
Personal Info
Known For
Acting
Gender
Male
June 17, 1874
Died
May 1, 1957 (82 years old)
Columbus, Ohio, USA
Also Known As
- John Grant Mitchell Jr.
- Грант Митчелл
Grant Mitchell
Biography
Grant Mitchell (born John Grant Mitchell Jr.) was an American stage and screen actor. He is best remembered for his portrayals of fathers, husbands, bank clerks, businessmen, school principals and similar type characters, usually supporting, in films of the 1930s and 1940s.
Mitchell, a Yale post graduate at Harvard Law, gave up his law practice to become an actor, making his stage debut at age 27. He appeared in lead roles on Broadway in such plays as "It Pays to Advertise", "The Champion", "The Whole Town's Talking", and "The Baby Cyclone", the last which was specially written for him by George M. Cohan.
His screen career took off with the advent of sound (years earlier he had appeared in at least two silent films). He appeared primarily in B films, though from time to time enjoyed being a part of A-quality productions such as Dinner at Eight (1933), A Midsummer Night's Dream (1935), Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939), The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942), and Arsenic and Old Lace (1944).
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Grant Mitchell retired from show business in 1948. He died, age 82, in Los Angeles in 1957.
Known For
Acting

Who Killed Doc Robbin?
1948

It Happened on Fifth Avenue
1947

Leave Her to Heaven
1945

Guest Wife
1945

Conflict
1945

Arsenic and Old Lace
1944

My Sister Eileen
1942

Orchestra Wives
1942

Larceny, Inc.
1942

The Man Who Came to Dinner
1941

One Foot in Heaven
1941

Nothing But the Truth
1941

The Great Lie
1941

Footsteps in the Dark
1941

Tobacco Road
1941

Edison, the Man
1940

It All Came True
1940

The Grapes of Wrath
1940

Castle on the Hudson
1940

The Secret of Dr. Kildare
1939

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
1939

On Borrowed Time
1939

The Last Gangster
1937

The Life of Emile Zola
1937







