Barry K. Barnes was an English film and stage actor. The son of Horatio Nelson Barnes and Anne Mackintosh Barnes, he was born and died in London. He appeared in sixteen films between 1936 and 1947. He played Sir Percy Blakeney in the 1937 filmReturn of theScarlet Pimpernel. His film career was cut short in 1947 due to an undiagnosable illness contracted during the war. He was married to actress Diana Churchill, and worked with his wife on stage during the 1940s and 1950s, taking West End revivals of The Admirable Crichton and On Approval on profitable tours.
Career
Barnes originally was going to be a mechanic but changed his mind and decided to be an actor. He trained at RADA and his first part was a role in Paul the First with Charles Laughton. He worked in repertory for a few years before receiving acclaim for his role in The White Assegai. In 1930 he was in The Barretts of Wimpole Street at the Malvern Festival. He accepted an offer to tour Australia with Margaret Rawlings; on the way his ship caught fire in the Red Sea and he spent six days on an island before being rescued. In Australia he performed Barretts among others. His other stage appearances included The Late Christopher Bean, Flowers of the Forest, Coincidence and The Ascent of F6.
Screen career
His first film was Dodging the Dole. Barnes leapt to national fame when Alexander Korda signed him to play the title role in Return of the Scarlet Pimpernel. He followed it with Who Goes Next? and the well-received "B" film This Man Is News. He starred in You're the Doctor, The Ware Case, and Prison Without Bars for Korda. Barnes did a sequel to This Man Is News, This Man in Paris. For the same director, David MacDonald, he did Spies of the Air, The Midas Touch and Law and Disorder. For Carol Reed he supported Margaret Lockwood in Girl in the News. He followed it with Two for Danger. Barnes went and served during World War II. He returned to films with a support role in Bedelia, starring Lockwood. He co starred with Richard Attenborough in Dancing with Crime, then had a small role in Cup-tie Honeymoon. Barnes appeared in some productions for the BBC in the early 1950s including the TV seriesSilk, Satin, Cotton, Rage. Barnes died 12 January 1965.