C. V. France
| C. V. France | |
|---|---|
| Born | 
Charles V. France 30 June 1868 Bradford, West Riding of Yorkshire, England, UK  | 
| Died | 
13 April 1949 (aged 80) Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire, England, UK  | 
| Occupation | Actor | 
| Years active | 1910–44 | 
Charles Vernon France (30 June 1868, in Bradford, West Riding of Yorkshire – 13 April 1949, in Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire), usually credited as C. V. France, was a British actor.

Stage career
France appeared (along with Ralph Richardson) in William Somerset Maugham’s 1932 play For Services Rendered: A Play in Three Acts and Maurice Baring’s 1912 drama The Grey Stocking: A Play in Four Acts.
France’s stage acting was singled out for praise in Maugham’s 1938 literary memoir, The Summing Up: “…But there is one actor whom, since he has never reached the rank of a star, and so has hardly received the recognition that he deserves, I should like to mention. This is C. V. France. He has acted in several of my plays. He has never played a part in which he has not been admirable. He has represented to the smallest particular the character that I had in my mind’s eye. It would be difficult to find on the English stage a more competent, intelligent, and versatile actor.”
Partial filmography
- The Blue Bird (1910)
 - The Burgomaster of Stilemonde (1929)
 - The Skin Game (1931)
 - Black Coffee (1931)
 - These Charming People (1931)
 - Lord Edgware Dies (1934)
 - Scrooge (1935)
 - Tudor Rose (1936)
 - Crime Over London (1936)
 - Victoria the Great (1937)
 - A Yank at Oxford (1938)
 - If I Were King (1938)
 - The Ware Case (1938)
 - Strange Boarders (1938)
 - Cheer Boys Cheer (1939)
 - Night Train to Munich (1940)
 - Went the Day Well? (1942)
 - The Halfway House (1944)
 - It Happened One Sunday (1944)
 
External links
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