Alfred the Great


10:30 am - 12:45 pm, Tuesday, November 18 on Turner Classic Movies ()

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About this Broadcast
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David Hemmings portrays the would-be priest who became king and put an end to Danish conquests in 9th-century Britain. Michael York, Prunella Ransome. Asher: Colin Blakely. Athelstan: Julian Glover. Roger: Ian McKellen. Ethelred: Alan Dobie. Freda: Vivien Merchant. Buhrud: Peter Vaughan. Ivar: Julian Chagrin. Directed by Clive Donner.

1969 English
Drama

Cast & Crew
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David Hemmings (Actor) .. Alfred
Michael York (Actor) .. Guthum
Prunella Ransome (Actor) .. Aelhswith
Colin Blakely (Actor) .. Asher
Julian Glover (Actor) .. Athelstan
Ian Mckellen (Actor) .. Roger
Alan Dobie (Actor) .. Ethelred
Peter Vaughan (Actor) .. Buhrud
Julian Chagrin (Actor) .. Ivar
Barry Jackson (Actor) .. Wulfstan
Vivien Merchant (Actor) .. Freda
Christopher Timothy (Actor) .. Cedric
John Rees (Actor) .. Cuthbert
Andrew Bradford (Actor) .. Edwin
Michael Billington (Actor) .. Offa
Ralph Nossek (Actor) .. Bishop
Keith Buckley (Actor) .. Hadric
David Glaisyer (Actor) .. Olaf

More Information
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Did You Know..
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David Hemmings (Actor) .. Alfred
Born: November 18, 1941
Died: March 12, 2003
Birthplace: Guildford, Surrey, England
Trivia: When the film version of the Broadway musical Camelot was released in 1967, critics had a jolly old time lambasting director Joshua Logan for casting non-singers in the leading roles. While it's certainly true that Lynn Redgrave, Richard Harris and Franco Nero seemed to suffer from Tin-Ear Syndrome, the critics were most unfair in picking on the fellow who played Mordred: David Hemmings. The son of a cookie merchant, Hemmings was a successful touring boy soprano at age nine, performing with the English Opera Group. He briefly left the musical world when his voice changed, studying painting at the Epsom School of Art and staging his first exhibition at 15. He returned to singing in his early 20s, first in nightclubs, then on the musical stage. Easing into acting, Hemmings appeared as misunderstood youths and belligerent "Teddy Boys" in a number of British programmers before attaining international stardom as the existential fashion photographer "hero"of Antonioni's Blow-Up (1966). With 1971's Running Scared, the indefatigable Hemmings began yet another new career as director; he has since helmed theatrical and made-for-TV films in England, Australia and Canada. With business partner John Daly, Hemmings formed the Hemdale Corporation for the express purpose of allowing the actor to do pretty much what he pleased both before and behind the cameras. In later years, he added novel writing to his considerable list of accomplishments. David Hemmings was the former husband of American actress Gayle Hunnicutt.
Michael York (Actor) .. Guthum
Prunella Ransome (Actor) .. Aelhswith
Colin Blakely (Actor) .. Asher
Born: September 23, 1930
Died: May 07, 1987
Trivia: Irish stage, film and TV actor Colin Blakely worked as a sporting goods salesman before turning to acting in his late 20s. Starting out in theatres in Belfast and Wales, he made his 1959 London debut in Sean O'Casey's Cock-a-Doodle-Dandy. Blakely spent most of the 1960s associated with the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre. Making his first film, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, in 1960, Blakely kept busy before the cameras until the mid-1980s in an exhausting variety of characterizations. Among his more sizeable movie roles was Dr. Watson in 1969's The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes. Colin Blakely's final appearance was in the Masterpiece Theatre TV multiparter Paradise Postponed (1986).
Julian Glover (Actor) .. Athelstan
Born: March 27, 1935
Birthplace: Hampstead, London, England
Trivia: Trained at RADA, spindly British actor Julian Glover made his film bow as Lt. Matherton in the Oscar-winning Tom Jones (1963). Glover has since proven equally adept at chop-licking villainy and eccentric comedy relief. His movie roles include Shrdlu in The Adding Machine (1968), Kristatos in For Your Eyes Only (1977), General Veers in The Empire Strikes Back (1980), King Richard in the made-for-TV Ivanhoe (1982), Walter Donahue in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989), Dr. Livesey in the Charlton Heston version of Treasure Island (1989) and King Gustav in King Ralph (1992). Julian Glover also appeared as megalomanic heavy Dr. Stefan Kilkis in the campy TV series QED (1982).
Ian Mckellen (Actor) .. Roger
Born: May 25, 1939
Birthplace: Burnley, Lancashire, England
Trivia: Widely considered one of the leading British actors of his generation, Ian McKellen has had a rich and varied career encompassing the stage, screen, and television. A renowned stage actor in his native Britain for decades, McKellen was not familiar to most American audiences until the '90s, when he began popping up in a number of well-received films. One of these, Gods and Monsters, elevated the actor into the international spotlight when he earned an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Frankenstein director James Whale.Born May 25, 1939, in the northern English mill town of Burnley, McKellen was the son of a civil engineer. Encouraged by his parents, he developed an early fascination with the theatre. This interest continued when his family moved to the mining town of Wigan, where McKellen began acting in school plays. At the age of 13, he performed in his first Shakespeare play, as Malvolio in a production of Twelfth Night. He gained an additional appreciation for Shakespeare during his summer vacations, when he attended camp in Stratford-upon-Avon and spent the evenings watching the likes of Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh, John Gielgud, and Paul Robeson give life to the playwright's work.Shakespeare played a continuing role in McKellen's life when he went to Cambridge University, where he was offered a place to study English at Saint Catherine's College. This offer was withdrawn two years later, when McKellen's involvement in theatre almost completely eclipsed his studies. His work in student theatre proved invaluable, however, allowing him to work with Derek Jacobi, David Frost, and Trevor Nunn, with whom he would go on to form a lasting professional relationship. McKellen's acting pursuits were also important for another reason: as he would later explain to numerous interviewers, the theatre introduced him to other gay men, something that eased his acceptance of his own homosexuality. McKellen's identity as a gay man would prove almost as defining a characteristic of his public persona as his identity as an actor: a vocal activist, he became one of a handful of openly gay knights when he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 1991.After leaving Cambridge in 1961, McKellen began his professional career at Coventry's Belgrave Theatre, where he acted in a production of A Man for All Seasons. Three years later, he was living in London and working steadily on the stage. He acted in countless productions, a number of which he also directed, and co-founded the progressive Actors' Company in 1972. He earned a score of awards and honors for his work and in 1979 was made a Commander of the British Empire. Two years later, he won international theatrical acclaim with his Tony Award-winning portrayal of Salieri in the Broadway production of Amadeus.McKellen made his film debut in 1969 with a small role in The Promise, the same year that he caused a sensation on the stage with his portrayal of Edward II, which required him to kiss another man. It was not until 20 years later that McKellen became recognizable to international film audiences with his starring role as John Profumo in Michael Caton-Jones's Scandal (1989). Somewhat ironically, a year before gaining fame for playing one of the most infamously heterosexual public figures of the 20th century, McKellen came out to the public as a gay man during a BBC radio program. In 1993, he became recognizable to American television audiences playing gay men in And the Band Played On and Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City, two acclaimed TV miniseries; McKellen earned an Emmy nomination for his work in the former. In 1996, he earned another Emmy nomination for his supporting role in Rasputin.That same year, the actor gained more visibility on the big screen, appearing in Six Degrees of Separation and The Ballad of Little Jo. He continued to turn in strong performances in such films as Cold Comfort Form (1995) and Jack and Sarah (1995), and he earned particular acclaim for his titular performance in Richard Loncraine's 1996 Richard III, for which he also adapted the screenplay. Following subsequent turns in Bent (1997) and Apt Pupil (1998), McKellen starred in Bill Condon's Gods and Monsters, giving a stunning portrayal of James Whale during the director's last days. His performance won a score of international accolades, including Best Actor Oscar and Golden Globe nominations and Best Actor honors from the National Board of Review.After appearing alongside future Harry Potter Daniel Radcliffe in a TV production of David Copperfield in 1999, McKellen stepped into the shoes of the diabolical Magneto in director Bryan Singer's popular comic-book action adventure, X-Men. McKellen stuck with fantasy for his next role as well, this time on a grand scale with his Oscar nominated role as Gandalf the Grey in director Peter Jackson's long-anticipated Lord of the Rings trilogy. Following the massively successful franchise, McKellen would appear in the subsuquent prequel, The Hobbit, as well as films like The Academy and The Da Vinci Code.
Alan Dobie (Actor) .. Ethelred
Born: June 02, 1932
Peter Vaughan (Actor) .. Buhrud
Born: April 04, 1923
Died: December 06, 2016
Birthplace: Wem, Shropshire
Trivia: British actor Peter Vaughan began alternating between stage and screen after his 1959 film bow in Sapphire. Nearly always cast as a frosty authority figure, Vaughan's movie assignments embraced both period films (he was Buhrud in 1968's Alfred the Great) and contemporary dramas (the Policeman in 1963's The Victors). On two occasions, Vaughan's talents were effectively utilized by director Terry Gilliam, first in the role of the Ogre in Time Bandits (1981), then in the part of Mr. Helpman in Brazil (1985). In 1986, Vaughan was seen on TV screens worldwide as the prosecutor in the miniseries Sins. He was seen as Mr. Stevens Sr. in Merchant-Ivory's Remains of the Day. Vaughan had a strong presence on British television for decades, appearing in shows like Fox, Masterpiece Theatre's Bleak House and Chancer. He later became known to an international set with his role of Maester Aemon on Games of Thrones. Vaughan died in 2016, at age 93.
Julian Chagrin (Actor) .. Ivar
Born: February 22, 1940
Barry Jackson (Actor) .. Wulfstan
Born: March 29, 1938
Died: May 12, 2013
Birthplace: Birmingham, England
Trivia: At the age of nine, presented radio broadcasts for Children's Hour. Worked as a stage hand at the Birmingham Rep at the age of 16. Moved to London to become an actor immediately upon getting his O-Levels. Worked as a fight director and stunt man throughout the 1960s, under the name 'Jack Barry'. Portrayed Dr George Bullard in Midsomer Murders from 1998 to 2011.
Vivien Merchant (Actor) .. Freda
Born: July 22, 1929
Died: October 03, 1982
Trivia: On stage from the age of 14 (she played a much-younger orphanage resident in a Peterborough Repertory staging of Jane Eyre) British actress Vivien Merchant hit her stride in the mid-1950s. From 1956 through 1980, Vivien was married to playwright Harold Pinter; she starred or was co-starred in several of his plays, notably as Ruth in The Homecoming. The actress made her first film appearance in Alfie (1966), winning an Oscar nomination for her portrayal of Lily, the bored housewife whose fling with hedonistic Michael Caine culminates in a painful abortion. One of Merchant's most delightful screen turns was also one of the least typical: the air-headed gourmet-cook wife of long-suffering Scotland Yard inspector Alec McCowan in Alfred Hitchcock's Frenzy (1972). Merchant left acting in 1980 after she and Pinter divorced. She died in 1982.
Christopher Timothy (Actor) .. Cedric
Born: October 14, 1940
Birthplace: Bala, Merionethshire, Wales
Trivia: His father Andrew Timothy was a priest at a local church, but then became a well-known BBC announcer. Worked as a tailor for three years before applying to drama school. In the 1960s, was a member of Laurence Olivier's National Theatre Company. Has done regular voice-over work, including for The Sun newspaper and Cornhill Insurance, since the 1970s. Played Jesus Christ in the York Mystery Plays in 1980. Was the subject of This Is Your Life in 2000 when Michael Aspel surprised him on the set of Doctors at the BBC's Pebble Mill studios in Birmingham. Footage of Timothy portraying Hamlet in 2003 was used in the instructional series Humanities Through The Arts. Along with footballer Joe Hart, he backed the We Love Shrewsbury campaign in 2012, which aimed to put the city on the tourism map. Played Father James Brown in The Living Room at the Jermyn Street Theatre in 2013. Supports National League football club Hartlepool United.
John Rees (Actor) .. Cuthbert
Born: March 06, 1927
Died: October 06, 1994
Andrew Bradford (Actor) .. Edwin
Born: September 07, 1944
Michael Billington (Actor) .. Offa
Born: December 24, 1941
Died: June 03, 2005
Birthplace: Blackburn, Lancashire
Ralph Nossek (Actor) .. Bishop
Keith Buckley (Actor) .. Hadric
Born: January 01, 1941
Trivia: Keith Buckley was a young British utility actor who came into films from the stage in the mid 1960s. He was seen in such costume dramas as King and Country (1964), Alfred the Great (1968) and Attack on the Iron Coast (1968). International exposure came to Buckley with such blockbusters as The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) and The Eagle Has Landed (1977). In 1967, the actor was a regular on the British TV anthology Stories of Arthur Conan Doyle; four years later, he played Henry Morgan Stanley (of "Stanley and Livingstone" fame) on the BBC miniseries Search for the Nile, which was networkcast in America in early 1972. Still on call in the 1980s, Keith Buckley showed up with third billing (right behind Michael Caine and Sigourney Weaver) as "Hugo Van Arkaday" in the British/American coproduction Half Moon Street (1986).
David Glaisyer (Actor) .. Olaf

Before / After
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Camelot
07:30 am