Does Ernest Cossart Dead or Alive?
As per our current Database, Ernest Cossart has been died on 21 January, 1951 at New York City, New York, USA.
🎂 Ernest Cossart - Age, Bio, Faces and Birthday
When Ernest Cossart die, Ernest Cossart was 75 years old.
Popular As |
Ernest Cossart |
Occupation |
Actor |
Age |
75 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Libra |
Born |
September 24, 1876 (Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, UK) |
Birthday |
September 24 |
Town/City |
Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England, UK |
Nationality |
UK |
🌙 Zodiac
Ernest Cossart’s zodiac sign is Libra. According to astrologers, People born under the sign of Libra are peaceful, fair, and they hate being alone. Partnership is very important for them, as their mirror and someone giving them the ability to be the mirror themselves. These individuals are fascinated by balance and symmetry, they are in a constant chase for justice and equality, realizing through life that the only thing that should be truly important to themselves in their own inner core of personality. This is someone ready to do nearly anything to avoid conflict, keeping the peace whenever possible
🌙 Chinese Zodiac Signs
Ernest Cossart was born in the Year of the Rat. Those born under the Chinese Zodiac sign of the Rat are quick-witted, clever, charming, sharp and funny. They have excellent taste, are a good friend and are generous and loyal to others considered part of its pack. Motivated by money, can be greedy, is ever curious, seeks knowledge and welcomes challenges. Compatible with Dragon or Monkey.
Some Ernest Cossart images
Ernest Cossart came to Hollywood to play a succession of butlers, valets and man-servants with names like Binns, Jeepers or Brassett. In fact, if you saw Angel (1937) or Letter of Introduction (1938), you may have assumed that he simply stepped from one movie set to another.
Always at home donning bat-wing collars, cut-away coats and striped trousers, portly, beetle-browed Ernest Cossart was America's notion of the perfect English 'gentleman's gentleman' (along with fellow émigrés Arthur Treacher, Barnett Parker, Eric Blore and Alan Mowbray, though perhaps a little less condescending).
With ancestors deriving from Scandinavia, Germany, Poland, Russia, and England, Ernest Cossart was born Emil Gottfried Adolph von Holst in Cheltenham, England, the son of a prominent musician. His brother Gustav Holst became a famous composer and music teacher.
Emil adopted the stage name 'Ernest Cossart' after a brief spell as clerk for a wine merchant. He gave his first theatrical performance in 1896, then acted with provincial repertory companies before moving to the U.
S. in 1908. His career on Broadway got off to a flying start with a leading role (as a colonel of Hussars) in the musical comedy "The Girls of Gottenberg". For the next twenty years (interrupted only by wartime service with the Canadian Army), his name remained high up in the list of credits.
Cossart's Hollywood career did not eventuate until 1935, when he was signed by Paramount. Except for occasional loan-outs, he remained with this, the most cosmopolitan of the studios, until 1945. Aside from butling, Cossart could also be relied upon to effectively impersonate Roman Catholic priests (Father McGee in The Jolson Story (1946)), chimney sweeps (Tom Clink in Tower of London (1939), uttering the famous line "Better have a black face than be worried about black deeds") and waiters (Champagne Waltz (1937)).
Easily one of his best roles was as the irascible, but kind-hearted Irish father of Ginger Rogers in Kitty Foyle (1940). Cossart retired from acting in 1949, having made his curtain call in the flop Broadway play "The Ivy Green".
He died two years later in New York at the age of 74.
Ernest Cossart WIFE, FAMILY, KIDS
- Maude Davies (1906 - 21 January 1951) ( his death) ( 1 child)
Ernest Cossart Movies
- Kitty Foyle (1940) as Tom Foyle
- Tom Brown's School Days (1940) as Squire Brown
- Three Smart Girls (1936) as Binns
- Three Smart Girls Grow Up (1939) as Binns the Butler
Ernest Cossart trend