- In the final years of his life, he claimed that he had never seen Dracula (1931) and didn't care to. He asked that people NOT send him any videos of it.
- One of the earliest recipients of a Hollywood "Walk of Fame" star, though it was later removed for reasons which have never been formally disclosed.
- Earned $2,000 a week during filming of Dracula (1931), as leading man John Harker. Top-billed Bela Lugosi only earned $500 a week. However, this discrepancy is misleading. Manners was under contract to Warner Bros./First National. Studios "loaned out" their contract players to each other at rates considerably higher than the performers' weekly salaries, and kept the profit.
- Wrote spiritual novels in his later years. In 1971 he published "Look Through, An Evidence of Self Discovery".
- He made four films with Helen Chandler. Two of the films were made at Warner Brothers/First National and one was made at Fox. Their most famous pairing, Dracula (1931), was made at Universal.
- Manners was a gay man. In 1948, he met playwright Frederic William Mercer and the two lived together as partners for 30 years until Mercer's death in 1978.
- In 1940 he officially changed his name to David Joseph Manners and became a citizen of the US.
- "Manners" is his mother's maiden name.
- After leaving films in 1936, he purchased a CineKodak 16mm movie camera and began making his own productions in and around his ranch, chronicling his life. The footage was stolen and never recovered.
- Once worked at a New York art gallery and served as a cowboy guide out west.
- Studio publicity tongues claimed he was a descendant of William the Conqueror.
- He left Hollywood abruptly in 1936, still a popular and in-demand actor, in part for having been harangued bitterly by Joan Crawford for turning down a role in a picture she was making.
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