Customize Results:
Male Female

Weight in lbs.


Height
ft   in

Age



Matheson Lang

AKA: Alexander Matheson Lang
Birthday: 1879-05-15
Died: 1948-04-11
Birthplace: Montreal, Quebec, Canada


From Wikipedia Matheson Alexander Lang (May 15, 1879 – April 11, 1948) was a Canadian-born stage and film actor and playwright in the early 20th century. He is best remembered for his performances roles in Great Britain in Shakespeare plays. In 1916, Lang became one of the first major theatre stars to act on film, as Shylock in The Merchant of Venice, with his wife as Portia. He went on to appear in over 30 films and was one of Britain's leading movie stars of the 1920s. Among his memorable roles were Guy Fawkes (1923), Matthias in The Wandering Jew (1923) (which also featured his wife as Judith), Henry IV in Henry, King of Navarre (1924), and Henry V in Royal Cavalcade (1935). Lang also wrote the plays Carnival (1919) and The Purple Mask (1920), both of which were produced on Broadway and made into films. Matheson Lang died in Bridgetown, Barbados. He was 68.

Filmography

Carnival
Character: Sylvio Steno
The King's Highway
Character: Paul Clifford
Channel Crossing
Character: Jacob Van Eeden

Drake of England
Character: Francis Drake
Little Friend
Character: John Hughes
The Great Defender
Character: Sir Douglas Rolls

The Hell Ship
Character: Jan Steen
The Chinese Bungalow
Character: Yuan Sing
The Island of Despair
Character: Stephen Rhodes

The Cardinal
Character: Cardinal de Medici
The Chinese Bungalow
Character: Yuan Sing
White Slippers
Character: Lionel Hazard

Slaves of Destiny
Character: Luke Charnock
Henry, King of Navarre
Character: Henry
Dick Turpin's Ride to York
Character: Dick Turpin

A Romance of Old Baghdad
Character: Prince Omar
The Secret Kingdom
Character: John Quarrain
The Blue Peter
Character: David Hunter

Carnival
Character: Silvio Steno
Masks and Faces
Character: Coachman
The Triumph of the Scarlet Pimpernel
Character: Sir Percy Blakeney

The Wandering Jew
Character: Matathias
Victory and Peace
Character: Edward Arkwright