Brittish Actors

Collection of Classic Brittish Actors

Niamh Cusack
Niamh Cusack
Niamh Cusack

Niamh Cusack is the daughter of the famed Irish actor Cyril Cusack.   She is best known for her role in television’s “Heartbeat”.   She was born in 1959.

“Guardian” article by Nick McGrath from 2011:

The structure of my family is a little odd in that I’ve got three older siblings, Paul, Sinéad and Sorcha, then there’s a 10-year gap until me, closely followed by my brother Pádraig. Then 11 years after I was born came my half-sister Catherine from my father’s second marriage. Catherine was brought up in England but the rest of us were brought up in Ireland and by the time Pádraig and I arrived, the older three were on their way out of the nest and my mum and dad had separated, so really it was just my mum, Pádraig, me and my godmother, Kitty.

My mother ruled the world from her bed. Both my parents were acting when my elder three siblings were growing up but by the time Pádraig and I arrived, Mum was no longer performing. She had a very bad heart and was in bed a lot. I think because of that I didn’t give her much trouble. She was quite an indomitable woman. She was formidable, really, in terms of her energy, and managed to get a lot of things done and influence our lives hugely from her bed.

I’m never quite sure when my parents split up, as it was all a bit vague because he did live in Dublin and the family thing was that he needed to live in Dublin because of his rehearsals, and I sort of bought that for quite a long time. An unusually long time, actually, and probably because that was easier for me to deal with. I think my mother deliberately shielded us emotionally from the split and didn’t share whatever grief and pain she went through with me.

When my dad was around he was quite involved, but he was a bit of a Victorian father. He could be a bit distant but I got to know him much better when I became an actor. Both of my parents were older than a lot of the parents that my friends had and I remember that he came to pick me up from school when I was about seven and the teacher looked out of the window and then turned to us and said, “There is an old tramp outside,” and I knew it was my dad as he had a tendency to wear bits and pieces of costume. He had a very particular style.

I prefer seeing my family one by one than all together. It can be a bit overwhelming when they’re all together, and I’m probably one of the quieter ones. The older three are more natural performers. I’m very proud of my family and as I’ve got older I feel prouder of them.

I’ve become closer to my half sister Catherine since my father died. You can’t engineer relationships, and despite being brought up in two countries with two mothers we still have a lot in common and a lot of similarities as people, and I really think she’s great. It’s weird how easy it is to just slot in. But I think that’s genetic.

Before I had my son, Calam, I think I was living life in black and white. When you have children, life becomes colourful. Everything you taste and notice, how the world is, how other children are. I think life becomes much more vivid when you’re a parent.

My husband, Finbar, and Calam are my biggest passion in life. My family and friends come second and then comes my acting. I think Calam’s already decided acting’s not for him. And that’s fine. All I wish is that he finds something he’s passionate about, the way I’m passionate about acting.

The above “Guardian” article can also be accessed online here.

Jude Law
Jude Law
Jude Law
Jude Law
Jude Law

Jude Law was born in 1972 in London.   His first major break in film was in “The Talented Mr Ripley” in 1999.   Other movies since include “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil”, “Cold Mountain” and “Sherlock Holmes”.

TCM overview:

Plagued with being called a heartthrob and a Golden Boy, British actor Jude Law managed to develop into a respected actor known for tackling challenging and often flawed characters. Though he struggled a bit early in his career to make a name for himself, Law finally burst onto the scene full force with his Oscar-nominated performance in “The Talented Mr. Ripley” (1999). From there, he was suddenly everywhere onscreen, playing a Russian sniper battling a Nazi sharpshooter during the Battle of Stalingrad in “Enemy at the Gates” (2001), a scarred assassin fond of photography in “Road to Perdition” (2002), and a Confederate soldier presumed dead and struggling to make in home in “Cold Mountain” (2003). Though he was often the subject of tabloid fodder due his trouble-plagued relationship with starlet Sienna Miller, Law oscillated between small indies like “I [Heart] Huckabees” (2004) and “Breaking & Entering” (2006) and large-scale studio movies like “The Aviator” (2004) and “Sherlock Holmes” (2009).  .

Born on Dec. 29, 1972 in Lewisham, England, a borough in southwestern London, Law was the son of schoolteachers who encouraged their son to act at an early age. When he was 12 years old, Law began performing with the National Youth Music Theatre. A leading role in “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” led to his TV debut in a musical based on Beatrix Potter’s “The Tailor of Gloucester” (1990). That same year, Law dropped out of school for the British soap, “Families.” Fourteen months after his debut, Law left the series and returned to the stage, touring Italy as Freddie in “Pygmalion” and making a splash in London in “The Fastest Clock in the Universe.” In 1994, Law made an impression on theatergoers in both London and New York as a young man coping with his suffocating parents in “Les Parents Terrible,” particularly for an extended bathing scene in the second act which required complete nudity. Making enough of an impression, he was the only member of the English production invited to reprise his role on Broadway and was honored with a Tony Award nomination for his effort.

Law’s first film role – he played a passive car stealing street kid in “Shopping” (1994) – did little to propel him into the consciousness of American audiences. This set an unfortunate pattern for his early film career throughout much of the 1990s, during which he delivered strong turns in under-performing features. Often touted as the “next big thing,” Law would find himself quickly relegated to the “Who’s he?” list after a string of disappointing films. In 1997 alone, he offered three diverse portraits: the spoiled Lord Alfred Douglas in the well-intentioned biopic “Wilde,” an alcoholic paraplegic in “Gattaca,” and a bisexual hustler who ends up a murder victim in the based-on-fact “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.” In each case, the actor brought energy and charisma to the screen, yet each film failed to find much audience support. His losing streak continued with the barely released “Music From Another Room” (1998) with Jude starring as an artist who reconnects with a girl at whose he birth he assisted, and “The Wisdom of Crocodiles” (1998) as a vampire-like predator. While many believed that David Cronenberg’s sci-fi thriller “eXistenZ” (1999) might finally catapult Law onto the A-list, it proved too esoteric for mainstream audiences.

Law finally caught a break when Anthony Minghella tapped him to play the decadent playboy Dickie Greenleaf who becomes an object of envy to Matt Damon’s “The Talented Mr. Ripley.” Law was perfectly cast, shading the character with – as Janet Maslin wrote in her New York Times review – “the manic, teasing powers of manipulation that make him ardently courted by every man or woman he knows. During the first half of the film, Dickie is pure eros and adrenaline, a combination not many actors could handle with this much aplomb.” With talk of an Oscar nomination – which he later received – Law finally seemed truly on the verge of fulfilling the predictions of his becoming a movie star, though he would take his time getting there, cultivating pet projects before stepping up the pace of his soon-to- skyrocket film career. Prior to the release of “Ripley,” he returned to the London stage and earned strong notices in “‘Tis Pity She’s a Whore,” as well as making his directorial debut with a segment of the omnibus TV-movie “Tube Tales” (1999). Along with his wife Sadie Frost, whom he had met on the set of “Shopping,” and best mates Johnny Lee Miller, Ewan McGregor and Sean Pertwee, Law formed the production company Natural Nylon, with a slate of films in various stages of development.

As predicted, Hollywood came looking for him again in 2001 to take on the leading role in “Enemy at the Gates.” His enigmatic performance soon led to an inspired turn as a gigolo robot in Spielberg’s highly anticipated “A.I.” From there, Law would soon become a highly-coveted talent among Hollywood royalty. In 2002, he had a supporting role as a murderous photographer opposite Tom Hanks in “Road to Perdition,” before coming into his own as a leading man in 2003 when he took over a role initially for Tom Cruise opposite Nicole Kidman and Renee Zellweger in director Anthony Minghella’s “Cold Mountain” an adaptation of Charles Frazer’s best-selling Civil War melodrama. Playing Confederate Army deserter Inman, who flees his unit to return to his beloved Ada (Kidman) at Cold Mountain and faces incredible hardship on his long, harrowing journey back, Law was an utterly believable and compelling screen presence. The actor’s work was rewarded with a spate of critical recognition, including an Academy Award nomination as Best Actor. Of course, his was also subject to some of the prices of fame, which included intense media scrutiny of the gradual, messy breakup of his marriage to Frost.

Law’s next big-screen entry was the retro-yet-original action-adventure “Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow” (2004) opposite Gwyneth Paltrow and Angelina Jolie, in which he played the titular character, a daring aviator in an Art Deco New York, battling giant robots and searching for missing scientists. “Sky Captain” was the first in a succession of Law-headlined films that were released in late 2004: He next appeared in the ensemble of writer-director David O. Russell’s “existential comedy” “I [Heart] Huckabees” as Jason Schwartzman’s rival, an executive climbing the corporate ladder at retail superstore Huckabees, whose seemingly perfect life is explored by a pair of existential detectives. Law had nearly dropped out of the film in favor of a Christopher Nolan project until Russell reportedly ran into Nolan at a Hollywood party, yanked him into a headlock and demanded he release Law. To the surprise of none, the following day the actor called to discuss his “Huckabees” role with no mention of the incident. Law then took on the titular caddish rogue with a comeuppance coming (originally played by Michael Caine) in a remake of the 1960s British comedy, “Alfie.”

He next appeared in the Mike Nichols-directed drama “Closer” opposite Julia Roberts, Natalie Portman and Clive Owen as a pair of couples whose relationships become messily intertwined; the performance was Law’s best of the busy year. The actor also gave his all when he had a cameo as the suave but debauched Hollywood superstar Errol Flynn in Martin Scorsese’s Howard Hughes biopic “The Aviator.” He closed the year as the voice of the title role in the children’s fantasy “Lemony Snicket’s Unfortunate Series of Events.” At the 2005 Oscar ceremony, Law’s now notable ubiquitous visage was notoriously skewered by host Chris Rock, who wondered who Law was to get so many roles, prompting über-serious Sean Penn, who was filming “All the King’s Men” with the actor, to defend Law’s talent from the stage. Later that year more unwanted publicity ensued when Law released a statement apologizing to his then-fiancée Miller for having an affair with his children’s nanny three months into their seven-month engagement. Not surprisingly, the British and American tabloids had a field day. The couple attempted to reconcile, but ultimately called it quits.

In “All the King’s Men” (2006), Steven Zaillian’s botched rehash of Robert Penn Warren’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Law joined a promising cast that included Penn, Kate Winslet, Anthony Hopkins, Patricia Clarkson and James Gandolfini. Unfortunately, talent could not make up for bad production all around, as the respected original film turned out to be a laughing stock of a remake that was plagued by bad Southern accents, weak acting and a poorly-conceived script. Law next starred in a more palpable film, “The Holiday” (2006), a romantic comedy centered on two women – one British (Kate Winslet) and the other American (Cameron Diaz) – whose torn love lives prompt them to cross the ocean and switches houses for the Christmas holiday. Meanwhile, Law collaborated again with director Anthony Minghella for “Breaking and Entering” (2006), playing a partner at a thriving architecture firm who embarks on a quest of self-discovery and ultimately redemption when he hunts for the burglar who twice broke into his office and stole all his company’s high-tech equipment.

In another remake, “Sleuth” (2007), a play by Anthony Shaffer turned into a 1972 film starring Michael Caine and Laurence Olivier, Law played Milo Tindle (Caine’s character in the original film version), a hairdresser being set up by Andrew Wyke, an older, but wealthy society man (Caine assuming the Olivier role) determined to exact revenge on Tindle for stealing his wife. Following a turn as a celebrity supermodel in Sally Potter’s ensemble media satire “Rage” (2009), Law joined Johnny Depp and Colin Farrell in portraying a transformed version of Heath Ledger’s character in “The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus” (2009), following the overdose death of the actor in 2008. Returning to blockbuster filmmaking, he portrayed Dr. Watson to Robert Downey, Jr.’s titular “Sherlock Holmes” (2009), a rousing action movie that was a global hit at the box office. Meanwhile, Law rekindled his relationship with Miller despite fathering a child after his brief dalliance with model Samantha Burke in 2009, though the couple again split two years later. After starring with Forest Whitaker in the sci-fi thriller “Repo Men” (2010), Law was a messianic conspiracy theorist in Steven Soderbergh’s thriller “Contagion” (2011), which focused on the death and destruction caused by a rapidly spreading virus.

Reprising his role as Dr. Watson, Law starred with Downey, Jr., in the commercially successfully, but critically derided sequel “Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows” (2011). Working with Martin Scorsese in the Oscar-nominated “Hugo” (2011), he was the deceased father of the titular Hugo Cabret (Asa Butterfield), a young boy living in the walls of Paris’ famed Gare Montparnasse railway station. After co-starring with Ben Foster, Rachel Weisz and Anthony Hopkins in the foreign-made drama “360” (2012), Law had a leading role as Alexei Karenina to Keira Knightley’s titular “Anna Karenina” (2012), Joe Wright’s Academy Award-nominated adaptation of Leo Tolstoy’s literary masterpiece. From there, he voiced Pitch Black the Boogeyman in the animated “Rise of the Guardians” (2012), and made some news for dropping out of filming the indie film “Jane Got a Gun” in 2013, the day after director Lynne Ramsay exited the film. Law had signed on to the project exclusively to work with Ramsay.

 

Gerard McCarthy
Gerard McCarthy
Gerard McCarthy

Gerard McCarthy was born in 1981 in Belfast.   He is best known for his role as ‘Kris Fisher’ in “Hollyoaks”.   Hos other TV roles are in “The Vikings” and the current “The Fall” with Gillian Anderson.   His movies include “On Eagles Wing” and “Belonging to Laura”.

Nigel Davenport
Nigel Davenport

Nigel Davenport was born in 1928 in Shelford.   His movies include “Look Back in Anger” in 1959, “The Entertainer”, “A Man For All Seasons” and “Living Free”.   He was the father of actor Jack Davenport.   He died in 2013.

“Telegraph” obituary:

Nigel Davenport, the actor, who has died aged 85, will be best remembered for playing dark, strong, rakish toffs, aggressive heroes, scowling villains – and for what he himself called his “dodgy” eyes.

Whether in films, plays or on television, Davenport’s power largely derived, some thought, from his expressive gaze. It could be even more striking in close-up. Amiable or disturbing, it caused tough guys to wilt and pretty girls to sigh.

Whether he glanced, or glared, grinned or grimaced, Davenport had an unusual magnetism. He also had a kind of rasp in his voice which some called gravelly and others abrasive, and altogether added to his authority.

One of the most versatile and busy of British character actors, after a strong theatrical start Davenport alternated between films and plays for nearly five decades. On the small screen he might be a red-hot titled lover in Howard’s Way; an aggressive boss on a North Sea oil-rig; a moody Yorkshire squire in pre-war England (South Riding); an interfering working-class racehorse owner (Trainer); or King George III in Prince Regent.

He appeared in more than 40 feature films, ranging from a detective in Peeping Tom, via a tough guy among conscripts in The Virgin Soldiers, to a resourceful psychopath who (in Play Dirty) wipes out a whole army encampment on the grounds that “I didn’t like the tea”. He was also the game warden in Living Free who resigns in order to capture lion cubs and transport them to a distant game reserve, and Lord Birkenhead in Chariots of Fire.

Nigel Davenport
Nigel Davenport
Sally Smith
Sally Smith
Sally Smith

Sally Smith was born in 1942 in Godalming, Surrey.   She has featured in such TV series as “No Hiding Place” in 1961, “The Avengers” and “The Benny Hill Show”.   She starred in the series “The Human Jungle”£ as Herbert Lom’s daughter.   She starred in the film “Father Came Too”.

David Hemmings
David Hemmings
David Hemmings

David Hemmings came to international fame with his central performance in the 1966 film “Blow Up” which represented Swinging London of the 1960’s.   He went on to star in such movies as “The Charge of the Light Brigade” and “Alfred the Great”.   His last performance was in “The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen”.   He died suddenly while on location in Budapest in 2003.   He was 62 years old.

“The Guardian” obituary by Tim Pulleine:

David Hemmings, who has died suddenly aged 62 following a heart attack while filming Samantha’s Child in Romania, had a long and varied screen career as an actor, director and producer. But he will be remembered, above all, for his performance in Michelangelo Antonioni’s 1966 film Blow Up, that defining reflection on the swinging 60s in which the Hemmings character – a fashionable photographer reportedly based on David Bailey – is eventually brought face to face with the illusoriness not only of success but of reality itself.

The film’s conclusion, in which the photographer is gradually torn into participation in an imaginary game of tennis, must surely rank as one of the most mesmerising in all cinema. Hemmings’s physical demeanour, combining down-to-earth chippiness with an almost ethereal air of fragility, admirably embodied the themes of a groundbreaking movie, which dissolved the barriers between art and popular cinema.

His co-star list in Blow Up also said much about the talented pool of actors then available to British cinema – Vanessa Redgrave, Sarah Miles, Jane Birkin, Varuschka and Peter Bowles, who became Hemmings’s best friend in the years to come.

Born in Guildford, Surrey, and educated at Glyn College, Epsom, Hemmings had, in fact, begun as a child actor, as well as having been a notable boy soprano, and featuring in English Opera Group performances of the works of Benjamin Britten. After his voice broke, he studied painting at Epsom School of Art, where he staged his first exhibition at the age of 15. He returned to singing in his early 20s, making nightclub appearances before moving on to the stage and gradually into movies.

He first appeared in films as early as 1954, with the Ealing Studios production of The Rainbow Jacket, and took a small role in Otto Preminger’s 1957 version of St Joan. By the turn of the next decade, he was just the right age – and of the right tousled, contemporary appearance – to represent the then burgeoning youth culture on the screen.

Thus he was in pop music quickies like Live It Up (1963) and, more substantially, in an early Michael Winner movie about a group of layabouts in a seaside town, The System (1964), co-starring with Oliver Reed. Hemmings and Reed were, in a sense, the yin and yang of that era’s characteristic look: Hemmings blond and slight, Reed dark and brooding. Nearly 40 years on, by odd coincidence, both men were to appear in Gladiator (2000), during the filming of which Reed died (obituary, May 3 1999).

The acclaim visited upon Blow Up converted Hemmings into an international name and an exemplar of the supposedly liberated alternative culture. But despite appearing alongside Jane Fonda in Roger Vadim’s pop art fantasy Barbarella (1968), he resisted any too ready identification of this kind, notably by playing in two ambitious historical movies, as the ill-fated Captain Nolan in The Charge Of The Light Brigade (1968) and taking the title role of the somewhat misconceived Alfred The Great (1969). Both films sought, it should be said, to tap into the counter-cultural attitudes of the time in which they were made, partly via the presence of Hemmings himself.

In 1972, Hemmings ventured into directing, taking on the suspense thriller Running Scared, in which the chief role was played by Gayle Hunnicutt, his wife from 1968 to 1974, and with whom he had earlier co-starred in Fragment Of Fear (1970). Running Scared, which Hemmings also co-scripted with Clive Exton, was an ambitious, if ultimately flawed, exercise in psychological tension, made in an elliptical narrative style seemingly influenced by Antonioni.

The following year, he directed a more avowedly offbeat picture, The 14, a strange tale, inspired by fact, of a misfit family of four children and their vicissitudes in the wake of their single mother’s demise. Perhaps unsurprisingly, it failed to achieve wide popularity.

Hemmings also formed, with his business partner, John Daly, the Hemdale Corporation, which for some years became a significant force in film production and distribution. But while assuming an executive profile, he continued to appear in front of the camera, sometimes in rather unexpected contexts, such as that of the Italian horror movie Profondo Rosso (1976). His other film roles during the decade were as varied as an upright bomb disposal officer in Juggernaut (1974) and a scheming criminal in The Squeeze (1977).

By the 1980s, however, television work had taken precedence, and he was to be found directing such shows as Magnum PI, Airwolf, The A-Team and Quantum Leap.

Gradually, in fact – and adeptly – Hemmings was shading, as he approached middle age and became physically bulkier, into the domain of the character actor. He gave, for instance, a notable performance as a hardbitten and vindictive policeman, doing his best to frame a suspect, in the New Zealand-made Beyond Reasonable Doubt (1980) – a part in which he embodied a malign authority figure startlingly in contrast to the iconoclastic youthfulness with which he had been identified in earlier times.

The following year, also in New Zealand, he directed and produced a rip-roaring buried treasure yarn, Race For The Yankee Zephyr, again affording conspicuous contrast with the psychological inflections of Running Scared.

It cannot be claimed that, in more recent years, Hemmings maintained a very consistent screen presence, although he continued to be active. Such roles as the colliery owner in Ken Russell’s 1989 film of DH Lawrence’s The Rainbow offered no very great opportunity, and directorial ventures like The Dark Horse (1991) seem not to have been widely seen.

However, there was Cassius, in Ridley Scott’s Gladiator, The League Of Extraorinary Gentlemen (2003) and, more memorably, his appearance in the film version of Graham Swift’s elegiac novel Last Orders (2001), about a group of friends travelling to the seaside to dispose of the ashes of the first of their number to die. The presence of Hemmings – along with other such actors as Michael Caine and Tom Courtenay, who also made their reputations in the new wave British cinema of the 1960s – gave tangible presence to the themes of mortality and changing times. Hemmings’s characterisation of cheery ruefulness in the face of ageing seems all the more plangent in the light of his own early death.

In an interview with the Guardian two years ago, Hemmings was asked if he would still like to direct movies. “Never say never, but I will never direct again,” he replied. “I’m back from America, and I think the time has come to say that all those wonderful Malibu parties are behind me. I have no ambitions, except to paint. I live in a market town, in a mill house with the river running both sides and Somerfield’s car park only a loose nine-iron away, and I really, really, really, love it.”

He is survived by his wife Lucy; a daughter Deborah by his first marriage to Genista Ouvry; a son Nolan by his marriage to Gayle Hunnicutt; and four children, George, Edward, Charlotte and William, by his third marriage, to Prudence J de Casembroot.

· David Leslie Edward Hemmings, actor, director and producer, born November 18 1941; died December 3 2003

To view “The Guardian” Obituary, please click here.

David Hemmings
David Hemmings
Peter Sellers
Peter Sellers
Peter Sellers
 

Peter Sellers wasone of the great film comics of all time.   He was born in Portsmouth in 1925.   He began his career with ‘The Goons’ on BBC Radio.   His first film was “Penny Points to Paradise” in 1951.   He had a major role in the Ealing classic of 1955, “The Ladykillers”.   He made many terrific movies in the the U.K. in the late 1950’s including “The Smallest Show on Earth” and “The Naked Truth”.   In 1963 he had enormous success with “The Pink Panter”.   He went to Hollywood soon therafter to make “Kiss Me Stupid” but suffered a heart attack and was replaced by Dean Martin.   After recovering he went on to make “What’s New Pussycat” and “The Wrong Box”.   One of his last roles was “Being There” and he died of another heart attack in 1980 at the age of 54.

TCM overview:

One of the most accomplished comic actors of the late 20th century, Peter Sellers breathed life into the accident-prone Inspector Clouseau in “The Pink Panther” (1963) and its three sequels, as well as such classics as “Lolita” (1962), “Dr. Strangelove” (1964), “The Party” (1968) and “Being There” (1979). The son of English vaudevillians, his ability to completely transform himself into outrageous comic characters received its first showcase on the legendary radio series “The Goon Show” in the 1950s. Film roles in the 1950s and 1960s were devoted to his knack for mimicry of accents and character types, with Stanley Kubrick’s “Lolita” and “Dr. Strangelove” underscoring his talent for drama as well. His best-known role of Inspector Clouseau surfaced in 1963, and he would return, sometimes reluctantly, to the franchise throughout his life before scoring a personal triumph as the simple-minded gardener who influences the Presidency in Hal Ashby’s “Being There” (1980). Off camera, Sellers could be cold, cruel, even unstable, but when the cameras were rolling, he showed a dedication to performance and humor that made him one of the greatest inspirations to comedians and film fans for decades.

He began life as Richard Henry Sellers on Sept. 8, 1925 in the seaside resort town of Southsea, in Portsmouth, England. His family, who were performers on the British vaudeville circuit, bestowed a particularly morbid nickname upon their son: Peter was the name of a brother who did not survive birth. He took up his family’s profession at an early age, dancing and singing alongside his mother in stage shows when he was just five years old. He became skilled at a variety of talents, including drums, banjo and ukulele, and for a while, he toured as a drummer with various jazz bands. Sellers was also an expert mimic, which he put to excellent use during his service as an airman with the Royal Air Force during World War II. He frequently impersonated his superior officers as a way to gain access into the Officers’ Mess, and made them part of his performances with the Entertainments National Service Association, which put on plays and skits for British troops. His knack for mimicry also served him well in the years after his discharge in 1948. Sellers supported himself by performing stand-up comedy and celebrity impressions on the variety theater circuit, and at one point, secured a meeting with BBC producer Roy Speer by pretending to be radio star Kenneth Horne. The ruse clearly worked, as the 23-year-old Sellers was soon granted an audition, which lead to a role on the popular radio comedy “Ray’s a Laugh,” starring comedian Ted Ray. Audiences had their first glimpse of Sellers’ astonishing voice talent on the series, which allowed him to play everything from an obnoxious little boy to a bizarre older woman.

During this period, Sellers was also performing in an informal group with comics Spike Milligan and Michael Bentine and singer Harry Secombe. The quartet, who dubbed themselves the Goons, recorded their antics at a local pub, and the tape made its way into the hands of a BBC producer, who granted the quartet their own radio series. “The Goon Show” premiered in 1951 and became a massive hit with British audiences, thanks to its surreal humor which parodied traditional radio drama with absurd leaps in logic. Each episode was filled with countless bizarre characters, many of which were voiced by Sellers, including the program’s chief villain, Hercules Grytpype-Thynne; the hapless scoutmaster Bluebottle; the cowardly, flatulent Major Bloodnok (who was based on many of Sellers’ superior officers), and many others. On more than one occasion, Sellers was called upon to voice all of Milligan’s characters as well, and at times, carry out complete conversations between two or more people.

The popularity of the Goons’ radio program led to a few abortive attempts at television series, including “The Idiot Weekly, Price 2d” (ITV, 1956), but most filmed efforts were unable to match the stream of consciousness that comprised their recorded efforts. More successful were the Goons’ comedy LPs and novelty songs, as well as a quartet of films – the feature length “Let’s Go Crazy” (1951), which marked Sellers’ screen debut, “Penny Points to Paradise” (1951), “Down Among the Z Men” (1952), and the shorts “The Case of the Mukkinese Battle Horn” (1956) and “The Running Jumping & Standing Still Film” (1959). The latter, directed by Sellers and Richard Lester, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Live Action Short, and also served as the impetus for the Beatles – all dedicated Goons fans – to hire Lester to direct “A Hard Day’s Night” (1964). The Goons were also acknowledged influences on the members of Monty Python’s Flying Circus, Eddie Izzard, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy author Douglas Adams, Peter Cook, the Firesign Theater and countless British and American television comedies.

In 1954, Sellers began branching out on his own as a supporting player in feature comedies. He quickly established himself as versatile a performer on screen as he was over the radio airwaves, with richly varied characters in some of the greatest British comedies of the late 1950s and early 1960s. He was the nervous Teddy Boy that joined Alec Guinness’s inept criminal crew in Alexander Mackendrick’s “The Ladykillers” (1955), an obsequious game show host in “The Naked Truth” (1957), a baffled military officer in Val Guest’s “Up the Creek” (1958), and most impressively, three roles in “The Mouse That Roared” (1959), including the addled Duchess of the tiny European nation of Fenwick, which declares war on – and defeats – the United States. Several of these pictures were international successes, especially in America, which brought Sellers to the attention of Hollywood. In 1958, he made his stateside debut in “tom thumb” (1958), fantasy director George Pal’s musical adaptation of the Brothers Grimm fairy tale about a tiny hero who outwits a pair of thieves (Sellers and Terry-Thomas).

Sellers’ stature as a film star grew in the 1960s, thanks to several key films. “Never Let Go” (1960) was a thriller that afforded him a rare opportunity to play a straight role as a murderous car dealer, while “I’m All Right Jack” (1959) proved he could bring pathos to his comic roles. His turn as a Communist shop steward who becomes a reluctant strike leader in the latter film earned him a BAFTA for Best Actor in 1959. However, it was Stanley Kubrick’s controversial adaptation of “Lolita” (1962) that made him an international star. His protean nature was given full reign as Clare Quilty, the decadent playwright who attempts to lure Sue Lyon’s teenage Lolita into his depraved world, prompting his murder by Humbert Humbert (James Mason). Kubrick’s version expanded the role considerably, allowing Sellers to don several disguises and accents throughout, including a Germanic doctor, Zempf, who foreshadowed Sellers’ turn as Dr. Strangelove two years later. For his efforts, Sellers was critically acclaimed, as well as a Golden Globe nominee for Best Supporting Actor.

In 1963, Sellers made his first appearance in his most iconic role – that of Chief Inspector Jacques Clouseau in “The Pink Panther.” Fiercely dedicated to fighting crime and upholding the dignity of France, Clouseau is also wildly accident-prone, egotistical to a fault and burdened with an impenetrable accent that transformed English into a wholly unknown language. A supporting character in “Panther,” which was intended as a comic caper series devoted to star David Niven’s gentleman jewel thief, it was Sellers that captured audiences’ attention, and led to a long and tumultuous series of films. The second in the series, “A Shot in the Dark” (1964), followed a year later with Clouseau now the central character. It too was a success, but the relationship between Sellers and director Blake Edwards deteriorated to such a degree that the pair refused to work together again until 1968’s “The Party.” A third Clouseau film, “Inspector Clouseau” (1968), continued the franchise with Alan Arkin in the title role, but it was not a success, prompting MGM to urge Sellers and Edwards to patch up their differences and return to the series for 1975’s “Return of the Pink Panther.”

Clashes such as the one with Edwards were not uncommon for Sellers during his career. In both Europe and America, he soon developed a reputation as a difficult performer, prone to lashing out at castmates over perceived slights. His personal life was also marked by moments of astonishingly casual cruelty towards his spouses and children. His first marriage, to Anne Howe, ended in a difficult divorce that may have been prompted by an affair with actress Sophia Loren; his second marriage, to actress Britt Ekland, was marked by domestic violence spurred by allegations of infidelity. Biographers surmised that Sellers suffered from depression and anxiety over his career, which he often viewed as a failure. Further evidence of his troubled psyche was glimpsed in interviews that asked him about his penchant for disappearing into his characters. His response was that there was no “Peter Sellers,” but rather, a blank slate that adapted to the needs of the role.

The greatest example of the extent to which Sellers could immerse himself into a role was perhaps Kubrick’s “Dr. Strangelove, Or How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the Bomb” (1964). The black comedy, about a series of political blunders which lead to World War III, allowed Sellers to play several roles: U.S. President Merkin Muffley, British officer Lionel Mandrake, and the sinister Dr. Strangelove, a wheelchair-bound nuclear scientist whose crippled body seemed hellbent on betraying his Fascist past. Sellers was initially asked to also play Major T.J. “King” Kong, the U.S. Air Force officer who rides the bomb bronco-style as it descends on the Soviet Union, but an injury forced Sellers to abandon the role, which was given to veteran Western performer Slim Pickens. Sellers found both the humor and the horror of the characters in his performances, which received an Oscar nomination, and seemed to indicate that he could move into dramatic roles – his abiding wish. However, he suffered a string of debilitating heart attacks – 13 over the course of a few days – that curtailed his availability. Desperate to return to work, he sought the aid of psychic healers for his condition, which would continue to deteriorate over the next two decades. He also threw himself headlong into film work, which varied, often wildly, in quality.

Sellers longed to play romantic roles, such as his singing matador in “The Bobo” (1967), but audiences responded more to his buffoonish turns, like the accident-prone Indian actor in Edwards’ “The Party” (1968) or the Italian jewel thief who poses as a film director in order to smuggle gold out of Europe in the Neil Simon-penned “After the Fox” (1966). He attempted to play James Bond in the all-star vanity project “Casino Royale” (1967), but abandoned the film after clashing with co-star Orson Welles and, allegedly, realizing that the film was in fact, a comedy and not a straight action piece. The end of the decade, which saw him diving into the counterculture with “I Love You, Alice B. Toklas!” (1968) and “The Magic Christian” (1969), which co-starred his close friend, Beatle Ringo Starr, also marked the conclusion of his lengthy tenure as a movie star for some years.

The first half of the 1970s was a period of deep personal and public failure for Sellers. His marriage to Eklund had ended on an explosive note in 1968, and his 1970 marriage to Australian model Miranda Quarry followed suit in 1974. His film career was in total freefall; pictures like “There’s a Girl in My Soup” (1970), “Ghost in the Noonday Sun” (1973), which reunited him with Spike Milligan, and “The Great McGonagall” (1974), were box office disasters. Sellers’ health also continued its downward spiral due to his reluctance to treat his condition with Western medicine, and a growing dependence on alcohol and drugs. The spell of bad luck broke in 1974 with the fourth “Pink Panther” film, “Return of the Pink Panther,” which reunited him with Blake Edwards once again. The result was a colossal hit for Sellers, and a career revival that lasted for the remainder of his life.

However, Sellers was mentally and physically unprepared for the rush of attention and work that came in the wake of “Return.” His relationship with Edwards had crumbled. By the time they began the rushed sequel to “Return,” 1976’s “The Pink Panther Strikes Again,” Sellers was unable to perform many of his own physical gags, and Edwards would later describe his emotional state at the time as “certifiable.” “Strikes Again,” however, was another hit, with Golden Globe nominations for the film and its star, who began working in earnest on several films. “Murder By Death” (1976) was an all-star parody of detective films, with Sellers playing a short-tempered version of Charlie Chan, while “The Prisoner of Zenda” (1978) was a lukewarm adaptation of the familiar Anthony Hope novel about a commoner (Sellers) recruited to impersonate his look-alike, the king (also Sellers) of a tiny European country. Sellers, however, had his attention fixed elsewhere.

For several years, he had worked in earnest to secure the film rights to Jerzy Kosinski’s novel Being There, about a simple gardener who becomes the confidante to the rich and powerful. The project went before cameras in 1979, with Sellers giving one of his richest performances in a role that seemed tailor-made for him – a man with no discernible personality, yet the ability to fascinate and inspire so many around him. The film was a critical and audience success, and won Sellers a Golden Globe and an Oscar nomination. The validation and acclaim, however, would be short lived.

Sellers had suffered another punishing heart attack in 1977, which required him to be fitted for a pacemaker. Though he had resisted having heart surgery for years, he finally relented, and in 1980, was slated to undergo an operation in Los Angeles. Just days before the surgery, Sellers suffered a massive heart attack which sent him into a coma. He died two days later on July 24, 1980, just one day before a scheduled reunion dinner with his Goon Show partners, Spike Milligan and Harry Secombe. He was survived by his fourth wife, actress Lynne Frederick, and his three children. At his funeral, the Glenn Miller song “In the Mood” was played for mourners. It was a fitting touch for a man who reveled in the darker side of humor; the song was reportedly one that the 54-year-old Sellers had long hated.

While the Hollywood community mourned his premature loss, the anarchy that swirled around Sellers continued to broil after his death. In 1979, Blake Edwards shocked many by releasing “Revenge of the Pink Panther,” which featured Sellers in outtakes from several of the previous films. It was roundly panned, but did not dissuade him from cobbling together another Clouseau movie, “Trail of the Pink Panther” (1982), from outtakes. Sellers’ final film, a dismal comedy called “The Fiendish Plot of Fu Manchu,” which he also co-directed, was released in 1980. Edwards would continue to labor over the Pink Panther franchise for two more films – “Curse of the Pink Panther” (1983), with Ted Wass as a Clouseau-esque policeman, and “Son of the Pink Panther” (1993), with Roberto Begnini as Clouseau’s illegitimate offspring – both of which were disastrous failures. Sellers’ estate was also the source of considerable dismay for his family members.  .

 The above
Janette Scott
72 Janette Scott
Janette Scott

Janette Scott. TCM Overview

Janette Scott (born 14 December 1938) is an English actress. She was born in MorecambeLancashire.

She is the daughter of actors Jimmy Scott and Thora Hird. She started her acting career as a child actress known as Janette Scott, and was briefly (along with Jennifer Gay) one of the so-called “Children’s Announcers” providing continuity links for the BBC‘s children’s TV programmes from the Lime Grove Studios in the early 1950s.

She became a popular leading lady, one of her best known roles being April Smith in the 1960 film School for Scoundrels, based on the “One-upmanship” books by Stephen Potter, in which Ian Carmichael and Terry-Thomas 

competed for her attention. Scott wrote her autobiography at the age of 14.

Her film appearances include The Day of the Triffids; her appearance there is referenced in The Rocky Horror Picture Show:.

TCM Overview:

Sabrina
Sabrina
Sabrina

Sabrina obituary in “The Independent” in 2017.

Cheshire teenager Norma Sykes came to London in 1953, determined to become a successful model. Before long her image was on the cover of Blighty, a men’s magazine that offered cartoons and short fiction, along with its photographs of scantily clad women.

Liverpool comedian Arthur Askey invited her into BBC television series Before Your Very Eyes. The “dumb blonde” was a cliché of 1950s popular culture and Askey decided that Sykes would be the literal personification of this stereotype. In June 1954 Askey was ending a run of the farce The Love Match at the Palace Theatre in London, where the next attraction would be the Broadway hit Sabrina Fair – this inspired Sykes to ditch the name Norma. On 18 February 1955, billed as the “a glamorous new playmate for Big-Hearted Arthur”, Sykes shimmered into the Britain’s living rooms to become an overnight sensation. Within a month she had accumulated more than 500 press cuttings.

English actress and glamour model Sabrina (Norma Ann Sykes) wearing lurex trousers and a tight sweater, circa 1957. (Photo by Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images)

She invested her BBC salary in elocution and singing lessons, while a variety tour was arranged to meet the overwhelming demand to see “television’s newest personality” in the flesh. Monday 4 July at the Chiswick Empire should have been “independence from Askey” day for her, but her inexperience showed. Four changes of costume – pink, blue, black, silver – ensured that she was seen to advantage but when it came to singing “Do It Again” she was inaudible.

Nevertheless, business was solid at the provincial theatres where she appeared. In Manchester the emergency services were summoned to control the crowds. That October, cinemagoers were introduced to Sabrina, film actress, in Stock Car. Playing Trixie, the decorative companion of a minor villain, this was a chance for her voice to be heard, literally. However, before the picture was released her character was revoiced in a coarse East End accent that was not her own.

Sabrina returned to Before Your Very Eyes, where she continued to distract male guests like bodybuilder Joe Robinson, and she was also seen to effect as the hostess in Hughie Green’s quiz show Double Your Money. In March 1956, Askey invited her to his daughter Anthea’s wedding. When Sabrina emerged from her taxi, a dozen photographers zoomed in on the famous cleavage, temporarily ignoring star guests like Norman Wisdom.

Between 1956 and 1958 the cinema newsreels and press cameramen followed Sabrina around as she judged beauty contests, posed with exotic birds, visited disabled people, attended film premieres and negotiated the London streets in her enormous American saloon with the S 41 personalised number plate. After Stock Car there had been occasional gag shots in comedies like Blue Murder at St Trinian’s, and in Make Mine A Million, Askey’s 1959 spoof of the BBC, she looked absolutely gorgeous, revealing – in her one proper dialogue scene – a light, attractive voice. But if there was to be no film stardom, her face and figure were nonetheless known to everyone in Britain.

An extensive portfolio of “cheesecake” photographic sessions generally depicted Sabrina taking her ease in basque and negligee. Nudity was not necessary: it was enough for her 18in waist to contrast with her spectacular bosom. This decorous level of titillation was as suitable for mainstream journals like Photoplay and Picturegoer as it was for the pocket-sized booklets like Spick and Span available from certain newsagents. Fans with 8mm projectors could obtain short colour movies for private viewing. The short film At Home With Sabrina exposed her daily routine, which apparently included hoovering and some light gardening with a trowel, after which she relaxed in swimsuit and sunglassses. Goodnight With Sabrina concentrated on her disrobing for a bubble bath, the soapy froth covering her modesty, before retiring to bed.

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From the start, comedians had only to mention Sabrina to raise a laugh: she was immortalised on canvas, parodied in the West End revue For Amusement Only, a Sabrina bar and grill opened in Wardour Street, and a samba incorporating her name was composed by the bandleader at the Orchid Ballroom, Purley.

In late 1956 she made a record herself: “Persuade Me” was put across with a breathless intimacy guaranteed to arouse the interest of the male population. Hollywood tough guy Steve Cochran was Sabrina’s regular escort during this period, and for a while the couple appeared inseparable, whether holidaying on the French Riviera or enjoying a romantic rendezvous in Santa Monica.

In late 1957 Sabrina made another stage foray, in a Robert Nesbitt revue at the Prince of Wales theatre. Plaisirs de Paris starring Dickie Henderson. Sabrina played gamely enough in the comedy interludes (for a sketch entitled “Are You Fully Covered?” she was aptly cast as “the Risk” opposite Henderson as “the Insurance Broker”), and genuinely dazzled as Helen of Troy in “The Realms of Venus”, one of the extravagant  chorus numbers. When this show was presented at the Tivoli in Sydney the following year, she was promoted to leading lady. Australian reactions to “the talk of two hemispheres” – as the theatre’s programme described her – were enthusiastic. Before a polar expedition sailed from Melbourne for the Antarctic, one of the amphibious craft was named after her; then she travelled north to a thousand-acre sheep station, to model dresses from the local wool.

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Sabrina entered America in late 1958, making her debut with a 40-minute cabaret act in Manhattan’s Latin Quarter, and subsequently toured most of the United States. In 1961 she was invited to feature “as herself ” in Satan In High Heels, a sexploitation melodrama involving junkies, burlesque dancers, murder and seduction, but her participation was mainly confined to a night club sequence in which she performed a couple of blues numbers.

In 1964 there was a last professional appearance on British television. ABC’s network arts programme Tempo had, in order to analyse the genre, commissioned an original farce entitled You Mitre Guessed. The standard ingredients of unworldly vicar, deaf housekeeper, suspicious policeman and inconvenient blonde were assembled, with Sabrina primarily required to scamper around in a diaphanous night-dress and sit on laps.

From 1965 she was based on the West Coast, and in late summer of 1966 was on the legitimate theatre stage in a Los Angeles production of  the West End success Rattle of a Simple Man – essentially a play for two actors concerning the unexpected rapport between a Soho prostitute and her girl-shy client. For once, Sabrina was taken seriously.

In 1967 there were a couple more film assignments: a Z-grade western shot in Mexico, The Phantom Gunslinger, starring opposite Troy Donahue; and Mountains of the Moon, a double-episode adventure in Ron Ely’s Tarzan television series. As this latter aired in November, Norma Sykes married wealthy Hollywood gynaecologist Dr Harold Melsheimer, and set up home in a Spanish-style villa at West Toluca Lake, Encino, California.

Showbusiness receded into the background, although her husband’s professional standing in Hollywood maintained her in a life of luxury. Ten years later they divorced, leaving Sabrina with a spacious Los Angeles residence in the million-dollar price bracket, and her own Mercedes. She died of blood poisoning last year aged 80, but her death was only announced until this month.

Sabrina (Norma Ann Sykes), model and TV personality, born 1936, died 24 November 2016

Cyril Young died in 2013