
Barry MacKay
Personal Info
Known for
Acting
Gender
Male
Birthday
1906-01-08
Day of Death
1985-12-12 (79 years old)
Place of Birth
London, England, UK
Barry MacKay
Biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Barry MacKay (8 January 1906 – 12 December 1985) was a British actor.
He was most prominently seen in light comedic roles in the British cinema of the 1930s and is perhaps best known as Jessie Matthews' leading man in Evergreen (1934), Gangway (1937) and Sailing Along (1938).
Other notable roles include Lieutenant Somerville in Brown on Resolution (1935) and as Fred, Scrooge's nephew, in MGM's film A Christmas Carol (1938), the latter being one of two films he made in the US; the other was the lead role in a B-picture, Smuggled Cargo (1939). After these films and serving in the Canadian navy during WW II, followed by stage work, there was a long gap in his film career until he reappeared as a character actor in the 1950s, making his last film (Timeslip a.k.a. The Atomic Man ) in 1955.
Barry also appeared in the 1954 Sheldon Reynolds produced Sherlock Holmes television series. He portrayed Reggie "Sardines" Taunton in episode 17; "The Case of the Laughing Mummy".
Known For
Acting
(1955)
Timeslip
as Inspector Hammond
(1954)
Orders Are Orders
as R.S.M. Benson
(1953)
Grand National Night
as Sergeant Gibson
(1952)
The Pickwick Papers
as Mr. Snubbins
(1939)
Smuggled Cargo
as Gerry Clayton
(1938)
A Christmas Carol
as Scrooge's Nephew Fred
(1938)
Sailing Along
as Steve Barnes
(1938)
It Might Be You
as Tom
(1938)
Who Killed John Savage?
as Anthony Benedict
(1937)
Gangway
as Bob Deering
(1937)
The Great Barrier
as Steve
(1937)
Glamorous Night
as Anthony Allan
(1935)
Brown on Resolution
as Lt. Somerville
(1935)
Me and Marlborough
as Dick Welch
(1935)
Oh, Daddy!
as Jimmy Ellison
(1935)
The Private Secretary
as Douglas Cattermole
(1934)
Evergreen
as Tommy Thompson
(1934)
The Private Life of Don Juan
as Rodrigo, the Impostor, a Man of Romance
(1934)
Forbidden Territory
as Michael Farringdon
(1934)
Passing Shadows
as Jim Lawrence
(1933)