Stefan PInto as Cary Grant by Dean Keefer
Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto as Cary Grant Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto
Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto
Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto Stefan Pinto
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facebook STEFAN PINTO as Cary Grant - Photo by Dean Keefer

“Stefan Pinto is a lot like Cary Grant —he’s quite gentlemanly, he’s very sexy and he can deliver a funny line,” David Leddick said in a recent interview for the sold out performance of Mexico City, a musical. “Stefan Pinto is great looking on stage and people really like coming out to see him.” >> Connect with Stefan Pinto on Facebook

     

Cary Grant

"I pretended to be somebody I wanted to be until finally I became that person. Or he became me.” – Cary Grant

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Who is Cary Grant? (from Wiki)
After some success in light Broadway comedies, Cary Grant went to Hollywood in 1931, where he acquired the name Cary Lockwood. He chose the name Lockwood after the surname of his character in a recent play called Nikki. He signed with Paramount Pictures, but while studio bosses were impressed with him, they were less than impressed with his adopted stage name. They decided that the name Cary was OK, but Lockwood had to go due to a similarity with another actor's name. It was after browsing through a list of the studio's preferred surnames, that Cary Grant was born. Grant chose the name because the initials C and G had already proved lucky for Clark Gable and Gary Cooper, two of Hollywood's then-biggest movie stars.

Having already appeared as leading man opposite Marlene Dietrich in Blonde Venus (1932), his stardom was given a further boost by Mae West when she chose him for her leading man in two of her most successful films, She Done Him Wrong and I'm No Angel (both 1933). I'm No Angel was a tremendous financial success and, along with She Done Him Wrong, which was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture, saved Paramount from bankruptcy. Paramount put Grant in a series of indifferent films until 1936, when he signed with Columbia Pictures. His first major comedy hit was when he was loaned to Hal Roach's studio for the 1937 Topper (which was distributed by MGM).

The Philadelphia Story (1940)
Grant starred in some of the classic screwball comedies, including Bringing Up Baby (1938) with Katharine Hepburn, His Girl Friday (1940) with Rosalind Russell, Arsenic and Old Lace (1944) featuring Priscilla Lane, and Monkey Business (1952) opposite Ginger Rogers and Marilyn Monroe. Under the tutelage of director Leo McCarey, his role in The Awful Truth (1937) with Irene Dunne was the pivotal film in the establishment of Grant's screen persona. These performances solidified his appeal, and The Philadelphia Story (1940), with Hepburn and James Stewart, showcased his best-known screen persona: the charming if sometimes unreliable man, formerly married to an intelligent and strong-willed woman who first divorced him, then realized that he was—with all his faults—irresistible.

Grant was one of Hollywood's top box-office attractions for several decades. He was a versatile actor, who did demanding physical comedy in movies like Gunga Din (1939) with the skills he had learned on the stage. Howard Hawks said that Grant was "so far the best that there isn't anybody to be compared to him".

Grant was a favorite actor of Alfred Hitchcock, notorious for disliking actors, who said that Grant was "the only actor I ever loved in my whole life". Grant appeared in such Hitchcock classics as Suspicion (1941), Notorious (1946), To Catch a Thief (1955) and North by Northwest (1959). Biographer Patrick McGilligan wrote that, in 1965, Hitchcock asked Grant to star in Torn Curtain (1966), only to learn that Grant had decided to retire after making one more film, Walk, Don't Run (1966); Paul Newman was cast instead in Torn Curtain, opposite Julie Andrews.