Leslie Henson - Place of Birth, Date of Birth, Age, Wiki, Facts, Net Worth, Birthday, Biography and Family

Leslie Henson, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Family, Facts, Age, Net Worth, Biography and More in FamedBorn.com


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Aug 03, 1891 Notting Hill, England, United Kingdom Died on 02 Dec 1957 (aged 66)

English actor, producer and comedian

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About Leslie Henson

  • Leslie Lincoln Henson (3 August 1891 – 2 December 1957) was an English comedian, actor, producer for films and theatre, and film director.
  • He initially worked in silent films and Edwardian musical comedy and became a popular music hall comedian who enjoyed a long stage career.
  • He was famous for his bulging eyes, malleable face and raspy voice and helped to form the Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA) during the Second World War. Born in Notting Hill, London, Henson became interested in the theatre from an early age, writing and producing theatrical pieces while at school.
  • He studied with "the Cairns–James School of Musical and Dramatic Art as a child, making his professional stage début at the age of 19.
  • His first West End role was in Nicely, Thanks! (1912) and he later starred in several hit West End Edwardian musical comedies, including To-Night's the Night (1915) and Yes, Uncle! (1917).
  • After briefly serving with the Royal Flying Corps, he was released from active service by the British government to help run a concert party called "The Gaieties", which provided entertainment for the troops during World War I.
  • After the war, he returned to the West End, playing in Kissing Time (1919) and a series of musical comedies and farces throughout the 1920s and 1930s. At the start of World War II, together with Basil Dean, he helped to form ENSA, with which he entertained British troops abroad.
  • Henson's postwar stage success continued in revues, musicals and plays, including a West End adaptation of The Diary of a Nobody in 1955.
  • Henson's film career was intermittent, and he made 14 films from 1916 to 1956.
  • The most notable of these was Tons of Money in 1924, which introduced the popular Aldwych farces to British cinema audiences for the first time.
  • In 1956, Henson's friend Gertrude Hullett (known as "Bobby") died in circumstances that struck him as suspicious.
  • Henson anonymously notified the police that her doctor, John Bodkin Adams, should be investigated.
  • Adams was subsequently tried for murder but acquitted.

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