Age, Biography and Wiki

Warner Oland (Johan Verner Öhlund) was born on 3 October, 1879 in Nyby, Västerbottens län, Sweden, is an actor,soundtrack. Discover Warner Oland's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 59 years old?

Popular As Johan Verner Öhlund
Occupation actor,soundtrack
Age 59 years old
Zodiac Sign Libra
Born 3 October 1879
Birthday 3 October
Birthplace Nyby, Västerbottens län, Sweden
Date of death 6 August, 1938
Died Place Stockholm, Stockholms län, Sweden
Nationality Sweden

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 3 October. He is a member of famous Actor with the age 59 years old group.

Warner Oland Height, Weight & Measurements

At 59 years old, Warner Oland height is 5' 11" (1.8 m) .

Physical Status
Height 5' 11" (1.8 m)
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
Eye Color Not Available
Hair Color Not Available

Who Is Warner Oland's Wife?

His wife is Edith [Gardener] Shearn (actress) (7 January 1908 - 6 August 1938) ( his death)

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Edith [Gardener] Shearn (actress) (7 January 1908 - 6 August 1938) ( his death)
Sibling Not Available
Children Not Available

Warner Oland Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Warner Oland worth at the age of 59 years old? Warner Oland’s income source is mostly from being a successful Actor. He is from Sweden. We have estimated Warner Oland's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Charlie Chan Carries On (1931)$10,000
The Black Camel (1931)$12,500
Charlie Chan's Chance (1932)$20,000
Charlie Chan's Greatest Case (1933)$20,000
Charlie Chan's Courage (1934)$20,000
Charlie Chan at the Olympics (1937)$30,000
Charlie Chan on Broadway (1937)$30,000
Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo (1937)$30,000

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Timeline

1879

Warner Oland was born Johan Verner Olund in the small village of Nyby in Bjurholm parish in the county of Vasterbotten, Sweden, on October 3, 1879. Bjurholm is situated about 60 kilometers outside the town of Umea.

1892

His family emigrated to the US on October 15, 1892. His father Jonas was a shopkeeper and his mother was Maria Johanna (nee Forsberg).

1906

Oland got a big break when the actress Alla Nazimova spotted him performing Shakespeare and signed him to her 1906 touring company of Ibsen's plays.

1910

After finishing grade school and working on Broadway during his 20s, Oland settled in California in the early 1910s, where he worked odd jobs.

The movie industry was in its beginning stages in Hollywood, and Johan Olund--changing his name to the more Americanized "Warner Oland"--worked as a stage actor for a while before getting small parts in films in the 1910s and 1920s.

1912

He and his wife, Edith, were instrumental in translating the works of playwright August Strindberg into English. Their translation of some of these plays was published in book form in 1912.

1920

As Hollywood made the transition from silent to sound pictures in the late 1920s (Oland co-starred in Warner Brothers' groundbreaking part-talkie The Jazz Singer (1927)), he began landing more prominent roles.

1926

After almost 15 years in silent films, he had one of the starring roles in "Don Juan" (1926), the first film with synchronized sound. He also had a starring role in the "The Jazz Singer" (1927), the first "talkie.".

1930

The Chan films were budgeted approaching 1930s A-picture levels (approximately $275,000) and were usually shot within tight 30-day schedules, three films per year (sadly, a number of these have apparently been lost). The series was pretty much the only guaranteed profit-maker the ailing studio could bank on during the days leading to its takeover by ex-Warner's production chief Darryl F.

1931

His greatest success came in 1931 when he was cast in the role of Charlie Chan, a Honolulu-based Chinese-American police detective in Charlie Chan Carries On (1931), based on the popular detective mystery series by Earl Derr Biggers [1884-1933] which was produced by Fox Films.

His performance as the seemingly mild-mannered but razor-sharp Asian detective won him critical acclaim, which resulted in his playing Chan again in the sequel, The Black Camel (1931). The success of the Chan character turned into a cash cow for Fox Studios and Oland became a valuable property. It seems incredible today, but in Fox's pre-Shirley Temple period, Oland was considered the only guaranteed profit maker on the lot. He became wealthy and bred miniature schnauzers. Although seemingly happy, Oland became increasingly dependent upon alcohol and exhibited bizarre delusional behavior after periods of drinking.

Oland appeared in a total of 16 Charlie Chan feature films from 1931 to 1937.

From 1931 to 1935 Oland did other films besides the Chan series, but he was increasingly relegated to roles that didn't vary much beyond mysterious Asians, and in mid-1935 he became so identified as Charlie Chan that he was assigned to the series exclusively. His last eight films were all Chan entries, usually co-starring Keye Luke, who played Chan's Number One Son. While considered somewhat stereotypical today, these films were met with wide critical acclaim and all were hugely profitable.

1935

Zanuck in 1935, that resulted in its transformation from Fox Films into Twentieth Century-Fox.

1936

The best of the series is generally considered to be Charlie Chan at the Opera (1936), featuring lavish set design and a particularly effective menacing villain in Boris Karloff.

1937

Oland's physical and mental problems slowly began to catch up to him, and in 1937 he was said to have suffered a nervous breakdown apparently due to some kind of mental dementia. The Fox executives, knowing that Oland was one of its biggest money earners, kept his alcoholism and mental problems hidden from the public.

In November 1937, Edith, his wife of 30 years, filed for divorce.

1938

In January 1938 "Charlie Chan at (the) Ringside" began production at Fox's Western Avenue lot under the direction of James Tinling with an increasingly erratic Oland. After a few days shooting inside Studio 6, Oland walked out and never returned. He was heard complaining the studio was possessed by voodoo and feared contracting pneumonia. Over the next month there were numerous negotiations between Oland and SAG (Oland had been an early member) and production was briefly resumed, then suspended after Oland again failed to report to work. He was hospitalized and released, then decided to return to his mother's home in Sweden. Oland's film career, unbeknown to him, was over. In the interim, producer Sol M. Wurtzel, desperate to salvage the property, ordered the Chan picture reworked as Mr.

Moto's Gamble (1938), with minor supporting cast changes.

Successful negotiations were made with the Biggers' estate and the film was quickly shot with Peter Lorre and released April 7, 1938. The film itself remains an anachronism in the Moto series, as it contains much Chan-like dialog, tacked on Moto-esque action scenes and a guest-starring role by Keye Luke. Regardless, it was also a hit.

During his visit to Sweden, Oland negotiated a reconciliation with Edith but contracted bronchial pneumonia and died there on August 6, 1938, at age 57. Ironically, Fox contract (and Chan series) director John G. Blystone died the same day. Numerous actors were tested to fill Oland's shoes as Charlie Chan, among them Cy Kendall, Walter Connolly, J. Edward Bromberg, Noah Beery Jr.. , Michael Visaroff and Leo Carillo (Kendall and Connelly had played Chan on radio).

The series continued at Fox for another 11 entries with Sidney Toler, who was signed by Zanuck in mid-October 1938. Toler injected more humor into the character as scripts became somewhat more pedestrian.

During that movie's production in August 1938, cast and crew learned of Oland's passing in his native Sweden.

1939

Moto's Last Warning (1939).

1942

By 1942 Fox considered the series exhausted and it would ultimately be sold to low-budget studio Monogram Pictures and continue on even after Toler's death in 1947 with Roland Winters in the role through six dismal films into 1949. In a postscript, Fox director Norman Foster paid a subtle tribute to Oland in the next Moto film, Mr.

2002

Biography in: "American National Biography". Supplement 1, pp. 461-462. New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.