His parents were Charles Sawforde Arliss and Annie Eleanor Lilian "Nina" Barnett Hill. He was not the son of George and Florence Arliss as has sometimes been reported erroneously.
Arliss began his professional career as a journalist in South Africa. Later he branched out into being a critic.
In 1938 it was reported he was writing a script on Rob Roy for Gainsborough Studios but the film was not made.[4] He worked in Hollywood in 1937 and 1938.[5] He did some work for Sam Goldwyn and wrote an unfilmed story of Tchaikovsky.[6]
The success of Noël Coward as a writer and director with In Which We Serve (1942) led to the British film industry encouraging writers to become directors.[7]
Arliss had the biggest success of his career to date with The Man in Grey (1943), which he co-wrote and directed.[8] It was one of the biggest hits of his career and made stars of its leads, Mason, Stewart Granger, Phyllis Calvert and Margaret Lockwood. Calvert later claimed Arliss was "not at all" responsible for the eventual success of the film, saying "He was a lazy director; he had got a wonderful job there and he just sat back... [producer] Ted Black was the one who would watch it, cut it, and know exactly what the audience would take."[9] Calvert also said ""Arlissing about" became "a Gainsborough byword for slackness."[10]
Arliss' next movie was also a huge hit. Love Story (1944), which he co-wrote and directed, starred Granger, Lockwood and Patricia Roc.
An even bigger success was The Wicked Lady (1945), which Arliss wrote and directed, starring Lockwood and Mason.
He was working on a film called Digger's Republic in 1945.[11] It was later made without him as Diamond City (1948).
Alexander Korda
Arliss turned down Hollywood offers, but in March 1946 he accepted an offer to work for Alexander Korda.[12] (Korda was on a talent-signing spree at the time, also doing contracts with Herbert Wilcox, Edward Black and Anthony Kimmins.)[13] Arliss was put to work on Bonnie Prince Charlie (1948), although he eventually left the project.[14] He directed A Man About the House (1947).[15] Arliss directed Idol of Paris (1948) for Gainsborough's former production chief Maurice Ostrer, but the film was a notorious flop, as was Bonnie Prince Charlie when it was released.
He was meant to make an Egg and I style comedy with Kieron Moore for Korda,[16] but instead he wrote and directed Saints and Sinners (1949), which also did poorly.
1950s films
Arliss prepared a sequel to his greatest success, The Wicked Lady's Daughter, but it was not made.[17] Instead he wrote and directed The Woman's Angle (1952), which was a commercial disappointment.[18]
He did a number of short films in the mid/late 1950s, two of which, Dearth of a Salesman and Insomnia Is Good for You (both 1957), featured Peter Sellers. The films, long believed lost, were rediscovered around 2013.[19]
^"FILM WORLD". The West Australian. Vol. 51, no. 15, 192. Western Australia. 1 March 1935. p. 3. Retrieved 26 October 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
^"Big British Films". The Voice. Vol. 8, no. 52. Tasmania, Australia. 28 December 1935. p. 6. Retrieved 28 September 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
^"NEWS OF THE SCREEN: Warners and Cagney End Litigation; Actor Returns to Studio 14 March--Other Picture Items New Film for Montgomery Coast Scripts Of Local Origin". New York Times. 4 January 1938. p. 18.
^Shippey, Lee (19 January 1938). "The LEE SIDE o' L. A.". Los Angeles Times. p. A4.
^C.A. LEJEUNE (22 November 1942). "LONDON'S CROP OF AMBIDEXTROUS FILM-MAKERS: Noel Coward Established One-Man Vogue With His 'In Which We Serve'". New York Times. p. X3.
^"WHAT GOES ON IN HOLLYWOOD". Sunday Mail. No. 682. Queensland, Australia. 16 May 1943. p. 8. Retrieved 28 September 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
^Brian MacFarlane, An Autobiography of British Cinema, Methuen 1997 p 110
^Sweet, Matthew (25 February 2000). "Film: For love? Hell no, I did it for money Frustrated by the British studios, Phyllis Calvert went to Hollywood. What followed was even worse". The Independent (FOREIGN ed.). London. p. 12.
^C.A. LEJEUNE (7 March 1948). "GLOOM, NOT FOG, ENVELOPS ENGLISH FILM STUDIOS: Expected Upswing in Production Fails to Materialize, but Costs Mount -- Castings". New York Times. p. X5.
^"He waited 7 years to do film". The Mail. Vol. 41, no. 2, 064. Adelaide. 22 December 1951. p. 7 (SUNDAY MAGAZINE). Retrieved 28 September 2017 – via National Library of Australia.