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Rome, Stewart (1886-1965)
 

Actor

Main image of Rome, Stewart (1886-1965)

A slightly aloof and aristocratic-looking leading man, Stewart Rome (born Septimus Ryott in Newbury on 30 January 1886), closely associated with Cecil Hepworth in the silent era, became a kindly character actor in talkies, making more than 150 films.

He studied to be a civil engineer, but instead went on the stage. After performing in Australia, Rome returned to the UK in 1912 and joined the Hepworth Company. Hepworth renamed him Stewart Rome, and when he left Hepworth, after WW1 service, to join Broadwest he was forced to sue to keep the name.

He is memorable as the shell-shocked veteran in George Pearson's Reveille (1924), but is obviously too old to remain an acceptable leading man. In 1942, Rome began appearing for Rank as Dr Goodfellow in a series of inspirational shorts, 'A Sunday Thought for the Coming Week', roundly jeered at by audiences.

Anthony Slide, Encyclopedia of British Film

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FILM & TV CREDITS

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Selected credits

Thumbnail image of ...One of Our Aircraft is Missing (1942)...One of Our Aircraft is Missing (1942)

Documentary-style WWII drama about an air crew stranded in Holland

Thumbnail image of Jassy (1947)Jassy (1947)

Technicolor melodrama about a gypsy girl with second sight

Thumbnail image of New Lot, The (1943)New Lot, The (1943)

Propaganda short that became the model for The Way Ahead

Thumbnail image of Rynox (1931)Rynox (1931)

Michael Powell's earliest surviving film, a thriller about an insurance scam

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