Bobby Henrey
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Bobby Henrey | |
|---|---|
Bobby Henrey, Ralph Richardson and Michèle Morgan in The Fallen Idol | |
| Born | 26 June 1939 |
| Occupation(s) | Actor (later an accountant and chaplain)[1] |
| Years active | 1948-1951 |
Robert "Bobby" Henrey (born 26 June 1939) is an Anglo-French former child actor best known for his role as the son of the French ambassador to London in the classic 1948 English film The Fallen Idol, directed by Carol Reed.
Henrey was the son of Robert Selby Henrey, grandson of Sir Coutts Lindsay, 2nd Baronet and his wife, memoirist Madeleine Gal.[2] Gal would go on to write about her son's film career in two of her many volumes of memoirs, the 1948 A Film Star in Belgrave Square and the 1950 A Journey To Vienna. Henrey went on to study at Downside School and Oxford University, where he obtained a degree in language and literature. At age 25, Henrey moved to the United States, eventually settling in Greenwich, Connecticut. He and his wife Lisette Talbert had a son, Edward, a graphic artist and illustrator, and a daughter, Dominique, who died at age 18 from anaphylactic shock after an allergic reaction while in her first year at Columbia University.,[3][4] having suffered all her life from poor health.[5] Roger Greaves, Reading Madeleine Mrs Robert Henrey, authoress, Les Editions d'En Face, 2024.