Lance Comfort(1908-1966)
- Director
- Producer
- Sound Department
Director Lance Comfort began his film career as a camera operator. He
also worked as a sound recordist and animator, mostly in British
documentaries and medical training films. His first feature was the
big-budget but slow-moving
Courageous Mr. Penn (1942),
a biography of 18th-century political leader William Penn, starring
Deborah Kerr, which was derided in some
circles in the US for its many wild historical inaccuracies.
He did somewhat better with
A.J. Cronin's Hatter's Castle (1942) with
James Mason, which was quite
successful. He went for lowbrow comedy with
Old Mother Riley Detective (1943),
one in the string of "drag" comedies with
Arthur Lucan in his standard Old Mother
Riley character. The series was successful in the UK, but was a
complete bust in the US (you'd be hard-pressed to find any American
film historians who have even heard of them, let alone seen them). In
1948 he produced and directed the somewhat noir-ish Gothic drama
Daughter of Darkness (1948),
but he blew it big-time with the disastrous reception to
Portrait of Clare (1950). It
lost so much money that Comfort's career never recovered from it, and
the only work he could scrape up afterwards were quickie "B" pictures
and episodic TV series. He made his last film in 1965 and died in
Sussex, England, in 1966.
also worked as a sound recordist and animator, mostly in British
documentaries and medical training films. His first feature was the
big-budget but slow-moving
Courageous Mr. Penn (1942),
a biography of 18th-century political leader William Penn, starring
Deborah Kerr, which was derided in some
circles in the US for its many wild historical inaccuracies.
He did somewhat better with
A.J. Cronin's Hatter's Castle (1942) with
James Mason, which was quite
successful. He went for lowbrow comedy with
Old Mother Riley Detective (1943),
one in the string of "drag" comedies with
Arthur Lucan in his standard Old Mother
Riley character. The series was successful in the UK, but was a
complete bust in the US (you'd be hard-pressed to find any American
film historians who have even heard of them, let alone seen them). In
1948 he produced and directed the somewhat noir-ish Gothic drama
Daughter of Darkness (1948),
but he blew it big-time with the disastrous reception to
Portrait of Clare (1950). It
lost so much money that Comfort's career never recovered from it, and
the only work he could scrape up afterwards were quickie "B" pictures
and episodic TV series. He made his last film in 1965 and died in
Sussex, England, in 1966.