Richard Chamberlain
(Actor)
.. Prince Edward
Born:
March 31, 1934
Birthplace: Los Angeles, CA
Trivia:
American actor Richard Chamberlain was a star in his first appearance--as the Pied Piper in the 3rd grade. While attending Pomona College, Chamberlain decided to study acting in earnest, honing his craft in little theatre productions. His All-American handsomeness gained him entry into film and TV work; Chamberlain starred in the title role of the NBC weekly series Dr. Kildare in 1961. It was one of two major medical programs premiering that year; the other was Ben Casey. Chamberlain's first starring film, Twilight of Honor (1963) did little to shake his male ingenue image--nor did his first job after the cancellation of Kildare, the notoriously disastrous musical play Holly Golightly (most reviewers thought this celebrated fiasco would kill both Chamberlain's and co-star Mary Tyler Moore's careers). In the late 1960s, Chamberlain headed for England to seek work in the classics. He first starred in a 1970 stage production of Hamlet, which became one of the pinnacles of his career. Several prestigious film, stage and TV appearances later, Chamberlain headlined the 1980 television multi-part drama Shogun and the 1983 miniseries The Thorn Birds which led critics and viewers to crown him "King of the Miniseries." Following a lead role in the poorly-received big screen efforts King Solomon's Mines (1985) and its sequel, Allan Quartermain and the Lost City of Gold (1987) (which critics blasted as low-budget Indiana Jones knockoffs) Chamberlain harkened back to the small screen, and continued to make periodic appearances in telemovies throughout the eighties, nineties and early 2000s. Key roles included Jason Bourne in a 1988 adaptation of Robert Ludlum's The Bourne Identity, and a 1991 reworking of Charles Laughton's Night of the Hunter (with Chamberlain assuming the Robert Mitchum part). He also landed guest appearances in such series as Touched by An Angel, Will and Grace, and The Drew Carey Show The actor made headlines in 2003 - not simply because of the debut of his autobiography, Shattered Love: A Memoir, but because the actor - around whom rumors of homosexuality had swirled for years -- finally 'outed' himself officially. (He and his partner, Martin Rabbett, have been together for twenty-five years and live in Hawaii). Young Dr. Kildare no more, Richard Chamberlain is today a highly respected actor whose very presence in the cast list of a film or miniseries is a guarantee of distinction and class.
Gemma Craven
(Actor)
.. Cinderella
Annette Crosbie
(Actor)
.. Fairy Godmother
Born:
February 12, 1934
Birthplace: Gorebridge, Midlothian
Trivia:
Scotland-born actress Annette Crosbie spent her early stage years alternating between classics and contemporary plays. Her rare screen appearances include The Public Eye (1972) and The Slipper and the Rose (1976). She has enjoyed international fame not from her stage or screen work but from her TV assignments. Annette Crosbie was seen as Catherine of Aragon in The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1971); as Queen Victoria in Edward the King (1979); and with Michael Hordern, Peter Egan and David Threlfall, Crosbie was one of the four major stars in the Masterpiece Theatre offering "Paradise Postponed" (1986).
Edith Evans
(Actor)
.. Dowager Queen
Born:
February 08, 1888
Died:
October 14, 1976
Birthplace: London, England
Trivia:
Formidable English character actress Edith Evans was celebrated for her unique voice and speech pattern. As a young woman, she held down a job while studying acting at night. In 1912 she made her professional stage debut, going on to become famous for her glorious performances of the classics both on the London stage and later on Broadway. Evans appeared in two silent films, A Welsh Singer (1915) and East Is East (1916), then went three decades before her next screen appearance, in The Queen of Spades (1949); in the meantime she devoted herself to the stage. After three films she again went seven years without a screen role, then after 1959 she began appearing in films more frequently. For her work in both Tom Jones (1963) and The Chalk Garden (1964) she received "Best Supporting Actress" Oscar nominations; for The Whisperers (1967) she won the New York Critics Award for "Best Actress," and was nominated for a "Best Actress" Oscar. Evans was an inspiration to generations of younger British stars, many of whom considered her to be their greatest influence in their professional lives. In 1946 she was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire. Her authorized biography is Dame Edith Evans: Ned's Girl (1978) by writer-director Bryan Forbes.
Michael Hordern
(Actor)
.. King
Born:
October 03, 1911
Died:
May 03, 1995
Trivia:
A graduate of Britain's Brighton College, Michael Hordern entered the workaday world as a schoolteacher. Engaging in amateur theatricals in his off-hours, Hordern turned pro in 1937, making his film debut two years later. After serving in the Royal Navy from 1940 to 1945, Hordern returned to show business, matriculating into one of England's most delightful and prolific character actors. His extensive stage work included two Shakespearean roles that may as well have been for him: King Lear and The Tempest's Prospero. In films, Hordern appeared as Marley's Ghost in the 1951 Alastair Sim version of A Christmas Carol (1951), Demosthenes in Alexander the Great (1956), Cicero in Cleopatra (1963), Baptista in Zeffirelli's Taming of the Shrew (1967), Thomas Boleyn in Anne of a Thousand Days (1968), and Brownlow in the 1982 TV adaptation of Oliver Twist. Other significant movie credits include the lascivious Senex (he's the one who introduces the song "Everybody Ought to Have a Maid") in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (1966), a pathetic Kim Philby type in The Spy Who Came in From the Cold (1967), theatre critic George Maxwell (who has his heart cut out by looney actor Vincent Price) in Theatre of Blood (1973), and what many consider his finest film assignment, the dissipated, disillusioned journalist in England Made Me (1983). He also served as offscreen narrator for Barry Lyndon (1976) and Young Sherlock Holmes (1985). Michael Hordern was knighted in 1983, and a decade later published his autobiography, A World Elsewhere.
Lally Bowers
(Actor)
.. Queen
Born:
January 01, 1916
Died:
January 01, 1984
Kenneth More
(Actor)
.. Lord Chamberlain
Julian Orchard
(Actor)
.. Montague
Born:
January 01, 1929
Died:
January 01, 1979
Margaret Lockwood
(Actor)
.. Stepmother
Born:
September 15, 1916
Died:
July 15, 1990
Birthplace: Karachi, Pakistan
Trivia:
Born in India to a British railway clerk, Margaret Lockwood was educated at London's Italia Conti School. After training for an acting career at RADA (several years after her official stage debut at age 12), she made her first film in 1935, billed as Margie Day. After a series of inconsequential ingenues, Lockwood was given a role with teeth in Hitchcock's The Lady Vanishes (1938). She had a brief Hollywood career (two films' worth) in 1939, then returned to England, where throughout the 1940s she specialized in beautiful but diabolical adventuresses. She left the screen in favor of the stage in 1955, then made a long overdue return to films in The Slipper and the Rose (1976). Books on Lockwood's career include her own autobiography Lucky Star (1955) and Hilton Tims' Once a Wicked Lady (1989). Margaret Lockwood was the mother of British film actress Julia Lockwood.
Christopher Gable
(Actor)
.. John
Born:
January 01, 1940
Died:
October 23, 1998
Trivia:
Lead actor Christopher Gable first appeared onscreen in 1969; Gable is formerly a star of the Royal Ballet.
Polly Williams
(Actor)
.. Lady Caroline
Keith Skinner
(Actor)
.. Willoughby
Rosalind Ayres
(Actor)
.. Isabella
Born:
December 07, 1946
Birthplace: Birmingham, England
Trivia:
Is perhaps best known for her role as Lady Duff-Gordon in the 1997 romantic epic Titanic. In 2011, provided the voice and motion capture performance for the main antagonist of the video game Uncharted 3: Drake's Deception. Runs the radio production company Jarvis & Ayres Productions alongside her husband. Received the UK Radio Academy's award for Best Drama and Readings Producer. Is a supporter of the National Brain Appeal.
John Turner
(Actor)
.. Major Domo
Born:
July 07, 1932
Birthplace: London
Sherrie Hewson
(Actor)
.. Palatine
Norman Bird
(Actor)
.. Dress Shop Proprietor
Born:
October 30, 1920
Died:
April 22, 2005
Birthplace: Coalville, Leicestershire
Trivia:
British character actor Bird has been onscreen from 1954.
Peter Graves
(Actor)
.. General
Born:
January 01, 1911
Died:
June 06, 1994
Trivia:
Not to be confused with the silver-haired American star of Mission: Impossible, Peter Graves was a popular British character actor whose five-decade career encompassed stage and feature films. He first attracted notice while starring in the 1934 London Palace Theatre production of the musical Streamline. Graves made his feature film debut in Carol Reed's Kipps (1941). His subsequent film credits include The Admirable Crichton (1957), The Magic Christian (1969), and The Woman He Loved (1988).
Gerald Sim
(Actor)
.. First Lord of the Navy
Born:
February 04, 1925
Birthplace: Liverpool
Trivia:
British character actor, onscreen from the '60s.
Elizabeth Mansfield
(Actor)
.. Ladies in Waiting
Ludmilla Nova
(Actor)
.. Ladies in Waiting
Roy Barraclough
(Actor)
.. Tailor
Patrick Jordan
(Actor)
.. Prince's Guard
Geoffrey Bayldon
(Actor)
.. Archbishop
Born:
January 07, 1924
Birthplace: Leeds
Trivia:
A British character actor, Bayldon was onscreen from the '50s.
Valentine Dyall
(Actor)
.. Second Major Domo
Born:
May 07, 1908
Died:
June 24, 1985
Birthplace: London
Trivia:
British actor Valentine Dyall was a well-known radio performer of the '40s, introducing a weekly "scare" series with "This is your storyteller....the Man in Black." In films, Dyall looked more like a bank president than the voice of doom, and was cast accordingly. On stage since 1930 and films since 1942, Dyall remained busy into the '80s. Some of Dyall's best-known films include The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943), Henry V (1945) (as the Duke of Burgundy), Caesar and Cleopatra (1946), Brief Encounter (1946), The Haunting (1963), The Wrong Box (1967) and Casino Royale (1967). Valentine Dyall made many of his final appearances where he began, on radio: he was indispensable to many Halloween broadcasts of the '70s and '80s, sometimes nostalgically recreating "The Man in Black."
Bryan Forbes
(Actor)
.. Herald
Born:
July 22, 1926
Died:
May 08, 2013
Trivia:
"The world of Bryan Forbes is one of wisps and whispers," noted film critic Andrew Sarris in 1968, citing the "muted" quality of director Forbes' best films. While his directorial output does indeed exhibit an inbred sense of quietude and subtlety, Forbes started out on stage in the more loudly demonstrative category of "actor." After wartime service, Forbes made his film-acting debut in The Small Back Room (1948). He continued as a performer and screenwriter until 1961, when he made an auspicious directorial bow in Whistle Down the Wind (1961). He subsequently directed (and sometimes produced and/or wrote) such critical and audience favorites as The L-Shaped Room (1962), Seance on a Wet Afternoon (1964), King Rat (1965), The Whisperers (1966), The Stepford Wives (1975) and Hopscotch (1980). From 1969 through 1971, Forbes was chief of production/managing director of EMI Studios. Bryan Forbes was married to actresses Constance Smith and Nanette Newman respectively, the latter appearing prominently in many of his films of the 1960s. He was named a Commander of the British Empire in 2004 for his services to the arts. Forbes died in 2013 at the age of 86.
Tim Barrett
(Actor)
.. Minister
Born:
May 31, 1929
Died:
August 20, 1990
Birthplace: London, England
Vivienne McKee
(Actor)
.. Bride
Andre Morell
(Actor)
.. Bride's Father
Born:
August 20, 1909
Died:
November 28, 1978
Trivia:
A versatile, cerebral character actor of British stage, screen, and TV, he worked in amateur theater for four years before making his professional stage debut in 1934; his first London appearance came in 1936. In 1938 he both joined the Old Vic company and debuted onscreen. His acting career did not, however, begin to bear much fruit until after he returned from service in World War Two (with the Royal Welsh Fusiliers). He was very busy onscreen throughout most of the '50s, playing leads in several horror films. He starred on the BBC-TV show Quartermass and the Pit. He served as President of British Actors Equity in 1973-74. He was married to actress Joan Greenwood.
Myrtle Reed
(Actor)
.. Bride's Mother
Peter Leeming
(Actor)
.. Singing Guard
Eva Reuber-Staier
(Actor)
.. Princess
Tessa Dahl
(Actor)
.. Princess