Acting credits
22
Active
Consistent number of acting credits.

Acting
These indicators come from TMDB. They are relative signals, not review ratings.
Acting credits
22
Active
Consistent number of acting credits.
TMDB popularity
0.4
Low visibility
TMDB internal trend index. Higher usually means more searches and page activity now.
TMDB ID: 50833
IMDb ID: nm0358899
Known for: Acting
Born: June 28, 1879
Died: June 11, 1955
Age: 75
Place of birth: Brooklyn, New York, USA
Gender: Male
Adult content flag: No
Career span: 1915 - 1956
Years active: 42
Average TMDB rating: 6.83
Wikidata: Q3565777
Also known as
Walter Hampden Dougherty
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Walter Hampden is the artist name of Walter Hampden Dougherty (June 30, 1879 in Brooklyn – June 11, 1955 in Los Angeles) was a U.S. actor and theatre manager. He was the younger brother of the American painter Paul Dougherty (1877-1947). He went to England for apprenticeship for six years. Later, he played Hamlet, Henry V and Cyrano de Bergerac on Broadway. In 1925, he became manager of the Colonial Theatre on Broadway. He became noted for his Shakespearean roles as well as for Cyrano, which he played in several productions between 1923 and 1936. Hampden's last stage role was as Danforth in the original Broadway production of Arthur Miller's The Crucible. Hampden appeared in a few silent films, but did not really begin his film career in earnest until 1939, when he played the good Archbishop of Paris[1] (Frollo's brother) in The Hunchback of Notre Dame, starring Charles Laughton as Quasimodo. This was Hampden's first sound film ; he was sixty at the time he made it. Several other roles followed—Jarvis Langdon in the 1944 film The Adventures of Mark Twain among them, but all were supporting character roles, not the lead roles that Hampden played onstage. He had a small, but notable role as the long-winded dinner speaker in the first scene of All About Eve (1950), and played the father of Humphrey Bogart and William Holden in Billy Wilder's 1954 comedy Sabrina. These last two films are arguably the ones that Hampden is most well known to modern audiences for. He also played long-bearded patriarchs in biblical epics like The Silver Chalice (1954) and The Prodigal (1955). (In The Silver Chalice, he was Joseph of Arimathea.) Hampden reprised his legendary portrayal of Hercule Savinien Cyrano de Bergerac in the first episode of the radio program Great Scenes from Great Plays, which Hampden hosted from 1948-1949. In addition to his radio roles (The Adventures of Leonidas Witherall), Hampden also appeared in several dramas during the early days of television. He made his TV debut in 1949, playing Macbeth for the last time at the age of 69. His last role was the non-singing one of King Louis XI of France, considered by some to be one of his best performances, in the otherwise unremarkable 1956 Technicolor remake of Rudolf Friml's 1925 operetta The Vagabond King. It was released posthumously, more than a year after Hampden's death. For 27 years, Walter Hampden was president of the Players' Club. The club's library is named for him.


Movie credits linked with Walter Hampden.
as King Louis XI
as Eli
as Father Gabriel Mendoza
as Joseph of Arimathea
as Oliver Larrabee
as Mr. Clemens
as Don Carlos Castillo
as Pierre Champlain
as Sir Frederic Taylor
as Father Edward Quarterman
as Aged Actor
as Jervis Langdon
as Commodore Devereaux
as William Sharp
as Big Bear
as Pasquier
as Archdeacon
as Henry Goode
Series credits linked with Walter Hampden.