Actor Ernest Thesiger (1879)
3 credits
Add to My Actors
The Man in the White Suit
Director: Alexander Mackendrick
Genre: Comedy (Movies)
Cast:

Alec Guinness
Cecil Parker
Ernest Thesiger
Director: Alexander Mackendrick
Genre: Comedy (Movies)
Cast:
Alec Guinness
Cecil Parker
Ernest Thesiger
The Man in the White Suit (1951) is a British comedy film produced by Ealing Studios. The story follows Sidney Stratton, a talented young chemist and former Cambridge scholar, who has been fired from multiple textile mills in northern England for his extravagant requests and obsession with creating an indestructible fabric. While working as a laborer at Birnley Mills, he stumbles upon the opportunity to conduct research and successfully develops an unbreakable, dirt-resistant fiber. A suit is then made from this material, which appears brilliantly white due to its inability to absorb dye and faintly glows due to its radioactive components. Initially hailed as a ...
The Man Who Could Work Miracles
Director: Alexander Korda
Genre: Fantasy (Movies)
Cast:

Roland Young
Edward Chapman
Ernest Thesiger
Director: Alexander Korda
Genre: Fantasy (Movies)
Cast:
Roland Young
Edward Chapman
Ernest Thesiger
The Man Who Could Work Miracles (1936) is a British fantasy comedy film directed by Lothar Mendes and produced by Alexander Korda. It opens in the celestial realms, where three superhuman entities – potentially gods or angels – are observing the planet Earth. Disheartened by the actions of these ‘animals’, one of the entities is challenged by the other two to prove whether or not these beings are capable of handling the power over reality required to reach the stars. The only limit set for this experiment is that free will cannot be controlled, as ...
Movies
Bride of Frankenstein
Director: James Whale
Genre: Horror (Movies)
Cast:

Ernest Thesiger
Boris Karloff
Colin Clive
Director: James Whale
Genre: Horror (Movies)
Cast:
Ernest Thesiger
Boris Karloff
Colin Clive
Bride of Frankenstein (1935) is an American sci-fi horror sequel to Universal Pictures’ original film, Frankenstein. In a castle during a stormy night, Percy Bysshe Shelley and Lord Byron praise Mary Shelley for her story about the infamous Frankenstein and his creation. Mary reminds them that her purpose in writing the novel was to teach a moral lesson about the dangers of playing God. She reveals that she has more of the story to share. The scene then shifts to the end of Frankenstein, where villagers celebrate as the Monster seemingly perishes in a burning windmill. However, Hans, whose daughter was killed by the creature, wants to see its ...