People

Matheson Lang

Matheson Lang
  • Name: Matheson Lang
  • Birthday: 1879-05-15
  • Also known as: Alexander Matheson Lang
  • Place of birth: Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • Popularity: 0.31
Biography: 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... Read More

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Movies:

Title Release date
The Cardinal   as  Cardinal de Medici 1936-01-04
Drake of England   as  Francis Drake 1935-05-16
The Great Defender   as  Sir Douglas Rolls 1934-11-26
Little Friend   as  John Hughes 1934-11-18
Channel Crossing   as  Jacob Van Eeden 1933-10-14
Carnival   as  Silvio Steno 1931-10-30
The Chinese Bungalow   as  Yuan Sing 1930-09-26
The Triumph of the Scarlet Pimpernel   as  Sir Percy Blakeney 1928-11-05
The Blue Peter   as  David Hunter 1928-09-01
The King's Highway   as  Paul Clifford 1927-10-01
The Island of Despair   as  Stephen Rhodes 1926-12-27
The Chinese Bungalow   as  Yuan Sing 1926-11-22
The Secret Kingdom   as  John Quarrain 1925-08-01
White Slippers   as  Lionel Hazard 1924-08-01
Slaves of Destiny   as  Luke Charnock 1924-03-31
Henry, King of Navarre   as  Henry 1924-03-01
The Wandering Jew   as  Matathias 1923-05-01
The Hell Ship   as  Jan Steen 1923-02-05
Dick Turpin's Ride to York   as  Dick Turpin 1922-09-01
A Romance of Old Baghdad   as  Prince Omar 1922-03-01
Carnival   as  Sylvio Steno 1921-06-26
Victory and Peace   as  Edward Arkwright 1918-12-01
Masks and Faces   as  Coachman 1917-03-01