David Landau (actor)


David Landau was an American stage and film actor who appeared in 33 films from 1931 to 1935. He appeared on Broadway in 12 plays from 1919 to 1929.

Early life and start of film career

Landau was born in Philadelphia, the son of Robert Magee, who emigrated from County Londonderry, Ireland and listed his occupation as gardener on the 1880 census. His mother, Maryann, was Pennsylvania-born of Irish and English descent. Landau studied law at the University of Pennsylvania. To improve his diction, Landau took a class in dramatics and later abandoned his law studies. Before appearing in his first film in 1931, he performed on Broadway and in many other stage productions.

Personal life and death

Landau's first wife was legally concluded by a court to have been actress Frances Landau. In his will, he questioned whether Frances had obtained a legal divorce from her previous husband, Edwin T. Emory, in 1900, before she had married him in 1903. Landau directed in his will that if Frances could prove her legal divorce from her previous husband, she should receive “the smallest legal amount” possible. His will left his estate to Delight Howell, “the best friend I ever had … in payment for her loyalty in spite of adversity”. According to the 1930 U.S. census, he was living with her in New York at that time. Howell is listed as "Lodger". Frances Landau claimed that Howell had taken advantage of her husband to make him believe that he and Frances had never been legally married. His funeral announcement in the Los Angeles Times referred to him as " beloved husband of Delight Landau"; his obituary in the New York Times cited "Mrs. Delight Landau, his widow, survives".
In 1934, Magee suffered a stroke from which he never recovered. He is buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.

Partial filmography