Adolphe Menjou
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Returning from the war, he became a star in such films as The Sheik and The Three Musketeers. When he starred in 1923's A Woman of Paris, he solidified the image of a well-dressed man-about-town. His career stalled with the coming of talkies, but in 1930 he starred in Morocco. He was nominated for an Academy Award for The Front Page in 1931.
In 1947, Menjou cooperated with the House Committee On Un-American Activities in its hunt for Communists in Hollywood. Menjou was an leading member of the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideas, an right-wing group formed to oppose what its members saw as excessive Communist influence in Hollywood. He published his autobiography, It Took Nine Tailors in that year. He ended his career with such roles as a French officer during World War I in 1957's Paths of Glory, and as the town curmudgeon in Pollyanna in 1960.
Menjou has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6822 Hollywood Blvd.de:Adolphe Menjou