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Ray Milland - Identity, Stardom, and the Long Climb to The Lost Weekend

Ray Milland

Identity, Stardom, and the Long Climb to The Lost Weekend

By Gillian Kelly
Hardcover : 9781496859143, 284 pages, 34 b&w illustrations, September 2025
Paperback : 9781496859136, 284 pages, 34 b&w illustrations, September 2025

Table of contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter One: Welsh National Identity and Cinematic Representations
Chapter Two: Stumbling into Acting
Chapter Three: Second Fiddles and Third Wheels: Early Bit Part Player
Chapter Four: The Brit Effect: Portraying Nobility and Royalty
Chapter Five: It’s a Woman’s World: Supporting Paramount’s Female Stars
Chapter Six: Reaching a Paramount: The Long Climb to The Lost Weekend
Chapter Seven: Oscar After Party
Conclusion
Filmography
Notes
Bibliography
Index

A comprehensive study of one Welsh actor's image and performance in Hollywood's Golden Age

Description

Ray Milland (1907–1986) was the inaugural Welshman to win the Best Actor Academy Award, as well as a performer boasting a rich and varied oeuvre from the silent era in 1920s Britain to New Hollywood in the 1980s. Despite being one of the most prolific actors in cinema history who left behind a legacy of almost 180 film and television appearances across seven different decades, Milland remains a somewhat forgotten figure of cinematic history. Ray Milland: Identity, Stardom, and the Long Climb to “The Lost Weekend” fills this void in scholarship by offering a detailed examination of Milland as one of Hollywood’s most durable and fascinating performers of the studio era.

The volume begins by exploring Milland’s unique Welsh identity in Hollywood, which was essentially erased by the studios. It then turns to his underexplored early career at MGM prior to signing with Paramount Pictures, where he remained for over two decades. Author Gillian Kelly discusses his early roles as a stereotypical “Brit” in Hollywood as well as his “stardom years” at Paramount where he often provided support for the studio’s leading ladies, including Claudette Colbert, Dorothy Lamour, and Paulette Goddard. A chapter is dedicated to his Oscar-winning performance in The Lost Weekend, and important later films like Dial M for Murder and Love Story also receive detailed analysis. Overall, Ray Milland provides a reappraisal of Milland’s earlier career and situates his performances within the broader tradition of star studies.

Reviews

"Ray Milland: Identity, Stardom, and the Long Climb to ‘The Lost Weekend’ is a welcome addition to scholarship on film stardom, especially in addressing the somewhat neglected realm of what Kelly terms the ‘second level studio luminaries’ and Milland’s role in supporting female stars like Lamour, Colbert, and Goddard at Paramount. With an excellent and detailed discussion of performance, image, and masculinity, this volume has the potential to reach a wide readership."

- Michael Williams, professor of film at University of Southampton and author of Film Stardom and the Ancient Past: Idols, Artefacts and Epics

"Kelly’s depiction of Milland is both fascinating and moving, particularly in her ability to capture his sense of belonging to nowhere and everywhere, right on down to his final days."

- Hometowns to Hollywood