Biography
The 1930s and 1940s are remembered as the golden era of Hollywood, when monumental films were made and stars were born. Some emerged slowly, but Errol Flynn took the world by storm. His acting talent, gorgeous face and handsome build put him on movie screens everywhere and kept him there for nearly 30 years. To moviegoers, Flynn was a dashing, noble romancer. To his friends, he was a mischievous, witty prankster. In all, he was loved and appreciated by fans everywhere.
Errol Leslie Thomson Flynn was born in the British Commonwealth seaport of
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia on June 20, 1909 to Marelle Young and Theodore
Thomas Flynn. His father, a distinguished marine biologist, introduced him
to the sea at a very young age. Flynn always said the one true love of his
life was the ocean. As a child, he excelled in athletics but never chose
to be an academic. He attended a number of private schools, spending only
a short time at each. By the time he turned twenty, Flynn had already traveled
to Sydney, Australia and New Guinea and had attempted several jobs, none
lasting more than a few months. Finally, he bought a boat,
The
Sirocco, and
sailed back to New Guinea where he became the manager of a tobacco plantation
and wrote for
The Sydney Bulletin about life in New Guinea.
In 1933, fate stepped into Flynn's life. An Australian film producer saw a photograph of him and offered him a part in his movie, In the
Wake
of the Bounty. Flynn had no acting experience, but curiosity drove him to accept the offer. In this job, he found his hidden passion. After
Bounty, he felt his new career would not flourish in Australia, so he sailed to London where he could expand his acting career.
Flynn acted at the Northampton Repertory Company for a year and a half. His
acting developed well at Northampton, and he was soon offered a contract
with Warner Brothers-Teddington studios in England. The managing director
offered
Flynn a contract before ever seeing him act. Warner Brothers believed his
dashing good looks and muscular build would be a sure bet at the box office.
He became
the star of
Murder at Monte Carlo and Warner Brothers-Hollywood studios signed
him immediately. Errol Flynn was soon the "debonair romancer" of the world.
By the end of 1935, Flynn had acted in five movies, taking the lead in two
of them,
Murder at Monte Carlo and
Captain
Blood. He married French actress
Lili Damita and they had a son, Sean.
Captain Blood was nominated for best
picture and contrived the swashbuckler image that marked the rest of Flynn's
career.
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