
Leslie Howard
Leslie Howard Steiner (3 April 1893 – 1 June 1943) was an English actor, director and producer. He wrote many stories and articles for The New York Times, The New Yorker, and Vanity Fair and was one of the biggest box-office draws and movie idols of the 1930s. Active in both Britain and Hollywood, Howard played Ashley Wilkes in Gone with the Wind (1939). He had roles in many other films, often playing the quintessential Englishman, including Berkeley Square (1933), Of Human Bondage (1934), The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934), The Petrified Forest (1936), Pygmalion (1938), Intermezzo (1939), "Pimpernel" Smith (1941), and The First of the Few (1942). He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for Berkeley Square and Pygmalion. Howard's World War II activities included acting and filmmaking. He helped to make anti-German propaganda and shore up support for the Allies—two years after his death the British Film Yearbook described Howard's work as "one of the most valuable facets of British propaganda". He was rumoured to have been involved with British or Allied Intelligence, sparking conspiracy theories regarding his death in 1943 when the Luftwaffe shot down BOAC Flight 777 over the Atlantic (off the coast of Cedeira, A Coruña), on which he was a passenger. Description above from the Wikipedia article Leslie Howard, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
44
Films
1
TV Shows
5
Crew Credits
Known For
45 Credits
Gone with the Wind
as Ashley Wilkes
1939

MGM Parade
1955

Glorious Technicolor
as Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
1998

The Gentle Sex
as Narrator (voice)
1943

British Agent
as Stephen 'Steve' Locke
1934

In Which We Serve
as Narrator (voice) (uncredited)
1942

Why Be Good?: Sexuality & Censorship in Early Cinema
as Self (archive footage)
2007

49th Parallel
as Philip Armstrong Scott
1941

The First of the Few
as R.J. Mitchell
1942

Complicated Women
as Self (archive footage)
2003

The Scarlet Pimpernel
as Sir Percy Blakeney / The Scarlet Pimpernel
1934

Hollywood Out-takes and Rare Footage
as Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
1983


