I love that actor who played a Catholic priest in a movie and, as a result, became a Catholic.
I am of course talking about Alec Guinness.
That priest he played was Chesterton’s Father Brown in the 1954 “The Detective.”
In his biography “Blessings in disguise” he writes:
“I hadn’t gone far when I heard scampering footsteps and a piping voice calling, ‘mon pere!’. My hand was seized by a boy of seven or eight, who clutched it tightly, swung it and kept up a non-stop prattle. He was full of excitement, hops, skips and jumps, but never let go of me. I didn’t dare speak in case my excruciating French should scare him. Although I was a total stranger he obviously took me for a priest and so to be trusted. Suddenly with a ‘Bonsoir, mon pere’, and a hurried sideways sort of bow, he disappeared through a hole in a hedge. Continuing my walk I reflected that a church which could inspire such confidence in a child, making its priests, even when unknown, so easily approachable could not be as scheming and creepy as so often made out. I began to shake off my long-taught, long-absorbed prejudices.”
“If I have one regret (leaving aside a thousand failings as a person, husband, grandfather, great-grandfather and friend – and my lazy, slapdash, selfish attitude as an actor) it would be that I didn’t take the decision to become a Catholic in my early twenties. That would have sorted out a lot of my life and sweetened it.” ( p. 560)
Now if you were thinking of another actor playing a priest who just became Catholic and is currently in the news, well then I heard that Shia LeBeouf was influenced by Dietrich von Hildebrand’s “Transformers in Christ”🙂
The Detective (Father Brown) (1954) – Decent Films
Blessings in Disguise – Alec Guinness
On Religion – Sir Alec Guinness, convert – Columns
1 comment
“That priest he played was Chesterton’s Father Brown in the 1954 “The Detective.””
1954…curious. That would be pre-Novus Ordo, wouldn’t it? 🙂
Although my wife and I are exclusively New Mass attendees, we respect the attraction which the Latin Mass holds for those who love it.
Whether a Guinness or a LeBouf, the attraction to the faith is the founder of the faith not the method he is worshipped. Although, those smells and bells surely call to the body and soul of those who are open to them.