Stanley Maxted (21 August 1895 – 10 May 1963) was a Canadian soldier, singer, radio producer, journalist and actor. He worked for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) and later for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) as a war correspondent during World War II. Following the war, he became an actor.
Maxted was a British home child who came to Toronto, Ontario, Canada in 1906 via Fegan Homes. He enlisted in 1915 and fought in World War I. Twice wounded and gassed during the First World War, he survived and became a singer. In the 1930s, he began working for the CBC as a journalist.
Maxted was seconded to work for the BBC in England during the Second World War. Maxted was present at on D-Day and the Battle of Arnhem alongside fellow BBC reporter Guy Byam and newspaper reporters Alan Wood of the Daily Express and Jack Smyth of Reuters. Maxted later covered the war in the Pacific in 1945, which he described as more difficult than reporting from Europe due to the distances covered.
1958
as Col. Butler
1958
as Mr. Moffat
1957
as Henry Fergus
1956
as Colonel
1956
1955
as Curtis B. Ryland
1954
as Oliver Stanton
1953
as Senator
1953
as John Barnes
1953
as Prof. Adams
1949
as U.S. Consul in Heidelberg (uncredited)
1946
as Himself (war correspondent)