John Mills


Sir John Mills, was an English actor who appeared in more than 120 films in a career spanning seven decades. He excelled on camera as an appealing British everyman who often portrayed guileless, wounded war heroes.
For his work in film Mills was knighted by Elizabeth II in 1976. In 2002, he received a BAFTA Fellowship from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, and was named a Disney Legend by the Walt Disney Company.

Early life

John Mills was born in Norfolk, the son of Edith Mills, a theatre box office manager, and Lewis Mills, a mathematics teacher.
Mills was born at Watts Naval School, where his father was a master.
He spent his early years in the village of Belton where his father was the headmaster of the village school. He first felt the thrill of performing at a concert in the school hall when he was six years old.
He lived in a modest house in Gainsborough Road, Felixstowe until 1929. His older sister was Annette Mills, remembered as presenter of BBC Television's Muffin the Mule.
He was educated at Balham Grammar School in London, Sir John Leman High School in Beccles, Suffolk and Norwich High School for Boys, where it is said that his initials can still be seen carved into the brickwork on the side of the building in Upper St Giles Street. Upon leaving school he worked as a clerk at a corn merchant's in Ipswich before finding employment in London as a commercial traveller for the Sanitas Disinfectant Company.
In September 1939, at the start of the Second World War, Mills enlisted in the British Army, joining the Royal Engineers. He was later commissioned as a Second Lieutenant, but in 1942 he received a medical discharge because of a stomach ulcer.

Career

Early career

Mills took an early interest in acting, making his professional début at the London Hippodrome in The Five O'Clock Girl in 1929. He followed this with a cabaret act.
Mills then got a job with a theatrical company that toured India, China and the Far East performing a number of plays. Noël Coward saw him appear in a production of Journey's End in Singapore and wrote Mills a letter of introduction to use back in London.
On his return Mills starred in The 1931 Revue, Coward's Cavalcade and the Noël Coward revue Words and Music.

Early films

He made his film debut in The Midshipmaid. He also appeared in The Ghost Camera with Ida Lupino and Britannia of Billingsgate.
Mills was promoted to leading roles in A Political Party, a comedy. He was in a series of quota quickies: The River Wolves ; Those Were the Days, the first film of Will Hay; The Lash ; Blind Justice ; Doctor's Orders ; and Car of Dreams. He did Jill Darling on stage and was one of many names in Royal Cavalcade.

"A" movies

Mills had the star role in an A film, Brown on Resolution. It was back to quota quickies for Charing Cross Road and The First Offence. He had another excellent part in an "A", playing Lord Guildford Dudley in Tudor Rose. He did Aren't Men Beasts? on stage and worked for Hollywood director Raoul Walsh in O.H.M.S..
Mills starred in The Green Cockatoo directed by William Cameron Menzies. He appeared as Colley in the hugely popular 1939 film version of Goodbye, Mr Chips, opposite Robert Donat.

World War II

At the Old Vic he was in A Midsummer Night's Dream, She Stoops to Conquer and Of Mice and Men. He joined the army in 1939 but occasionally made films on leave. He went back to movies with Old Bill and Son and made Cottage to Let, a war film for Anthony Asquith. Mills went back to supporting Will Hay in The Black Sheep of Whitehall and he was one of many names in the war film, The Big Blockade.
He was in Men in Shadow on stage, written by his wife. He achieved acclaim for his performance as an able seaman in Noël Coward's In Which We Serve, a huge hit. Mills had another good support role in The Young Mr. Pitt playing William Wilberforce opposite Robert Donat. He was invalided out of the army in 1942.

Stardom

Mills's climb to stardom began when he had the lead role in We Dive at Dawn, a film directed by Asquith about submariners. He was top billed in This Happy Breed, directed by David Lean and adapted from a Noël Coward play.
Also popular was Waterloo Road, from Sidney Gilliat, in which Mills played a man who goes AWOL to retrieve his wife from a draft-dodger. Mills played a pilot in The Way to the Stars, directed by Asquith from a script by Terence Rattigan, and another big hit in Britain. He did Duet for Two Hands on stage.
Mills had his greatest success to date as Pip in Great Expectations, directed by David Lean. It was the third biggest hit at the British box office that year and Mills was voted the sixth most popular star.
Less successful critically and financially was So Well Remembered which used American writers and directors. The October Man was a mildly popular thriller from Roy Ward Baker.
Mills played the title role in Scott of the Antarctic, a biopic of Captain Scott. It was the fourth most watched film of the year in Britain and Mills was the eighth biggest star.

Producer

Mills turned producer with The History of Mr Polly from the novel by H. G. Wells. It was directed by Anthony Pelissier and Mills said it was his favorite film. Pelisse also made The Rocking Horse Winner which Mills produced; he also played a small role. More liked at the box office was a submarine drama, Morning Departure, directed by Baker. By this stage his fee was a reported £20,000 a film.

Career slump

After Morning Departure Mills took almost two years off. The films he made on his return were not popular: a thriller, Mr Denning Drives North ; The Gentle Gunman, where he and Dirk Bogarde played IRA gunmen for Basil Dearden; The Long Memory, a thriller from Robert Hamer.

Popularity revival

Mills had his first hit in a number of years with Hobson's Choice, directed by Lean. He appeared in war film The Colditz Story.
Mills played a support role in a movie for MGM, The End of the Affair with Deborah Kerr and Van Johnson. More liked in Britain was another war story, Above Us the Waves ; this was sixth most popular film at the British box office that year, and helped Mills be the fifth most popular star in the country.
After Escapade, Mills made the popular military comedy The Baby and the Battleship, one of the biggest hits of 1956. Also on that list was another Mills comedy, It's Great to Be Young.
Mills had a key support role as a peasant in War and Peace and made a cameo in Around the World in 80 Days.
Mills appeared in the thrillers: Town on Trial directed by John Guillermin and The Vicious Circle. More popular with the public were the war films: Dunkirk, the second most popular film of the year in Britain; Ice Cold in Alex, directed by J. Lee Thompson; and I Was Monty's Double', directed by Guillermin.
In the 1959 crime drama Tiger Bay, directed by Thompson, Mills played a police detective investigating a murder that a young girl has witnessed. His daughter Hayley was cast, and earned excellent reviews.
Mills went to Australia to play a cane cutter in the Hollywood financed Summer of the Seventeenth Doll.
Better received was Tunes of Glory, a military drama directed by Ronald Neame co-starring Alec Guinness. Mills's performance earned him a Best Actor Award at the Venice Film Festival.
Walt Disney saw Tiger Bay and offered Hayley Mills the lead role in Pollyanna. Disney also offered John Mills the lead in the adventure film Swiss Family Robinson, which was a huge hit. He did Ross on stage.
The Rank Organisation insisted Mills play the role of the priest in The Singer Not the Song opposite Dirk Bogarde. Mills and Baker reteamed on an interracial drama Flame in the Streets and an Italian-British war film The Valiant.
Mills did a comedy with James Mason, Tiara Tahiti. He had a support role in The Chalk Garden starring Hayley.
After a cameo on the war film Operation Crossbow, Mills made a third film with his daughter, The Truth About Spring. He had a cameo in King Rat for Bryan Forbes, who then directed Mills in The Wrong Box. Mills again played Hayley's father on screen in The Family Way. He then directed her in Sky West and Crooked from a script written by his wife.
He was the subject of This Is Your Life on two occasions, firstly in 1960 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews outside Pinewood Studios, and again in 1983 when Eamonn surprised him on the stage of London's Wyndham's Theatre at the curtain call of the play Little Lies.

Character actor

Mills began to move into character roles, supporting Hugh O'Brian in Africa Texas Style and Rod Taylor in Chuka. He went to Italy for a giallo, A Black Veil for Lisa and played William Hamilton in Emma Hamilton.
Mills had a cameo in Oh! What a Lovely War for director Richard Attenborough and supported Mark Lester in Run Wild, Run Free. He went to Australia to star in a convict drama, Adam's Woman.
For his role as the village idiot in Ryan's Daughter — a complete departure from his usual style – Mills won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar.
He was in Dulcima then had support roles in Young Winston for Attenborough, Lady Caroline Lamb, and Oklahoma Crude. On stage he did Veterans at the Royal Court, At the End of the Day, The Good Companions, Great Expectations and Separate Tables.
Also on the small screen, in 1974 he starred as Captain Tommy "The Elephant" Devon in the six-part television drama series The Zoo Gang, about a group of former underground freedom fighters from World War II, with Brian Keith, Lilli Palmer and Barry Morse.
In the late 1970s Mills could still get lead roles in films, as shown by The "Human" Factor, Trial by Combat, and The Devil's Advocate. He had filmed supporting roles in The Big Sleep and The Thirty Nine Steps.
His most famous television role was probably as the title character in Quatermass for ITV in 1979. He followed this with a sitcom in Young at Heart.
On the big screen he was now mainly playing upper crust types as in Zulu Dawn, Gandhi, and Sahara. He performed Goodbye Mr Chips on stage followed by Little Lies.

Later career

In 1986 he did The Petition at the National and the following year did Pygmalion on Broadway. He provided a voice for When the Wind Blows and supported Madonna in Who's That Girl. His best roles were on TV in Harnessing Peacocks and Martin Chuzzlewit. Mills also starred as in the filmed version of the musical Cats in 1998.
In 2000, Mills released his extensive home cine-film footage in a documentary film entitled Sir John Mills's Moving Memories, with interviews with Mills, his children Hayley, Juliet and Jonathan and Richard Attenborough. The film was produced and written by Jonathan Mills, directed and edited by Marcus Dillistone, and features behind the scenes footage and stories from films such as Ice Cold in Alex and Dunkirk. In addition the film also includes home footage of many of Mills's friends and fellow cast members including Laurence Olivier, Harry Andrews, Walt Disney, David Niven, Dirk Bogarde, Rex Harrison and Tyrone Power. Mills's last cinema appearance was playing a tramp in Lights 2 ; the cinematographer was Jack Cardiff. They had last worked together on Scott of the Antarctic in 1948.

Personal life and death

His first wife was the actress Aileen Raymond who died only five days after he did. They were married in 1932 and divorced in 1941. Raymond later became the mother of actor Ian Ogilvy.
His second wife was the dramatist Mary Hayley Bell. Their marriage, on 16 January 1941, lasted for 64 years, until his death in 2005. They were married in a rushed civil ceremony, because of the war; it was not until 60 years later that they were married in a church. They lived in The Wick, London, for many years. They sold the house to musician Ronnie Wood in 1971 and moved to Hills House, Denham, south Buckinghamshire.
Mills and Bell had two daughters, Juliet, star of television's Nanny and the Professor and Hayley, a Disney child star who appeared in Pollyanna, The Parent Trap and Whistle Down the Wind, and one son, Jonathan Mills, a screenwriter. In 1947, Mills appeared with his daughters in the film So Well Remembered. The three also appeared together decades later, on an episode of ABC's The Love Boat. Mills's grandson by Hayley, Crispian Mills, is a musician, best known for his work with the raga rock group Kula Shaker.
Despite having always previously voted Conservative, Mills publicly supported Tony Blair's Labour Party in the 2001 General Election.
In the years leading up to his death, he appeared on television only on special occasions, his sight having failed almost completely by 1992. After that, his film roles were brief cameos.
He died aged 97 on 23 April 2005 in Denham, Buckinghamshire, following a stroke. His wife died on 1 December 2005. They are buried in St Mary the Virgin Churchyard, Denham.

Honours

Mills was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1960. In 1976 he was knighted by the Queen.
In 1999, at 91 years of age, Mills became the oldest joining member of the entertainment charitable fraternity, the Grand Order of Water Rats.
In 2002, he received a Fellowship of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts, their highest award, and was named a Disney Legend by the Walt Disney Company.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1932The MidshipmaidGolightly
1933The Ghost CameraErnest Elton
1933Britannia of BillingsgateFred Bolton
1934A Political PartyTony Smithers
1934The River WolvesPeter Farrell
1934Those Were the DaysBobby Poskett
1934The LashArthur Haughton
1934Blind JusticeRalph Summers
1934Doctor's OrdersRonnie Blake
1935Car of DreamsRobert Miller
1935Royal CavalcadeYoung Enlistee
1935Brown on ResolutionAlbert Brown
1935Charing Cross RoadTony
1936The First OffenceJohnnie Penrosealternative title Bad Blood
1936Tudor RoseLord Guilford DudleyReleased as Nine Days a Queen in USA
1937O.H.M.S.Cpl. Bert Dawson
1937The Green CockatooJim Connor
1939Goodbye, Mr ChipsPeter Colley – as a Young Man
1941Old Bill and SonYoung Bill Busby
1941Cottage to LetFlt. Lieutenant Perry
1942The Black Sheep of WhitehallBobby Jessop
1942The Big BlockadeTom
1942In Which We ServeOrdinary Seaman Blake
1942The Young Mr. PittWilliam Wilberforce
1943We Dive at DawnLt. Taylor, R.N.
1944This Happy BreedBilly Mitchell
1944Victory WeddingBill ClarkShort
1945Waterloo RoadJim Colter
1945The Way to the StarsPeter Penrose
1946Great ExpectationsPip
1947So Well RememberedGeorge Boswell
1947The October ManJim Ackland
1948Scott of the AntarcticCaptain Scott
Captain R.F. Scott R.N.
1949The History of Mr PollyAlfred Polly
1949The Rocking Horse WinnerBassett
1950Morning DepartureLt. Commander Armstrong
1951Mr Denning Drives NorthTom Denning
1952The Gentle GunmanTerrence Sullivan
1953The Long MemoryPhillip Davidson
1954Hobson's ChoiceWillie MossopNominated-BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
1955The Colditz StoryPat Reid
1955The End of the AffairAlbert Parkis
1955Above Us the WavesCommander Fraser
1955EscapadeJohn Hampden
1956The Baby and the BattleshipPuncher Roberts
1956War and PeacePlaton Karataev
1956Around the World in 80 DaysLondon Carriage Driver
1956It's Great to Be YoungMr Dingle
1957Town on TrialSupt Mike Halloran
1957The Vicious CircleDr Howard Latimer
1958DunkirkCorporal Binns
1958Ice Cold in AlexCaptain Anson RASC
1958I Was Monty's DoubleMajor Harvey
1959Tiger BaySuperintendent Graham
1959Summer of the Seventeenth DollBarney
1960Tunes of GloryLt. Col. Basil Barrow Volpi Cup for Best Actor
Nominated-BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
1960Swiss Family RobinsonWilliam Robinson
1961The Singer Not the SongFather Michael Keogh
1961The Parent TrapMitch Evers' Golf CaddyUncredited
1961Flame in the StreetsJacko Palmer
1962The ValiantCaptain Morgan
1962Tiara TahitiLt. Col. Clifford Southey
1964The Chalk GardenMaitland
1965Operation CrossbowGen. Boyd
1965The Truth About SpringTommy Tyler
1965King RatSmedley – Taylor
1966The Wrong BoxMasterman Finsbury
1966The Family WayEzra Fitton
Prize San Sebastián for Best Actor
1967Africa Texas StyleWing Commander Hayes
1967ChukaColonel Stuart Valois
1968A Black Veil for LisaInspector Franz Bulon
1968Emma HamiltonSir William Hamilton
1969Oh! What a Lovely WarField Marshal Sir Douglas Haig
1969Run Wild, Run FreeThe Moorman
1970Adam's WomanSir Phillip MacDonald
1970Ryan's DaughterMichaelAcademy Award for Best Supporting Actor
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture
Kansas City Film Critics Circle Award for Best Supporting Actor
Nominated-BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor
1971DulcimaMr Parker
1972Young WinstonGeneral Kitchener
1972Lady Caroline LambCanning
1973Oklahoma CrudeCleon Doyle
1975The Human FactorMike McAllister
1976Trial by CombatColonel Bertie Cook
1977The Devil's AdvocateBlaise Meredith
1978The Big SleepInspector Jim Carson
1978The Thirty Nine StepsScudder
1979The Quatermass ConclusionProfessor Bernard Quatermass
1979Zulu DawnSir Henry Bartle Frere
1982GandhiThe Viceroy Baron Chelmsford
1983SaharaCambridge
1986When the Wind BlowsJimVoice
1987Who's That GirlMontgomery Bell
1993The Big FreezeDapper man
1994Deadly AdviceJack the Ripper
1995The GrotesqueSir Edward Cleghorn
1996HamletOld Norway
1997BeanChairman
1998CatsGus the Theater Cat
2003Bright Young ThingsGentleman
2004Lights2The TrampCinematographer Jack Cardiff,

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1967Dundee and the CulhaneDundee13 episodes
1974The Zoo GangThomas 'The Elephant' Devon6 episodes
1978Dr. StrangeThomas LindmerTV Movie
1979QuatermassProfessor Bernard Quatermass
1980Tales of the UnexpectedThe Umbrella Man
1980–82Young at HeartAlbert Collyer18 episodes
1982The Adventures of Little Lord FauntleroyThe Earl of DorincortTV Movie
1984The Masks of DeathDr WatsonTV Movie
1985Murder with MirrorsLewis SerrocoldTV Movie
1985Edge of the Wind
1987The Dame Edna ExperienceSeason 1, Episode 6
1989A Tale of Two CitiesJarvis Lorry2 episodes
1993Harnessing PeacocksBernard QuigleyTV Movie
1994Martin ChuzzlewitMr Chuffey3 episodes, TV Mini-series

Stage appearances

YearTitleRoleTheatre
1929The Five O'Clock GirlHippodrome Theatre
1931The 1931 RevueLondon Pavilion, London
1931CavalcadeDrury Lane
1932Words and MusicAdelphi Theatre
1934Jill DarlingSavoy Theatre
1936Aren't Men Beasts?Strand Theatre
1939A Midsummer Night's DreamOberonOld Vic Theatre
1939She Stoops to ConquerYoung MarlowOld Vic Theatre
1939–40Of Mice and MenGeorge MiltonOld Vic Theatre
1942Men in ShadowLyric Theatre, London
1945Duet for Two HandsVaudeville Theatre
1960–61RossBroadway Theatre
1972VeteransRoyal Court Theatre
1973At the End of the DaySavoy Theatre
1974The Good CompanionsHer Majesty's Theatre
1975Great ExpectationsYvonne Arnaud, Guildford
1977Separate TablesApollo Theatre
1982Goodbye, Mr ChipsChichester
1983Little LiesWyndham's Theatre
1986The PetitionNational Theatre
1987PygmalionBroadway

Box office ranking

For a number of years, British film exhibitors voted him among the top ten British stars at the box office via an annual poll in the Motion Picture Herald.