Reginald Gardiner

 portrayed Lord Clive Montdrako in the fourth season episode, I Get Your Nannie, You Get My Goat (1967).

Biography
English-born actor William Reginald Gardiner, graduate of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts, became an established revue and musical star on the London stage in the 1930's. His first foray into the film business was in the Alfred Hitchcock-directed The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1927). However, it was in Hollywood where his career really took off. At the prompting of Beatrice Lillie, he departed England for America in 1935. After appearing in two of her shows, he delighted Broadway audiences in "An Evening with Beatrice Lillie and Reginald Gardiner", performing a series of clever impersonations of such inanimate items as lighthouses and wallpaper.

In 1936, he appeared in his first Hollywood film, Born to Dance (1936) (starring Eleanor Powell and James Stewart). Gardiner played a traffic cop with symphonic delusions. His instant popularity resulted in further film offers and he soon found himself in constant demand to impersonate butlers and "silly ass" upper-crust English twits. With his suave attire, thin moustache and obtuse mannerisms, he took to playing those caricatures with obvious glee. He enlivened many a film with his comic presence, most notably A Damsel in Distress (1937), The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942) (his character "Beverly Carlton" brilliantly lampooning Noël Coward) and Cluny Brown (1946).

In later years, Gardiner became a regular on television as co-star of The Phyllis Diller Show (1966) and, in 1964, he returned to the stage to play Alfred P. Doolittle at the New York City Centre (the role made famous by Stanley Holloway in My Fair Lady). John Canaday, reviewing for the New York Times, described his character as a "wonderful, boozy, abominable, bug-ridden and altogether reprehensible charmer, a kind of defrocked Boy Scout, whose love for everybody is exceeded only by his propensity for chicanery and self-indulgence."

Gardiner was also celebrated for his classic monologue, simply called "Trains". It so impressed King George VI that he summoned the actor to Buckingham Palace for a special performance. "Trains" was recorded by Decca and has since become a collector's item.

Source
Reginald Gardiner on the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on January 8, 2020.