Late in Claude Rains's distinguished career, a reverent film journalist
wrote that Rains "was as much a cinematic institution as the medium
itself." Given his childhood speech impediments and his origins in a
destitute London neighborhood, the ascent of Claude Rains (1889-1967) to
the stage and screen is remarkable. Rains's difficulties in his
formative years provided reserves of gravitas and sensitivity, from
which he drew inspiration for acclaimed performances in The Invisible
Man (1933), Mr.