Brittish Actors

Collection of Classic Brittish Actors

Brian Aherne
Brian Ahearne
Brian Ahearne

 

Brian Aherne was born in Kings Norton, England in 1902.   He made his talkie debut in 1931 in the British film “Madame Guillotine”.   By 1935 he was in Hollywood where he made such films as “Sylvia Scarlet”, “Jurez”, “Vigil in the Night” and “My Son, My Son”.   He graudated into character parts in the 50’s and made such films as “Titanic”, “The Swan” with Grace Kelly  and “The Best of Everything”.   In the 60’s he was in “”Susan Slade” with Troy Donahue and Dorothy McGuire and “Rosie” with Rosalind Russell and Sandra Dee.   He died in 1986 at the age of 64.

TCM overview:

British born Brian Aherne possessed the attributes that all but guaranteed him a career in motion pictures, in that he was a polished stage performer, came across as a cultured gentleman and was also quite handsome. He first made his name in America as one of the stars of Broadway’s “The Barretts of Wimpole Street” (1931) and was soon gracing such notable features as “Sylvia Scarlett” (1935), “Beloved Enemy” (1936), “The Great Garrick” (1937), and “Juarez” (1939). While he did not generate the same degree of publicity as the major stars of the time, Aherne was a respected actor and reliable box office draw who earned a great deal of money from his film assignments. He continued to appear in gems like “A Night to Remember” (1942), “The Locket” (1946), “I, Confess” (1953), and “The Best of Everything” (1959), but also took breaks to do stage work. These detours usually found him either back on the Great White Way or in touring productions of old standbys like “My Fair Lady,” where his interpretation of Professor Henry Higgins proved a hit with audiences. Following his retirement in 1967, he penned sharp and amusing books about his life and that of longtime friend and colleague, George Sanders. While he only starred in a handful of classic movies, Aherne was welcomed by audiences of the era for the touches of charm and sophistication that he could be counted on to display in most any role.

Brian Aherne was born William Brian de Lacy Aherne in King’s Norton, Worcestershire, England on May 2, 1902. He began to log stage credits at the princely age of nine and continued to perform over the years that followed. Aherne became a member of the Birmingham Repertory Theatre in his late teens and while he had studied architecture at Malvern College, it became clear that acting was his true calling. Engagements in such West End productions as “Paddy the Next Best Thing” (1923) and “White Cargo” (1924) soon followed, and he also toured Australia in several additional plays. Cinematic opportunities were also soon on the horizon. Aherne debuted in the silent crime drama “The Eleventh Commandment” (1924) and graced several other pictures before making his first sound feature, a spy thriller called “The W Plan,” in 1930. He was invited to America and his Broadway bow came in “The Barretts of Wimpole Street” (1931), the highly popular and acclaimed comedy that would enjoy many revivals. Aherne was quickly sought out by Hollywood producers and co-starred with Marlene Dietrich, whom he reportedly also dated for a time off the set, in the romantic drama “The Song of Songs” (1933). Additional lead engagements followed in such films as “The Fountain” (1934) and “I Live My Life” (1935), and he returned to the Great White Way to play Mercutio in a revival of “Romeo and Juliet” (1934-35) alongside such talented co-stars as Basil Rathbone and young up-and-comer Orson Welles.

Frederic March took over Aherne’s role in MGM’s pleasing adaptation of “The Barretts of Wimpole Street” (1934), but the debonair and cultured Aherne had plenty of other cinematic work to choose from. One character he did not want was the titular part of swashbuckler “Captain Blood” (1935) and Aherne’s refusal to sign on to the project inadvertently helped launch the career of Errol Flynn. He joined Katherine Hepburn and Cary Grant in “Sylvia Scarlett” (1935) and co-starred with Merle Oberon in the Irish Rebellion drama “Beloved Enemy” (1936). Aherne also had a fine vehicle for his talents in “The Great Garrick” (1937), where he played a fictionalized version of the talented but decidedly egotistical 18th century stage star David Garrick. During this period, Aherne began to guest star on various radio programs and would play roles on “Lux Radio Theater” (WJZ/CBS/WABC/CBS/NBC, 1934-1955) at various times for the better part of almost two decades.

Aherne’s highest-profile credit of the time was the elaborate historical biopic “Juarez” (1939), in which he came off well as Emperor Maximilian opposite notorious firebrand Bette Davis, dominating the screen as unbalanced Empress Carlotta. He was also able to try his hand at the sort of adventure vehicle he had previously shunned as star of “Captain Fury” (1939). While the Australia-set adventure was shot entirely in California, the combination of Western-style plotting supplemented with a dash of Robin Hood-style derring-do made for diverting entertainment. On the personal front, Aherne wed his first wife, 22-year-old actress Joan Fontaine, who found fame that year in “The Women” (1939) and followed up with the superb Alfred Hitchcock efforts “Rebecca” (1940) and “Suspicion” (1941). Fifteen years apart in age, the two made for a highly photogenic couple, but their union proved to be less than smooth sailing.

Aherne was employed by several studios in the 1940s and proved adept at various genres. “Vigil in the Night” (1940) found him playing an empathetic doctor opposite Carole Lombard in a rare drama for the screwball comedienne about the nursing profession, while he and Loretta Young displayed excellent chemistry in the splendid mystery-comedy “A Night to Remember” (1942). He joined a number of fellow ex-patriots in “Forever and a Day” (1943), a drama produced to bolster the British war effort, and the romantic comedy “What a Woman!” (1943), which cast Aherne as a reporter with his eye on publishing executive Rosalind Russell. Movie work proved to be very lucrative for Aherne and a Security and Exchange Commission report revealed that he made $145,000 in 1942, only $5,000 less than Columbia studio chief Harry Cohn. That financial luxury allowed Aherne to occasionally step off the production treadmill and devote his time to other pursuits. In the wake of “What a Woman,” Aherne did not make another movie until “The Locket” (1946), in which he gave an excellent performance as a psychiatrist whose past includes a dangerously unbalanced woman (Laraine Day) who is about to marry anew. Aherne and Fontaine had ended their own union by that point, with the latter citing extreme cruelty as the cause. A few months after their separation was finalized, Aherne wed Eleanor de Liagre Labrot, with whom he would remain for the rest of his life.

Despite the steady flow of opportunities available to him in Hollywood, the stage remained Aherne’s first love and after the adventure “Angel on the Amazon” (1948), he decided to switch his emphasis for a time and acted in productions of plays like “She Stoops to Conquer” (1949-50) and “The Constant Wife” (1951-52). Their runs proved short, however, and he was soon back in features, including Alfred Hitchcock’s “I, Confess” (1953), “Titanic” (1953), and the colorful CinemaScope costumer “Prince Valiant” (1954), in which he portrayed King Arthur. In the wake of other films like Grace Kelly’s final film “The Swan” (1956) and “The Best of Everything” (1959), stage work again returned to the actor’s schedule. He enjoyed his longest run in sometime via a revival of “My Fair Lady” that found him on the road for more than a year as Professor Henry Higgins, the role countryman Rex Harrison had made famous. Aherne also found time for periodic small screen guest star outings during this period and made his best remembered television appearance on “The Trouble with Templeton,” an excellent episode of Rod Serling’s “The Twilight Zone” (CBS, 1959-1964).

 

Aherne started off the 1960s by receiving a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and took his final Broadway bow playing George Bernard Shaw in “Dear Liar” (1960). Now approaching his sixties, he began to slow down, taking supporting assignments in the glossy soap opera “Susan Slade” (1961) and the lower-budget outings “Sword of Lancelot” (1963) and “The Cavern” (1964). Following his work on the Jane Russell comedy “Rosie!” (1967), Aherne announced his retirement and penned the well-received A Proper Job: An Autobiography of an Actor’s Actor (1969). He followed up a decade later with A Dreadful Man: The Story of Hollywood’s Most Original Cad: George Sanders, a wry and entertaining tribute to Aherne’s troubled longtime friend and fellow thespian, who took his own life in 1972. In distinct contrast to Sanders, Aherne’s own final years were spent in quiet repose. He succumbed to heart failure at a hospital in Venice, FL on Feb. 10, 1986.

By John Charles

The above TCM overiew can also be accessed on line here.

Ann Sidney
Ann Sidney
Ann Sidney

Ann Sidney is from Poole in Dorset.   She won the Miss World Beauty Contest in 1964.   During her tenure she joined Bob Hope and his group touring the Far East visiting U.S. troops in Vietnam.   She was featured in “You Only Live Twice” and “Sebastian” both released in 1967.   Her website can be accessed here.

Ann Sidney recalls in “Flashbaack Telegraph UK:

This is the moment that I was crowned Miss World, and I think you can see from my face that I didn’t quite believe it. I was 19 years old, from Poole in Dorset, and before this my travel experience consisted of going to the Isle of Wight with my bicycle. I didn’t expect to win; I was meant to start a new job in a hairdressing salon in a John Lewis department store the Monday after the competition. The first thought that went through my mind was, ‘I’d better call John Lewis and tell them I won’t be at work.’

We had 10 days of rehearsals and going on trips, including one to the House of Commons to listen to a debate, and we were treated like royalty. In those days Miss World was the most-watched programme on television. One night we had a big ball with everyone from Sean Connery to Roger Moore among the guests. I got some flowers from Paul Getty with a card saying, ‘You’re my choice, good luck in the competition.’   After this photo was taken we were whisked away to Café de Paris for the coronation ball. By the end of the evening I realised that I hadn’t called my mum and dad, so I kept trying to call them from a phone booth in the lobby, but their phone was permanently engaged. I finally managed to speak to them about two in the morning when I was back in my room – they had had all the neighbours round to watch the show.   As Miss World I was awarded a year’s contract as ambassadress for the International Wool Secretariat, which involved promoting the industry across the globe. That year was a blur. I travelled five times around the world in first class with my 15 suitcases, and a limousine always greeted me as soon as I stepped off a plane. I was on television shows everywhere and it was a great experience.

But at the end of the year suddenly I was the ex-Miss World, last year’s model. I had always wanted to be an actress so I joined a repertory theatre in Manchester, which paid me £12 a week. It was the best thing I could have done because it brought me straight back to earth. From then on I continued to act. I’m not saying I made a big break, I didn’t, bu I did have roles in television programmes including The Avengers, Are You Being Served? and in the Bond film You Only Live Twice, and I’ve been lucky enough to do a job I love ever since.
annsidney.com

This page can also be accessed online on “Telegraph” here.

Dora Bryan
Dora Bryan
Dora Bryan

Dora Bryan was one of the delights of British cinema of the 1950’s and 60’s.   She was born in Southport, Lancashire in 1923.   She entertained British troops in Italy with ENSA during World War Two.   After the War she appeared on the London stage in theatrical revues.   In 1948 she was featured in the classic “The Fallen Idol” and quickly became a notable character actress.  She had a good role in the initial Carry On “Carry on Sargent” in 1958.    She had a rare starring role in 1961 in “A Taste of Honey” with Rita Tushingham.   In 1966 she succeeded Mary Martin on the London stage in “Hello Dolly”.   On television more recently she was in “Absolutely Fabulous” and “Last of the Summer Wine”.   She died in July 2014.

“Guardian” obituary:

Dora Bryan, who has died aged 91, started out as a dancing and singing actress, making her first professional appearance at the age of 12 in Manchester with the 23 other girls of the Eileen Rogan Drury Lane Babes in Jack and the Beanstalk. She excelled as the plain-speaking young woman from the north, and the presence this gave her brought a wide range of work on stage and screen in the decades following the second world war.   Her basic stage personality – bright, streetwise but unworldly – was squeezed into Restoration comedy, the Hello Dolly! lead in the West End (twice), JB Priestley’s An Inspector Calls at the Chichester Festival theatre and Meg, the guesthouse keeper oblivious of the sexual and other power-play in Pinter’s The Birthday Party at the National Theatre. In 2001 she contributed to the mayhem in an episode of Absolutely Fabulous, and she continued in TV comedy until 2005, as Ros Utterthwaite in Last of the Summer Wine.   Her most substantial film role came in A Taste of Honey (1961). But from the first, Bryan could make even makeweight characters come alive, as with the kindly streetwalker in the film of Graham Greene’s The Fallen Idol (1948), who gives a lost boy a touch of needed feminine warmth and understanding. A part that could have set the teeth on edge was redeemed by the catchy humour of the acting.

She was born Dora May Broadbent in Southport, Lancashire, and brought up in a village near Oldham. Her father, Albert Broadbent, owned a small mill that went bankrupt, forcing him to sell bobbins from door to door, sometimes taking Dora with him. Her mother, Georgina (nee Hill) encouraged her to perform in public.     Dora saw her family background as happy, but was attracted by the potential extra attention that acting offered. The first live show she saw, Peter Pan, gave her the urge to play Peter. After seeing Ingrid Bergman in Intermezzo, she spoke with a Swedish accent until an adored elder brother told her not to be so silly.   Though she won a place at grammar school she did not take it up, preferring to join the Drury Lane Babes and then, on leaving school, went into pantomime at Glasgow. The following year she was in Mother Goose in London with Max Wall.   After the London Academy of Music and Manchester Repertory School, she joined Oldham Rep as an assistant stage manager. During the second world war she travelled to Italy with ENSA to entertain the troops.

She went to London to seek her stage fortune, and got her first big chance when she replaced a sick cast member in a London production of the celebrated thriller Gaslight. The Fallen Idol provided her first film role.   While in Emlyn Williams’s play Accolade (1950), she entertained him offstage with some of her comedy routines: he invited her to one of his big parties, at which impresario Binkie Beaumont was present. She quickly became the star of The Lyric Revue. It took 14 curtains on the opening night and ran for two years.   By the time she was 37, Bryan had appeared in 28 films without ever having her name above the title. This improved after Shelagh Delaney’s A Taste of Honey, in which she played the harridan mother, unsympathetic to the heroine’s emotional injuries. Theatrical recognition had come earlier, when after the first night of a 1955 production of AP Herbert’s The Water Gypsies, the billing outside was changed to “Dora Bryan in AP Herbert’s The Water Gipsies.   The previous year she had married Bill Lawton, and they went on to run a hotel in Brighton. She had to leave the cast of The Water Gipsies when she became pregnant, but the child died after being born prematurely – the first of two such misfortunes. She insisted on going ahead with a Granada TV series, believing work would be a healer, but had a nervous breakdown and did not work again for nine months until the comedy actor Ronald Shiner asked her to play his wife in The Love Birds at the Adelphi (1957).

For a time Bryan was prone to depressive interludes. By the end of the 1970s she was attending Alcoholics Anonymous and pledging herself to Christ at the behest of Cliff Richard, who starred with her in a Billy Graham film production. However, Bryan was a great survivor, and her later years were some of the most productive of her career. In 1996 she was appointed OBE.   In 1963 her single All I Want For Christmas Is a Beatle was voted Best Bad Record on Top of the Pops. She was delighted. In her 70s, she was proud that she could still do the splits.

Bill and her daughter, Georgina, predeceased her. She is survived by her sons, Daniel and William.

• Dora May Bryan, actor and singer, born 7 February 1923; died 23 July 2014

Anthony Valentine
Anthony Valentine

Anthony Valentine was born in 1939 in Blackburn, Lancashire.   His first film role pf prominence was in 1962 in Joseph Losey’s “The Damned” as one of the thugs terrorising Shirley Anne Field.   His other film appearances include “Performance” in 1970, “Tower of Evil” and “To the Devil A Daughter” in 1976.   On television he has starred with Margaret Lockwood in “Justice” between 1971 and 1974.   The following year he starred as the title character in “Raffles”.   More recently he has appeared as George Wilson in “Coronation Street”.   He died in 2015.

His “Independent” obituary:

Anthony Valentine exuded charm and sophistication but made his name on television as psychopathic Toby Meres in Callan and ruthless Nazi Major Mohn in Colditz. Both roles, which brought him fame in the 1970s, typecast him as a screen “nasty” for years. “There must be something in me that other people see,” the former child star once told me. “They must have a sixth sense that says, ‘He looks a bit dodgy,’ or, ‘I don’t like him.’ I find that strange because, inside, I feel just as warm and friendly as the next guy.”

Alongside Edward Woodward’s title character in Callan (1967-72), a brutal drama set in the world of intelligence and intended as an antidote to the James Bond films, Valentine chillingly portrayed fellow agent Meres as a cold-blooded licensed killer, an upper-class thug who enjoys his deadly work.

He brought the same sadistic qualities to menacing Luftwaffe security officer Horst Mohn in the final series of Colditz (1974), based on Major Pat Reid’s memoirs of his time in a German prisoner-of-war camp. Valentine also proved adept at depicting another side of Mohn’s personality with his pathetic attempts to get the PoWs to testify that he treated them well as the Third Reich’s imminent defeat becomes clear.

He played a more debonair character, albeit on the wrong side of the law, as the gentleman jewel thief in Raffles (1975-77), adapted from EW Hornung’s short stories. AJ (Arthur) Raffles was a cricketer and amateur cracksman and, unlike Valentine’s previous notorious characters, disapproved of violence.

He was born Tony Valentine in Blackburn, Lancashire, where his parents, Mary (née Walsh) and William, worked in a cotton mill. When he was six, the family moved to south London and Valentine’s mother, a fan of Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly film musicals, enrolled him in dancing lessons.

At the age of nine he was spotted tap-dancing in a stage version of Robin Hood at Ealing Town Hall and chosen to act in the film thriller No Way Back (1949). Then, while training at the Valerie Glynne Stage School and attending Acton County Grammar School, he appeared in the film The Girl on the Pier (1953) and had various roles on television, including Trout in Emil and the Detectives (1952).

On leaving school, children’s TV kept Valentine busy, casting him as Humphrey Beverley in The Children of the New Forest (1955), JO Stagg in Rex Milligan (1956) and Lord Mauleverer (1955), then Harry Wharton (1956-57), in Billy Bunter of Greyfriars School. He also sang in the children’s magazine show Whirligig – accompanied by Steve Race on the piano – and for two seasons in operas at Sadler’s Wells Theatre.

Making the successful transition to adult acting, Valentine performed in repertory theatres around the country. He also enjoyed invaluable experience at the Royal Court Theatre in 1958 with roles in John Osborne’s Epitaph for George Dillon and Arnold Wesker’s Chicken Soup with Barley. Back on television, he played Gerald Quincey in the Francis Durbridge serial The Scarf (1959) and, switching to the classics, took a dozen parts in An Age of Kings (1960), the BBC’s Shakespeare anthology series.

Fame in Callan led Valentine to be cast in two other thriller series, playing Vickers in Scobie in September (1969) and Philip West in Codename (1970). He also acted barrister James Eliot (1974) in the final series of Justice, a popular legal drama starring Margaret Lockwood.

This celebrity made him a popular panellist in television game shows such as Call My Bluff (between 1974 and 1981), but he began to find good, strong starring roles hard. So he simply made guest appearances – as streetwise gambler Maurice Michaelson in Minder (three episodes, 1979-83), charming black marketeer Squadron-Leader Dickie Marlowe in Airline (1982) and evil sorcerer Baron Simon de Belleme in Robin of Sherwood (1984 and 1985).

He then bounced back with several leading roles. After acting sinister Tony Slater, one of the partners in crime, in The Fear (1988), he was cast in Body & Soul (1993) as Stan Beattie, the stubborn manager of an ailing north of England mill coming into conflict with the young nun (played by Kristin Scott Thomas) who takes charge of it after the death of her brother. Then came the part of smuggler George Webster (1994-96) in the Customs & Excise drama The Knock.

Guest roles continued, including a 36-episode run in Coronation Street as George Wilson (2009-10), the grandfather of Simon Barlow (Alex Bain) and father of Lucy Richards (Katy Carmichael), who had died after splitting up with her bigamist husband, Peter Barlow (Chris Gascoyne). On discovering his newly found grandson, retired builder George spoiled him and offered to pay for a private education, to the annoyance of Simon’s other grandfather, Ken Barlow (William Roache).

Valentine’s occasional film appearances included Joey Maddocks, a bookmaker contending with James Fox’s east London gangster, in Performance (1970), SS Major Volkmann, the sadistic town commandant, in Escape to Athena (1979) and the British ambassador in Jefferson in Paris (1995). On the West End stage, Valentine acted in The Shifting Heart (Duke of York’s Theatre, 1959), Two Stars for Comfort (Garrick Theatre, 1962), Half a Sixpence (Cambridge Theatre, 1962), No Sex, Please – We’re British (Strand Theatre, 1971-72), as the assistant bank manager, Peter Hunter, Sleuth (St Martin’s Theatre, 1972) , Hans Andersen (London Palladium, 1977) and Art (Wyndham’s Theatre, 1999-2000).

Valentine, who was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2012, was married to the actress Susan Skipper (née Cook), who met him when she guest-starred in Raffles. They also appeared on screen together in the 1979 television production of the Ivor Novello musical The Dancing Years.

The above “Independent” obituary can also be accessed online here.

David Yelland

David Yelland was born in 1947.   He read English at Cambridge University.   In 1981 he played “Edward 8th” in “Chariots of Fire”.   He also played Leo McKern’s son Nicholas Rumpole in the series “Rumpole of the Bailey”.   He continues to act regularly in many of the popular British television dramas.   His daughter is the famed stage actress Hannah Yelland.

Vinnie Jones
Vinnie Jones
Vinnie Jones

Vinnie Jones was born in 1965 in Watford.   He was a reknowned footballer and played for Leeds United and Chelseaamong others.   In 1998 he made his feature film debut in “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels” directed by Guy Ritchie.   Other films include “Snatch”, “Gone in 60 Seconds” and “X-Men”.

TCM Overview:

One of the toughest of England’s “hard men” of football, Vinnie Jones parlayed his notoriety as a talented if ruthless player for championship teams into a career as a supporting actor and occasional lead in films on both sides of the Atlantic. Jones’ movie roles rarely asked him to do more than provide a physically imposing presence, but from time to time – most notably in Guy Richie’s “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels” (1998) – he displayed a knack for comic delivery as well. He also successfully parodied his two-fisted soccer persona in a string of popular television ads in England, making him a bit of public treasure in his homeland.

Born Vincent Peter Jones in Watford, Hertfordshire, England on Jan. 5, 1965, Jones’ soccer career began with the semi-professional Wealdstone Football Club and the Swedish club IFK Holmsund, before joining the Wimbledon Football Club in 1986. Jones quickly earned a reputation as an aggressive player – he set a still-unbroken record of earning a yellow flag (which cites a second warning from an official and removal from the game) after only five seconds of play, and earned admirers and detractors alike for distracting an opposing player by grabbing his testicles. Despite these and numerous other offenses, Jones helped to earn the Wimbledon team the Football Association Cup – the highest honor in English football – in 1988.

Jones left Wimbledon in 1989 and played for several other teams, including Chelsea and Leeds, before returning to Wimbledon in 1992. During his tenure in Leeds, he proved that he was able to play at the top of his skill set without resorting to dirty tricks. However, after returning to Wimbledon, he solidified his image as a brawler by hosting “Soccer’s Hard Men,” a direct-to-video compilation of footage featuring Jones and other players getting tough on the field. The Football Association publicly excoriated Jones for his participation and fined him 20,000 pounds.

While completing his final stint with Wimbledon, Jones’s record of 384 games and 33 goals earned him a spot on the Wales International Team, for which he played from 1994 to 1997. He eventually brought his professional sports career to a close with a stint as player/coach for the Queens Park Rangers in 1998. He retired from the game a year later after being passed over as the team’s manager; instead focusing on the business of living up to his reputation.

First on the docket was an autobiography, Vinnie, which was published in 1998. He quickly followed this with a string of television commercials which played up to his sports persona to great effect. His film career got off to a rollicking start with Guy Ritchie’s crime caper romp “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels,” in which he played Big Chris, the stone-faced and brutal debt collector for porn magnate “Hatchet” Harry Lonsdale (P.H. Moriarty). Jones’s dry delivery was perfect for the offbeat character, which brought his equally taciturn son with him on collection jobs, and it brought him the first of two Empire Awards; the second came for his reunion with Ritchie on the more star-studded (Brad Pitt, Benecio Del Toro) but less clever “Snatch” (2001).

Jones made his Hollywood debut as a taciturn car thief named “The Sphinx” in Dominic Sena’s overblown remake of “Gone in Sixty Seconds” (2000), and quickly settled into a string of roles in mediocre American product that emphasized his imposing figure, including “Swordfish” (2001) and “The Big Bounce” (2004). In his native England, however, Jones got his first chance to play a lead in “Mean Machine” (2001), a remake of “The Longest Yard” (1974), which cast him as an imprisoned former soccer champ who organizes a team from his fellow cons to play against the jail’s guards. Jones also cut an album of blues and soul covers titled Respect in 2002, and began a long and lucrative collaboration with Bacardi in spots for UK television. These came to an end in 2003 after Jones was convicted of assaulting a crew member on board a Virgin Atlantic flight.

Jones manfully handled the crooks and cronies he was assigned in a handful of bland action and comedy pictures for most of 2004 and 2005; his sole notable character during this period was, appropriately enough, a berserk soccer hooligan in the otherwise dim teen sex comedy “Eurotrip” (2004), which again gave Jones a showcase for his comic skills. He later proved that he could capably handle a lead role (and even a smattering of romance) in the little-seen Irish crime drama “Johnny Was” (2005), which cast him as a crook attempting to stay straight, despite the temptations of his former mentor (Patrick Bergin) and his girlfriend (Samantha Mumba).

Jones enjoyed another comic turn as a hard-nosed soccer coach in “She’s the Man” (2006), a likable teen comedy about a female soccer prodigy (Amanda Bynes) who must dress as a boy in order to play for a prestigious team. That same year, Jones was used to excellent effect as Cain Marko, the unstoppable and flippant mutant known as Juggernaut in “X-Men: The Last Stand” (2006) who makes life difficult for Ellen Page’s Kitty Pride in one tense chase scene through walls. Jones reportedly made enough of an impression on the film’s producers that his character was spared in the film’s room-clearing final assault, and was signed to future related projects.

In 2006, Jones appeared in several UK television ads promoting greyhound racing for the bookmaker company Ladbrokes; Jones was a recognized figure in that sport as both a greyhound owner and racing enthusiast. On the film front, he remained remarkably busy, and if the projects rarely allowed him to show much range, he had established himself as a dependable “type,” capable of handling most genres. In his native country, he acquitted himself nicely opposite such acclaimed talents as Vanessa Redgrave and Derek Jacobi in “The Riddle” (2007), a mystery about a sports reporter (Jones) who sets out to solve a murder connected to an unpublished Charles Dickens manuscript. Hollywood, however, continued to cast Jones as pure muscle; he was the most villainous of a group of criminals dispatched to a private island to compete in a televised elimination match in “The Condemned” (2007), a lunkheaded if entertaining exploitation effort that featured World Wrestling Entertainment hero “Stone Cold” Steve Austin in his first starring role. Jones even took to American television to help Austin promote the movie at “No Way Out,” a 2007 pay-for-view wrestling event promoted by the WWE.

Jones’ schedule was booked solid for most of 2008 and 2009; he was cast as a subway serial killer in the gruesome horror film “The Midnight Meat Train” (2008), which was directed by Japanese cult filmmaker Ryuhei Kitamura and based on a short story by acclaimed novelist Clive Barker. True to form, he then shifted gears to play a Biblical heavy in “Year One” (2009), a Judd Apatow-produced comedy set in ancient times that reunited “Superbad” (2007) stars Michael Cera and Christopher Mintz-Plasse under director Harold Ramis.

 TCH Overview on Vinnie Jones can also be accessed online here.
Bonnie Langford
Bonnie Langford
Bonnie Langford

Bonnie Langford is a very popular British all-round entertainer. She was born in 1964. She achieved national fame in the UK for her performance as Violet Elizabeth Bott in the very popular television version of the “Just William” books by Richel Crompton in 1976 . Recently she appeared with greta success on the ‘Dancing On Ice’ series.   Bonnie Langford’s website can be accessed here.

Harry Andrews
Harry Andrews
Harry Andrews
Harry Andrews

Harry Andrews. IMDB.

Harry Andrews was born in 1911 in Tonbridge Wells, Kent in 1911.  He served with the Royal Artillary in the Second World War.   In 1933 he made his first stage appearance in Liverpool in the “The Long Christmas Dinner”.   Beore the War and into the 1950’s he concentrated on the stage.   His first film was in 1953, “The Red Beret” with Alan Ladd.   From then on he was constantly on the screen playing in the main, tough military characters.   He was cast against type with Beryl Reid and Peter McEnery in “Entertaining Mr Sloane” in 1970.   He died in 1989 aged 77.

“A stern and rugged British character actor with ears as distinctive as Bing Crosby’s.   He spent nearly 20 years in live theatre before making his movie debut in the 1952 film “The Red Beret”.   Over the next 30 years his lantern-jawed face was a familiar addition to many international productions usually in historical or military dramas e.g. “The Hill” which offered perhaps his greatest showcase as the pigheaded martinet in charge of a prison camp.   His craggy weather appearance made him one of the most authentic looking whalers in director John Huston’s impressive filming of ‘Moby Dick’.   Outside of these genres he was am Amish dad searching for his daughter in sinful New York in “The Night They Raided Minsky’s”, Dr Sorin in Chekhov’s “The Seagull” in 1968, the aging homosexual with designs on Peter McEnery in “Entertaining Mr Sloane” and a drama critic who has his heart cut out in retaliation for a bad review in “Theatre of Blood” “. – Barry Monush in “The Encyclopedia of Hollywood Film Actors”. (2003).

His IMDB entry:

British character actor Harry Andrews had the sort of massive granite face and square jaw that would stamp that career, but he set himself apart with brilliant stage and screen work.

He had graduated from Wrekin College in Shropshire and then moved on to the stage, appearing with Liverpool Repertory in 1933 and focusing on Shakespearean roles.

He was befriended by stage star John Gielgud who invited him to New York and Broadway as part of the cast of “Hamlet” in 1935. On the return to London, Andrews did a run of plays in the West End.

Then Gielgud invited him into his own stage company. Soon after he was asked into the Old Vic Company by its director Laurence Olivier. His roles were becoming increasingly substantial, authoritative parts to match his sharp and forceful, through-the-teeth delivery of lines.

Next he did not pass up the opportunity to join the Stratford Memorial Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon, where he spent a decade honing himself into an established, fine, versatile actor, described by the controversial London theater critic Kenneth Tynan as “the backbone of British theater.”

He came to the small screen before the large, having debuted in British experimental television in 1939, followed over a decade later with his debut on the ever expanding and fecund American playhouse TV in 1952. His big screen debut came the next year in a character part which would accent his career-from ancient to modern-the disciplined military man in Paratrooper (1953). From there the roles came his way – three or four per yearwell into 1979, when TV took up most of his time. His movie makingwas spent either before American or British cameras. And the military roles were always masterly done, whether a roughed out sergeant or a more dignified officer. Though his most famous noncom may be Sergeant Major Tom Pugh alongside ‘John Mills’ in J. Lee-Thompson’s classic adventure Ice Cold in Alex (1958), his achievement as Sergeant Major Bert Wilson, the near psychotic martinet, opposite Sean Connery and Ian Bannen, in The Hill (1965) was an over-the-top tour de force. That same year he was back in costume – having played many an ancient and medieval noble role through the 1950s – in something different – playing the great Renaissance architect Donato Bramante against Charlton Heston as rival Michelangelo in The Agony and the Ecstasy (1965). Not a big part, nevertheless Andrews gave the role a subdued and matter-of-fact strength that well fit the ambitious architect of the fiery Pope Julius II (played with great verve by ‘Rex Harrison’). While Andrews was also excellent with a tongue-in-cheek style for comedic roles, as in the send up, The Ruling Class (1972), he excelled against type as a flamboyant homosexual in the black comedy Entertaining Mr. Sloane (1970). He had said something like: “I don’t want to be a star — I want to be a good actor in good parts” – but his presence always made him standout. It was ironic that he had difficulty in memorizing lines. Sometime later co-star Alan Bates thought him very courageous for his obvious triumph over this impediment. Bates further remarked that Andrews’ great sense of humor and no-nonsense personable character made him a favorite with younger actors as a continuous well of encouragement and learning experiences. Though his parts were smaller as he grew older, he filled each of his roles, big or small – over 100 of them – with a giant’s footsteps.

– IMDb Mini Biography By: William McPeak

His IMDB entry can be also accessed online here.

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Joan Sims
Joan Sims
Joan Sims

Joan Sims was a wonderful comedy actress best remembered for her contribution to the “Carry on” films.   She has though made many terrific performances in other British films.   She was born in 1930 in Essex.   She graduated from RADA in 1950.   Her first fil part was in “Will Any Gentleman?” with George Cole.   Other per-Carry On films include “Trouble in Store” with Norman Wisdom, “Lost” with Julia Arnall, “The Captain’s Table” with John Gregson and Peggy Cummins.   Her first appearance in the Carry on series was in 1958 in “Carry On Nurse”.   In all she starred in 25 “Carry On Films” the last been “Carry On Emmannuelle” in 1978.   Her later films include  “The Canterville Ghost” and in 2000 with a wonderful collection of mature actresses in “The Last of the Blonde Bombshells”.   The cast included Judi Dench, Leslie Caron, Olympia Dukakis, Cleo Laine, June Whitfield and Billie Whitelaw.   Joan Sims died in 2000.

“Guardian” obituary:

Joan Sims
English actress whose fame and popularity was based on a series of high-spirited characters in the Carry On and Doctor films
Dennis Barker

That extreme rarity, a natural rather than thought-out comedian, Joan Sims, who has died aged 71, exuberantly enhanced the bawdiness of one of the British movie industry’s biggest successes, the Carry On films. She brought to 24 of them – 20 in an unbroken sequence – a plump, high-spirited raucousness, that might have been offensive, but for her obvious good nature.
Never married, though in her youth she had two close relationships – with the actor Tony Baird, and the stage manager John Walters – she claimed that, generally, men were put off by funny women, and that sometimes she had had to steel herself to get through the filming of the Carry Ons – especially as the male cast were apt to play practical jokes on her. The scripts also placed demands on her sensitivity; she had to strain hard to make funny anecdotes out of the sufferings she endured for her art.
She was not in the first of the series, Carry On Sergeant, but, in November 1958, she was hired to play the student nurse in the second, Carry On Nurse, the biggest box office success of 1959. Playing the gym mistress in the next, Carry On Teacher (1959), she developed thrombophlebitis, and had her bad leg propped up on off-camera cushions before being hospitalised for 10 days. In Carry On Constable (1960), her role was that of a WPC called Gloria Passworthy – and the jokes were to match. For Carry On Regardless (1961), she was required to take the tickets at the door of a wine tasting, then take part, ending up by falling down dead drunk.   Simultaneously, Sims was also appearing – on a similar nudge-nudge-wink-wink basis – in that other highly successful, if slightly more genteel, run of films, the Doctor series. By 1960, she had reached her third, Doctor In Love, followed by Doctor In Clover, both with Leslie Phillips, a more refined leading man than the bucolic Sid James, but the Doctor films satisfied her less than the Carry Ons, which she said gave her a unique comradeship and fun during shooting.

The producer Peter Rogers did, in fact, claim that he would do anything for his Carry On team – the camp Kenneth Williams and Charles Hawtrey, the randy Kenneth Connor, the mountainous Hattie Jacques – except pay them. The top men in the cast got a £5,000 fee and the women, including Sims, £2,500 – well below the market rate. By the final one, Carry On Columbus (1992), the jokes had grown laboured and joyless, and Sims wrote that she was glad she was not in it.   Her motivation for acting, she claimed, was a child’s desire to please. Her mother had been deeply in love with a man who, after a misunderstanding, took off, returning after a few weeks to discover that his beloved had married on the rebound. Divorce not being an option in those days, Sims’s father and mother showed no affection towards one another – and little to their daughter.

Joan compensated by dressing up and entertaining passengers at Laindon station, in Essex, where her father was station-master. A neighbour brought a gramophone to spice up the act, and Joan became adept at increasing her wardrobe by asking the passengers for cast-off clothes.   At Brentwood county school for girls, she became determined to find something at which she could excel. Acting seemed the most likely – she arranged entertainments in the school air-raid shelter, joined amateur groups, played old ladies (like Madame Arcati, in Noel Coward’s Blithe Spirit, and Fumed Oak), and danced in Gilbert and Sullivan. But she failed her school certificate twice, and only got a place at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art on her third application, after her father persuaded the academy to give her a chance.

An agent, who also handled Ronnie Barker and Peter Eade, took her on, and she progressed through repertory at Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Southend, Luton and Salisbury to being principal girl in the Glasgow Citizens’ Theatre’s production of the pantomime The Happy Ha’Penny. After that she showed her adaptability in the West End by appearing in two plays at once – a Grand Guignol shocker at the Irving Theatre Club and a revue called The Bells Of St Martin’s.   In 1952, Sims got her first small role in a British film, Colonel March Investigates. The following year, she had a bigger part, with George Cole, in Will Any Gentleman?, and appeared in the revue High Spirits, where she met John Walters and from which she took the title for her autobiography, High Spirits (2000).

A string of stage revues, films and radio comedies followed. Her association with Kenneth Horne, the urbane straight man of the BBC radio comedy, Round the Horne, began in 1968, but was cut short by his death the following year. She was in the show’s successor, Stop Messing About, starring her friend Kenneth Williams, but, with no straight man to play against, his hysterics fell flat.   In her last years, Sims struggled against illness, heavy drinking and depression. But audiences and producers thrived on her high-spirited lifeblood and she successfully appeared last September, with Dame Judi Dench, in the award-winning BBC TV film, Last Of The Blonde Bombshells.   Irene Joan Sims, actor, born May 9 1930; died June 27 2001

Her obituary from the Guardian newspaper can be found here.