Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Creator / DavidNiven

Go To

1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/David-Niven_3753.jpg]]
2->''"I see my purpose in life as making the world a happier place to be in."''
3
4James David Graham Niven (1 March 1910 – 29 July 1983) is mostly famous for being, by a considerable margin, the most English man ever to go to Hollywood.
5
6Before becoming an actor, Niven was an officer in the peacetime British Army. He was just making the leap to movie stardom in 1939 when UsefulNotes/WorldWarII started; Niven rejoined for the duration. A measure of his popularity and success is that after seven years of war, during which he appeared in only two films (both government-sponsored propaganda pieces), he was still the second most popular film star in Britain. It was probably the mustache.
7
8In most of his films Niven played a somewhat effete British gentleman, and looked somewhat out of place in his occasional action roles, which is odd since in RealLife he spent much of the war as a commando, and even rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel.
9
10Creator/IanFleming considered him the ideal actor for the role of Film/JamesBond, and he ''did'' play him, although that was in [[Film/CasinoRoyale1967 a parody film]].
11
12Anyone interested in UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfHollywood should read his memoirs, ''The Moon's a Balloon'' and ''Bring On The Empty Horses''.
13
14----
15!!Film roles with TV Tropes pages:
16
17* Capt. Randall in ''Film/{{The Charge of the Light Brigade|1936}}'' (1936)
18* Capt. Clyde Lockert in ''Film/{{Dodsworth}}'' (1936)
19* Fritz von Tarlenheim in ''Film/ThePrisonerOfZenda'' (1937)
20* Scott in ''Film/TheDawnPatrol'' (1938)
21* Edgar Linton in ''Film/{{Wuthering Heights|1939}}'' (1939)
22* David Merlin in ''Film/BachelorMother'' (1939)
23* A.J. Raffles in ''Literature/{{Raffles}}'' (1939)
24* Geoffrey Crisp in ''Film/TheFirstOfTheFew'' (1942)
25* Squadron Leader Peter Carter in ''Film/AMatterOfLifeAndDeath'' (1946)
26* Rev. Henry Brougham in ''Film/TheBishopsWife'' (1947)
27* Major Valentine Morland in ''Film/AppointmentWithVenus'' (1951)
28* David Slater in ''Theatre/TheMoonIsBlue'' (1953)
29* Phileas Fogg in ''Film/{{Around the World in Eighty Days|1956}}'' (1956)
30* Henry in ''Film/TheLittleHut'' (1957)
31* Godfrey Smith in ''Film/MyManGodfrey'' (1957)
32* Raymond in ''Film/BonjourTristesse'' (1958)
33* Maj. David Pollock in ''Film/SeparateTables'' (1958), which earned him the UsefulNotes/AcademyAward for Best Actor, the briefest performance ever to receive that award (23 minutes, 39 seconds)[[note]]About a minute shorter than Creator/AnthonyHopkins in ''Film/TheSilenceOfTheLambs''.[[/note]]
34* Cpl. John Anthony Miller in ''Film/TheGunsOfNavarone'' (1961)
35* Sir Arthur Robertson in ''Film/FiftyFiveDaysAtPeking'' (1963)
36* Sir Charles Lytton in ''Film/{{The Pink Panther|1963}}'' (1963), a role he [[RoleReprise reprised]] in ''Film/TrailOfThePinkPanther'' (1982) and ''Film/CurseOfThePinkPanther'' (1983)[[note]]Due to his failing health during production of the latter film, his last, his voice was dubbed by Creator/RichLittle.[[/note]]
37* Lawrence Jameson in ''Film/BedtimeStory1964''
38* Philippe de Montfaucon in ''Film/EyeOfTheDevil'' (1967)
39* Film/JamesBond in ''Film/{{Casino Royale|1967}}'' (1967)
40* Gerald Hardcastle in ''Film/PrudenceandthePill'' (1968)
41* Colonel Carol Matthews a.k.a. "The Brain" in ''Film/{{The Brain|1969}}'' (1969)
42* J.W. Osborne in ''Film/NoDepositNoReturn'' (1976)
43* Dick Charleston in ''Film/MurderByDeath'' (1976)
44* Priory in ''Film/{{Candleshoe}}'' (1977)
45* Col. Johnny Race in ''Film/{{Death on the Nile|1978}}'' (1978)
46* Professor Blake in ''Film/EscapeToAthena'' (1979)
47* Col. W.H. Grice in ''Film/TheSeaWolves'' (1980)
48
49!!Tropes associated with David Niven's work in film and books and with his appereances in media:
50* AsideGlance: One of his trademarks.
51* ComicBookFantasyCasting: The appearance of ''Sinestro'' was based on Niven.
52* CoolOldGuy: He didn't lose any of his sharp wit, effortless suave charm or his legendary charisma as he went through his fifties and sixties.
53* CrazyPrepared: Niven was presenting at the Academy Awards in 1974, when streaking on college campuses was a fad. He wondered if it was possible that a streaker might make it onstage, and he decided to write down a couple of lines in response, ''just in case.'' The rest is history (see immediately below).
54* DeadpanSnarker:
55** When serving in the Second World War, Niven remarked, just before leading his troops into action, "Look, you chaps only have to do this once. But I'll have to do it over again in Hollywood with Creator/ErrolFlynn."
56** Niven's pre-war army career came to an end when a superior officer asked after a lecture if there were any questions. Niven, who was being kept from a date, snarked back, "Do you have the time, sir? I need to catch a train."
57** While presenting at the 1974 Academy Awards a "streaker" somehow gets onstage and runs naked behind him on live television. A startled but amused Niven immediately quipped:
58---> "Well, ladies and gentlemen, that was almost bound to happen. But isn't it fascinating to think that probably the only laugh that man will ever get in his life is by stripping off and showing his shortcomings?"
59** He once attended a Music/{{Can}} concert, where most of the audience walked out due to the band's extreme music. When asked about what he thought of the performance he said, "It was great, but I didn't know it was music."
60** One of the few stories Niven was willing to share about his experiences in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII came during the Battle of the Bulge. The discovery of German special forces operating behind American lines in American uniforms led American sentries to adopt some arcane security measures. Niven's jeep was stopped by an American soldier guarding an intersection, who demanded to know, "Who won the World Series in 1940?" Niven shot back “I haven’t the faintest idea" (it was the Cincinnati Reds). “But I do know that [[Film/BachelorMother I made a picture]] with Creator/GingerRogers in 1938.”
61* HorsingAround: Niven recounted an amusing anecdote that happened to him while he was filming ''Film/ThePrisonerOfZenda'' in his memoir ''The Moon's A Balloon'': The director wanted all of his stars mounted on fiery, flashy horses for the royal procession scene. Niven, being an experienced rider, wanted no part of that and bribed the wrangler to give him a nice, safe, gentle mare instead... only to be nearly killed when his nice, safe, gentle mare was mounted by Ronald Colman's stallion.
62* MilesGloriosus: Inverted. Niven flatly refused to discuss his own wartime deeds (apart from some humorous anecdotes in his books) and was enraged by "war stories" from people who'd obviously never heard the sound of a bullet going by their heads.
63* NeverSpeakIllOfTheDead: Despite being known for his incredible wit and love of storytelling, he never spoke about his time in the war. He remarked that he visited a war cemetery at Bastogne and told himself, "Here's twenty-seven thousand reasons to keep your mouth shut".
64* NiceToTheWaiter: The biggest bunch of flowers at his funeral was sent by the porters at Heathrow Airport. The note with it read: "To the finest gentleman who ever walked through these halls. He made a porter feel like a king."
65* OfficerAndAGentleman: Niven played a bunch of 'em, but proved to be an aversion in RealLife. Known for his rebellious sense of humor, he was very much a square peg in a round hole, so he resigned his commission, wandered off to Hollywood and found work as an extra. Ironically, his first major speaking role was as the young Captain Fritz von Tarlenheim in the definitive 1937 film adaption of ''Film/ThePrisonerOfZenda''. When he rejoined the service in WWII he was posted to the Commandos with a lot of other mavericks.
66* QuintessentialBritishGentleman: Niven's trademark look was that of the most English man who ever lived.
67* ShellShockedVeteran: His time in WWII had a serious effect on him and he never spoke about it in any great detail or shared many anecdotes from it, implying he was one.
68* ShoutOut:
69** Appears as the expert in good manners in the ''ComicBook/LuckyLuke'' story ''Calamity Jane'', where he tries to teach UsefulNotes/CalamityJane more feminine daintyness, becoming more degrading himself in the process.
70** The appearance of Sinestro, ArchEnemy of the ComicBook/GreenLantern, was modeled after him.

Top