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George Cole

 
Art Encyclopedia: George Vicat Cole

(b Portsmouth, 17 April 1833; d London, 6 April 1893). English painter. The eldest son of the landscape painter George Cole (1810-83) and Eliza Vicat, he worked in his father's studio in Portsmouth copying, in black and white, engravings after Turner, Constable and Cox. He accompanied George Cole on sketching tours, visiting the Moselle region in 1851. His work was first exhibited at the British Institution in 1852, and later that year his family moved to London. He married Mary Ann Chignell in 1856. In 1853 two of his works were accepted by the Royal Academy, where he continued to exhibit until 1892. He was a regular exhibitor at the Society of British Artists, of which he became a member in 1858. He was elected ARA in 1870 and RA in 1880.

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Biography: George Douglas Howard Cole
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George Douglas Howard Cole (1889-1959) was an English historian, economist, and guild socialist. His teaching, writing, and commitment to political activism affected three generations of Englishmen.

The son of a builder in West London, G. D. H. Cole went from St. Paul's School to Balliol College, Oxford. He coedited the Oxford Reformer, acted in social causes, and joined the Fabian Society. He attempted to reconcile syndicalism and socialism in World of Labour (1913), a plea for public ownership of major industries under the democratic control of unions modeled upon medieval guilds. With a first class in classical moderns and greats, he was awarded a fellowship at Magdalen College. Elected to the Fabian executive in 1915, he rebelled against the old guard to head the quasi-independent Fabian Research Bureau.

During the next decade Cole was away from Oxford writing, often with his wife and fellow Fabian rebel, Margaret Postgate Cole; directing tutorial classes at the University of London; and organizing professional trade unions. He returned to Oxford in 1925 as fellow of University College and university reader in economics and was to have compelling influence upon students such as Hugh Gaitskell. From 1944 until his retirement in 1957 Cole was at All Souls College as first Chichele professor of social and political theory.

Cole was for many years chairman of the Fabian weekly, the New Statesman, contributing to almost every issue during his lifetime. In 1931 he formed the Society for Socialist Information and Propaganda but broke with the society when it moved toward communism. That year he formed the New Fabian Research Bureau as a politically neutral agency for accumulating objective information. This group formed the basis for union in 1938 with the older, badly splintered Fabian Society. Collectivization was omitted from the new rules as a concession to Cole.

Cole's prodigious writings (over 130 works) may be divided into five broad and overlapping categories: guild socialism; history; biography; economic, political, and social analysis; and fiction. His strongest treatment of guild socialism, Self-government in Industry (1917), was an appeal for the pluralistic and romantic socialism which moved Cole all his life. In Case for Industrial Partnership (1957) he tried to adjust the earlier plea to new times.

Cole's historical and biographical work provided the evidence against which he tested his socialist faith and reliance upon the individual. This was especially true in his classic five-volume History of Socialist Thought (1953-1960).

Of Cole's perceptive biographies, the two best are The Life of William Cobbett (1924) and The Life of Robert Owen (1925). The analytical writings, intended to influence or explain, include Principles of Economic Planning (1935) and An Intelligent Man's Guide to the Post-war World (1947). For recreation he wrote, largely with his wife, more than 15 detective novels.

Further Reading

Although there is no biography of Cole, various aspects of his life and thought are discussed in the book by his wife, Margaret Cole, The Story of Fabian Socialism (1961). See also Anne Fremantle, This Little Band of Prophets: The British Fabians (1959), and As a Briggs and John Saville, eds., Essays in Labour History: In Memory of G. D. H. Cole (1960; rev. ed. 1967), which contains personal recollections of Cole by Ivor Brown, Hugh Gaitskell, Stephen K. Bailey and G. D. N. Worswick. The discussion of Cole's thought in Henry M. Magid, English Political Pluralism: The Problem of Freedom and Organization (1941), suffers from an inadequate historical context.


(1884–1963)

Versatile English architect. He became (1912) a partner of Percy Henry Adams (1870–1934), and the firm quickly gained a reputation for cinema design (e.g. the Carlton, Upton Park, and Carlton, Islington (1928–30), with their Egyptianizing frontages). For Oscar Deutsch (1893–1941) Coles designed several Odeon cinemas, starting with that at Welling, Kent. Among his best Odeon designs were Isleworth, Southall (Mddx.), Muswell Hill (London—a particularly fine essay), the superb Woolwich (London— with its streamlined features and Egyptianizing torchère), and Acton (London), all 1935–6.

Bibliography

  • Atwell (1981)
  • Eyles (2002)

The full bibliography for this book is available to download as a pdf file.
Download the bibliography for A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (PDF: 1.2MB)

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: George Douglas Howard Cole
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Cole, George Douglas Howard, 1889-1959, English economist, labor historian, and socialist. Educated at Oxford, he was long associated with the university and held a professorship from 1944 to 1957. For many years a leading exponent of guild socialism, he later returned to his original Fabianism, acting as chairman of the Fabian Society from 1939 to 1946 and becoming its president in 1952. His many books, mainly on labor and socialism, range from popular works to scholarly studies. Among his original works are A Short History of the British Working Class Movement (3 vol., 1927; rev. ed. 1948), The British Common People (with Raymond W. Postgate, 1939; rev. ed. The British People, 1947), and A History of Socialist Thought (5 vol. in 7, 1953-60). With his wife, Margaret Isabel (Postgate) Cole, 1893-1980, he wrote over 30 detective stories as well as works on economics and politics. Her works include Beatrice Webb (1945), The Story of Fabian Socialism (1961), and a biography of her husband (1971). She also edited Beatrice Webb's diaries.

Bibliography

See biography of George Cole by L. P. Carpenter (1973).

Actor: George Cole
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  • Born: Apr 22, 1925 in London, England, UK
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '40s-'70s, '90s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: The Belles of St. Trinian's, Quentin Durward, Too Many Crooks
  • First Major Screen Credit: Quartet (1948)

Biography

Trained for a stage career at the Morden Council School, 14-year-old George Cole made his London stage debut in the 1939 production White Horse Inn. Cole ascended to juvenile stardom as a young evacuee in 1940's Cottage to Let, repeating the role in the 1941 film version. As an adult, Cole specialized in light, semicomic characterizations on both stage and screen. His most cherished movie roles include the mother-dominated protagonist in the "Kite" segment of Quartet (1948) and shifty salesman Flash Harry in the first two St. Trinians farces of the 1950s. He entered the household-word category as a klutzy con man in the British TV series Minder, which ran from 1979 to 1984. George Cole's other weekly TV credits include Don't Forget to Write (1977-1979), The Bounder (1982-1988), Heggerty Haggerty (1984-1985), Comrade Dad (1986), and Root Into Europe (1992). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: George Cole (actor)
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George E. Cole OBE
Born George Edward Cole
22 April 1925 (1925-04-22) (age 84)
Tooting, South London, England
Occupation Actor
Years active 1939–present
Spouse(s) Eileen Moore (1954–62)
Penny Morrell (1964–present)

George Edward Cole, OBE (born 22 April 1925(1925-04-22), Tooting) is an English actor.

In an interview included in the 2007 DVD release of A Christmas Carol he recounts that he was given up for adoption at the age of ten days, and adopted by Mr and Mrs George Cole. He grew up with a strong Cockney accent that hindered his early performing career.

He began appearing in films in the early 1940s, debuting in the 1941 film Cottage to Let. He attributes his career to the British stage and film actor Alastair Sim, who became his mentor. Cole appeared in a total of 11 films with Sim, starting with Cottage to Let, and ending with the somewhat obscure 1961 independent film The Anatomist. He also acted opposite Laurence Olivier in The Demi-Paradise (1943) and Olivier's film version of Henry V (1944), but his career was interrupted by his service in the Royal Air Force from 1944 to 1947.

He became familiar to audiences in British comedy films in the 1950s. Cole appeared with Sim in Scrooge (as the young Scrooge) in 1951, but his best known film role was as "Flash Harry" in the St Trinian's films (two of which also star Sim).

Cole later became a respected television actor. During the 1960s and 1970s, he played numerous character parts on British television, usually as a disturbed and/or pathetic villain or victim. The television series he appeared in included Gideon's Way ('The Firebug', 1965), Out of the Unknown ('The Last Lonely Man', 1969), UFO ('Flight Path', 1969) and Menace ('Killing Time', 1970). He also starred in the big screen movie Take Me High alongside Cliff Richard and Deborah Watling.

His most memorable television role was as crooked used car dealer Arthur Daley in the Thames Television series Minder (1979-94). The character became synonymous with the down-at-heel side of 1980s capitalism (along with Del Trotter of Only Fools and Horses). Cole played a similar character in late 1980s / early 1990s TV advertisements for the Leeds Permanent Building Society who was "Laughing all the way to The Leeds". In 1988 he voiced Vernon the mouse in the Children's ITV cartoon Tube Mice (in which Minder co-star Dennis Waterman also voiced a character).

Cole also played Henry Root in the TV series Root Into Europe in 1992.

In 1995–1996 he starred as businessman-councillor Freddie Patterson in An Independent Man. He also starred as Brian Hook in the BBC Comedy Dad in the late 1990s alongside Kevin McNally, who played his son, Alan Hook.

He is able to hide his London accent when playing upper-class characters, such as Sir Giles Lynchwood in the TV adaptation of Tom Sharpe's novel Blott on the Landscape. Recently he was announced to play the leading role in Kevin Tate's The Story of Carl Veart, a new 6-part ITV series. Cole recently appeared in the BBC drama A Class Apart, in which he played a grandfather who encourages his impoverished daughter keep her son on the straight and narrow by means of a public school bursary (part of the Winter/Spring 2007 season[1]), and The Dinner Party, broadcast in September 2007.

He was married first to Eileen Moore, an actress and subsequently to Penny Morrell, in 1964, with whom he has two children.

Partial filmography

References

External links


 
 

 

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