Eric Portman

Actor

Popular As Eric Harold Portman

Birthday July 13, 1901

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Halifax, West Riding of Yorkshire, England

DEATH DATE 1969-12-7, St Veep, Cornwall, England (68 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 5′ 10″

#50381 Most Popular

1868

Born in Halifax, West Yorkshire, Portman was the second son of Matthew Portman (1868–1939), a wool merchant, and his wife, Alice, née Harrison (1870–1918).

His birth was registered with the middle name of Harold but he would later adopt his mother's maiden name as his middle name.

1901

Eric Harold Portman (13 July 1901 – 7 December 1969) was an English stage and film actor.

1922

He was educated at Rishworth School in Yorkshire and, in 1922, started work as a salesman in the menswear department at the Marshall & Snelgrove department store in Leeds and acted in the amateur Halifax Light Opera Society.

1924

He made his professional stage debut in 1924 with Henry Baynton's company.

In 1924, Robert Courtneidge's Shakespearian company arrived in Halifax.

Portman joined the company as a 'passenger' and appeared in their production of Richard II at the Victoria Hall, Sunderland which led to Courtneidge giving him a contract.

Portman made his West End debut at the Savoy Theatre in London, in September 1924, as Antipholous of Syracuse in The Comedy of Errors.

He was engaged by Lilian Baylis for the Old Vic Company.

1928

In 1928, Portman played Romeo at the rebuilt Old Vic.

He became a successful theatre actor.

1930

In the 1930s, he began appearing in films, starting with an uncredited bit in The Girl from Maxim's (1933) directed by Alexander Korda.

1933

In 1933, Portman was in Diplomacy at the Prince's Theatre with Gerald du Maurier and Basil Rathbone.

1935

In 1935, he appeared in four films, including Maria Marten, or The Murder in the Red Barn with Tod Slaughter.

He also made Hyde Park Corner with Gordon Harker and directed by Sinclair Hill; Old Roses and Abdul the Damned.

1936

In 1936 Portman had a stage hit playing Lord Byron in Bitter Harvest.

After Hearts of Humanity (1936), he played Giuliano de' Medici in Hill's The Cardinal (1936).

Portman made another film with Tod Slaughter, The Crimes of Stephen Hawke (1936), and was in Moonlight Sonata (1937).

He went to the US and played in Madame Bovary on Broadway for the Theatre Guild of America.

1937

He also had a small role in The Prince and the Pauper (1937), but disliked Hollywood and did not stay long.

He was back on Broadway in I Have Been Here Before by J. B. Priestley.

Portman's last London stage show was Jeannie.

In the semi-autobiographical play Dinner with Ribbentrop by screenwriter Norman Hudis, a former personal assistant to Portman, Hudis relates a claim made often by Portman that in 1937, before the start of the Second World War, he had had dinner in London with Joachim von Ribbentrop (then the German Ambassador to Britain).

Portman claimed that Ribbentrop had told him that "when Germany wins the war, Portman would be installed as the greatest English star in the New Europe" at a purpose-built film studio in Berlin.

1940

He is probably best remembered for his roles in three films for Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger during the 1940s.

1941

In 1941 he had his first important film role playing Lieutenant Hirth, a Nazi on the run, in Powell and Pressburger's 49th Parallel, which was a big hit in the US and Britain.

Portman was established as a star and signed a long-term contract with Gainsborough Pictures.

1942

Portman was in Powell and Pressburger's follow up, One of Our Aircraft Is Missing (1942), which reworked the story of The 49th Parallel to be about Allied pilots in occupied Holland.

He played a Belgian resistance leader in Uncensored (1942) from director Anthony Asquith, and a German pilot in Squadron Leader X (1943) with director Lance Comfort.

1943

Portman was a sailor in Asquith's We Dive at Dawn (1943) and a factory supervisor in Millions Like Us (1943) from Launder and Gilliat.

He was in another war story in Comfort's Escape to Danger (1943), then was back with Powell and Pressburger for A Canterbury Tale (1944).

1945

Portman had the lead in Great Day (1945) with Flora Robson and in the expensive colonial epic Men of Two Worlds (1946).

In 1945, exhibitors voted him the 10th most popular star at the British box office.

He maintained that ranking the following year.

1947

He made some thrillers – Wanted for Murder (1947), Dear Murderer (1947) and The Mark of Cain (1947).

1948

He was a hangman in Daybreak (1948), then made Corridor of Mirrors (1948) and The Blind Goddess (1948).

1949

He made two films for the new producing team of Maxwell Setton and Aubrey Baring, The Spider and the Fly (1949) and Cairo Road (1950).

1951

Portman was one of many names in The Magic Box (1951) and then made an Ealing comedy, His Excellency (1952), playing a trade unionist who becomes Governor of a British colony.

1953

For Baring and Setton, he made South of Algiers (1953) then had a big hit on stage in Terence Rattigan's Separate Tables and on film in The Colditz Story (1955).

1955

Portman had a supporting part in The Deep Blue Sea (1955) and Child in the House (1956).