
Personal Info
Known For
Acting
Gender
Male
August 26, 1879
Died
June 6, 1940 (60 years old)
Blaenavon, Monmouthshire, Wales, UK
Also Known As
- Edward Erskholme Clive
- Edward E. Clive
- E. E. Clive
E. E. Clive
Biography
Edward Erskholme Clive was a Welsh stage actor and director who had a prolific acting career in Britain and America. He also played numerous supporting roles in Hollywood movies between 1933 and his death. E. E. Clive was born on 28 August 1879 in Blaenavon in Monmouthshire. Clive studied for a medical career, and had completed four years of medical studies at St Bartholomew's Hospital before switching his focus to acting at age 22. Touring the provinces for a decade, Clive became an expert at virtually every sort of regional dialect in the British Isles. He moved to the US in 1912, where after working in the Orpheum vaudeville circuit he set up his own stock company in Boston. By the 1920s, his company was operating in Hollywood; among his repertory players were such up-and-comers as Rosalind Russell. He also worked at the Broadway in several plays. E. E. Clive made his film debut as a village police constable in 1933's The Invisible Man with Claude Rains, then spent the next seven years showing up in wry supporting and bit parts, where he often portrayed comical versions of English stereotypes. He often played butlers, reporters, aristocrats, shopkeepers and cabbies during his short film career. Though his roles were often small, Clive was a well-known and prolific character actor of his time. Among his best-known roles was the incompetent Burgomaster in James Whale's horror classic Bride of Frankenstein (1935). He was a semi-regular as Tenny the Butler in Paramount Pictures' Bulldog Drummond B series, starring John Howard; he also played butlers in other movies like Bachelor Mother with David Niven and Ginger Rogers. In 1939, Clive appeared in The Little Princess as the lawyer Mr. Barrows, and the first two entries of the classic Sherlock Holmes series starring Basil Rathbone. One of Clive's last roles was Sir William Lucas in the 1940 literature adaption Pride and Prejudice (1940) with Laurence Olivier and Greer Garson. E. E. Clive died on 6 June 1940, of a heart ailment, in his Hollywood home. He was survived by his wife Eleanor and their child. Clive was a member of the Euclid lodge of Freemasons in Boston.
Known For
Acting

Foreign Correspondent
1940

Pride and Prejudice
1940

Raffles
1939

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
1939

Bulldog Drummond's Bride
1939

Bachelor Mother
1939

Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police
1939

The Hound of the Baskervilles
1939

The Little Princess
1939

Mr. Moto's Last Warning
1939

Arrest Bulldog Drummond
1938

Bulldog Drummond in Africa
1938

Bulldog Drummond's Peril
1938

Bulldog Drummond's Revenge
1937

It's Love I'm After
1937

Bulldog Drummond Comes Back
1937

Night Must Fall
1937

Bulldog Drummond Escapes
1937

Camille
1936

Lloyd's of London
1936

Tarzan Escapes
1936

The Charge of the Light Brigade
1936

Isle of Fury
1936

Libeled Lady
1936







