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Stanley Augustus Holloway, OBE (1 October 1890 – 30 January 1982) was an English stage and film actor, comedian, singer, poet and monologist. He was famous for his comic and character roles on stage and screen, especially that of Alfred P. Doolittle in My Fair Lady. He was also renowned for his recordings of comic monologues and songs, which he performed throughout most of his 70-year career. Born in London, in his early years Holloway pursued a career as a clerk. He made early stage appearances before infantry service in the First World War. After the war he joined a concert party, "The Co-Optimists", and his career began to flourish. At first he was chiefly employed as a singer, but his skills as an actor and reciter of comic monologues were soon recognised. Characters from his monologues such as Sam Small, invented by Holloway, and Albert Ramsbottom, created for him by Marriott Edgar, were absorbed into popular British culture. By the 1930s, he was in demand to star in music hall, pantomime and musical comedy.
7.5My Fair Lady
1964
6.6In Harm's Way
1965
7.7Brief Encounter
1945
5.8Champagne Charlie
1944
7.4Hamlet
1948
7.2The Lavender Hill Mob
1951
6.6The Way Ahead
1944
6.3Ten Little Indians
1965
6.8The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes
1970
7.1This Happy Breed
1944
6.7The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby
1947
6.2Caesar and Cleopatra
1945
7.5Meet Me at Dawn
1947
7.0The Titfield Thunderbolt
1953
6.0Journey into Fear
1975
6.1The Way to the Stars
1945
6.3Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
1973
5.7On the Fiddle
1961
6.9Major Barbara
1941
7.0The Winslow Boy
1948