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Actor:

Laurence Harvey

  • Born: Oct 01, 1928 in Joniskis, Lithuania
  • Died: Nov 25, 1973
  • Occupation: Actor, Director, Writer
  • Active: '50s-'60s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Thriller
  • Career Highlights: The Manchurian Candidate, Darling, Room at the Top
  • First Major Screen Credit: Man on the Run (1949)

Biography

Laurence Harvey was one of Hollywood's stranger success stories; never a major star, or even the subject of a cult following, his films were rarely hits, and those that were often seemed to achieve their popularity in spite of him. A cold, remote actor, he proved highly unsuited to the majority of the roles which came his way, and his performances were typically the subject of unanimous critical dismissal; even his co-stars frequently derided his abilities. At the same time, however, Harvey enjoyed a career much longer and more prolific than many of his more lauded contemporaries, and was one of the most prominent onscreen presences of the 1960s. Also to his credit, his resumé includes at least one certified classic, 1962's The Manchurian Candidate.

Harvey was born Lauruska Mischa Skikne on October 1, 1928, in Joniskis, Lithuania. Raised in South Africa, he served in Egypt and Italy during World War II, and after performing in the army show The Bandoliers he returned to Johannesburg to begin his theatrical career. He later relocated to Britain, where he tenured with the Manchester Library Theater and also worked as a male prostitute. In 1948, Harvey made his feature debut in the horror thriller House of Darkness, and its success earned him a two-year contract with Associated British Studios, resulting in lead roles in 1949's Man on the Run and the following year's Cairo Road. Smaller turns in Landfall and The Black Rose followed before he appeared in a disastrous West End revival of Hassan.

Harvey continued to languish in B-movies like 1951's There Is Another Sun before appearing in 1953's Women of Twilight. The picture was not a success, but the studio Romulus was so impressed by his performance that they made his career a top priority and cast him in the comedy Innocents in Paris. Harvey then appeared for the 1952 season with the Memorial Theatre at Stratford, earning almost unanimously poor notices. He responded by giving interviews which claimed that regardless of the critics, he was in fact a great actor, a game of cat-and-mouse with the press that went on for years. Despite his disappointing Shakespearean performances, Harvey was cast in a 1954 film treatment of Romeo and Juliet, delivering a virtually expressionless portrayal of the title hero. He then starred in the Warner Bros. production of King Richard and the Crusaders.

Upon returning to Britain, Harvey again worked under the auspices of Romulus, where in 1955 he starred in The Good Die Young. Margaret Leighton, one of his co-stars in the picture, later became his wife. After starring in I Am a Camera, he appeared opposite popular television comedian Jimmy Edwards in 1957's Three Men in a Boat, which became Harvey's first real hit. However, a series of disappointments -- After the Ball, The Truth About Women, and The Silent Enemy -- were to follow before he could again taste success in 1959's Room at the Top. Hollywood again took interest in Harvey, and in 1960 he co-starred with John Wayne in The Alamo, followed by an appearance in the Elizabeth Taylor hit Butterfield 8. A role in the 1961 British production The Long and the Short and the Tall was next, trailed by a pair of Hollywood flops, Two Lovers and Summer and Smoke.

Harvey remained a frequent target of reviewers' derision in all of these films, and even co-star Jane Fonda criticized his performance in 1962's Walk on the Wild Side. Finally, in John Frankenheimer's masterful The Manchurian Candidate, he found a role perfectly suited to his talents, portraying a brainwashed assassin shorn of emotion; the performance was the best of his career, but in a cruel twist of irony the film was pulled from distribution by producer/star Frank Sinatra when its plot too closely foreshadowed the tragic death of President John F. Kennedy. With 1963's The Ceremony, Harvey turned screenwriter and director as well as star. The result was a critical lambasting even more severe than usual, with response to both 1964's Of Human Bondage and The Outrage not much better.

A small role in John Schlesinger's superb Darling followed in 1965, but both 1966's The Spy With the Cold Nose and 1967's A Dandy in Aspic (which Harvey finished directing upon the death of original helmer Anthony Mann) sank without a trace. He then filmed 1969's Rebus in Italy with Ann-Margret, remaining there to produce and star in L'Assoluto Naturale. Appearances in 1970's The Magic Christian and the next year's Paul Newman vehicle W.U.S.A. followed, but Harvey proved unable to revive his stalling career. After working with Elizabeth Taylor in 1972's Night Watch, he directed and starred in one final film, 1974's Welcome to Arrow Beach, but did not live to see its premiere; he died of cancer on November 25, 1973. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide

 
 
Wikipedia: Laurence Harvey
Laurence Harvey
Laurence_Harvey.jpg
Laurence Harvey in the Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode "Arthur" (first shown 27 September 1959)
Birth name Zvi Mosheh (Hirsh) Skikne
Born October 1 1927(1927--)
Joniškis, Lithuania
Died November 25 1973 (aged 45)
London, England
Years active 1948 - 1973
Spouse(s) Margaret Leighton (1957-1961)
Joan Perry (1968-1972)
Paulene Stone (1972-1973)

Laurence Harvey (October 1, 1927November 25, 1973) was an Academy Award-nominated Lithuanian-born actor who achieved fame in British and American films.

Early Life & Career

Laurence Harvey maintained throughout his life that his birth name was Laruschka Mischa Skikne, but his real name was Zvi Mosheh (Hirsh) Skikne and he was called Hirshkeh by his family. He was the youngest of three boys born to Ber "Boris" and Ella Skikne, a Jewish family in the town of Joniškis, Lithuania. At the age of five he emigrated with his family to South Africa where he took on the English name of Harry.

He grew up in Johannesburg, and was in his teens when he served with the entertainment unit of the South African Army during World War II. After moving to London, England, he enrolled in the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art where he became known as Larry. After learning his craft at RADA, he began to perform on stage and film, where he adopted the stage name "Laurence Harvey", taken either from the shop name Harvey Nichols or from Harvey's Bristol Cream.

He made his cinema debut in the British film House of Darkness (1948) but didn't really establish himself in British cinema until 1954, when he appeared with Rex Harrison and George Sanders in King Richard and the Crusaders (1954) and as Romeo in Renato Castellani's adaptation of William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, which featured John Gielgud. This enabled him to break out of the "ghetto" of British films and get his first experience of Hollywood. He was cast as the gay writer Christopher Isherwood in I Am A Camera (1955), opposite Julie Harris as Sally Bowles. He also appeared on American TV and on Broadway, making his Broadway debut in 1955 in the play Island of Goats, a flop which closed after one week, though his performance won Harvey a 1956 Theatre World Award.

Harvey appeared twice more on Broadway, in 1957 with Julie Harris, Pamela Brown, and Colleen Dewhurst in William Wycherley's The Country Wife, and as Shakespeare's Henry V in 1959, as part of the Old Vic company, which featured a young Judi Dench as Katherine, the Daughter of King of France.

International Stardom

Harvey's breakthrough to international stardom came in 1959 when he was cast by director Jack Clayton as the social climber Joe Lampton in Room at the Top produced by British film producing brothers Sir John Woolf and James Woolf of Romulus Films and Remus Films. For his performance, Harvey received a nomination for a BAFTA Award and for an Academy Award for Best Actor, the first person of Lithuanian descent to be nominated for an acting Oscar.

Harvey was now a star. He was cast in the role that had made Peter O'Toole famous in the West End in the movie version of The Long and the Short and the Tall (1961) as O'Toole had yet to establish himself as a cinema star and Harvey was more "bankable". During the 1950s and 1960s, Harvey appeared in several major films, including BUtterfield 8 (1960), John Wayne's epic The Alamo (1960), Walk on the Wild Side (1962) with Barbara Stanwyck, Jane Fonda and Capucine, the film adaptation of Tennessee Williams's Summer and Smoke (1961) with Geraldine Page, and Darling (1965) with Julie Christie. In this period, he also appeared as Raymond Shaw, the eponymous The Manchurian Candidate (1962), the role for which he is best known.

Harvey played King Arthur in the London staging of the Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe musical Camelot, in 1964 at Drury Lane. He became very good friends with Elizabeth Taylor and his Manchurian Candidate co-star Frank Sinatra, and was a member in good standing of high society, then dubbed "The Jet Set". Like Joe Lampton, he had made it to the top.

In the period of 1959-65, Harvey had the distinction of appearing opposite three actresses who won the Academy Award for their performances: Simone Signoret in Room at the Top, Elizabeth Taylor in BUtterfield 8, and Julie Christie in Darling. In all three roles, he established his star persona of being a first-class heel. (Geraldine Page, his co-star in Summer and Smoke, was also nominated for a Best Actress Oscar but did not win.)

Decline

Harvey reprised his Oscar-nominated role as Joe Lampton in Life at the Top (1965), but the film was not a success. Audiences in the mid-1960s were changing, in tune with the culture at large. Audiences now embraced the humorous amorality of Michael Caine's Alfie (1966) and rejected the humorless Joe Lampton, who hearkened back to the "Kitchen Sink Dramas" that has dominated British popular culture since John Osborne's Look Back in Anger in 1956. Just as Look Back in Anger signalled a shift in culture, "Darling" and "Alfie" were bellwethers of a new generation who were ready to have it all, on their own terms, with just a modicum of angst demanded by motion picture morality. Harvey belonged to a generation, the youngest members of the generation that had fought the Second World War, that was quickly being supplanted.

In 1968, in settlement of a dispute with Woodfall Films over the rights to The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968), Woodfall cast him in their version as a Russian prince. He performed as cast, but was never seen as the Prince in the finished film.[1] The only part of his performance remaining in the final cut is a brief appearance of him in the background of one shot, as an anonymous member of a theater audience.

Harvey's career began to decline after the mid-1960s. The 1964 remake of W. Somerset Maugham's Of Human Bondage was a failure, as was The Outrage (1964), director Martin Ritt's remake of Akira Kurosawa's classic Rashomon, despite the presence of cinema superstar Paul Newman. His turn in Darling essentially was a supporting role. Bereft of a choice of better roles, Harvey returned to Britain to make the comedy The Spy with a Cold Nose (1966). His last hurrah was his appearance in the spy thriller A Dandy in Aspic (1968), which he helmed after director Anthony Mann died during shooting. After that, it was mostly exile in foreign productions, TV and an occasional supporting role in a major production. In The Magic Christian, he recited Hamlet's soliloquy, almost nude and very thin. A promising project, Orson Welles' The Deep (1970) with Jeanne Moreau, was never finished. One performance from this period was in a 1971 USA horror film television episode, titled "The Caterpillar", of "Rod Serling's The Night Gallery".

Private Life

It is indisputable from numerous accounts that Laurence Harvey was bisexual. In his account of being Frank Sinatra's valet, Mr. S: My Life with Frank Sinatra, George Jacobs writes that Harvey often made passes at him while visiting Sinatra. Sinatra knew that Harvey was gay, but did not mind, joking that he had the handicap of being both gay, a Jew and a "Polak" (sic), so everyone should go easy on him. British actor John Fraser writes in his 2004 memoir Close Up that Harvey was gay, and his lover was his manager James Woolf.

As a teenager, he started out living with Hermione Baddeley, a blowsy star of intimate revue more than twice his age. Then he married Margaret Leighton, six years Harvey's senior. When this marriage was over, he married Joan Cohn, widow of Harry Cohn, managing director of Columbia Studios. Throughout all these career marriages, he still managed to string Jimmy Woolf along.

Harvey was married three times, to actress Margaret Leighton in 1957, whom he divorced in 1961, and to Joan Perry Cohn in 1968, the very rich widow of movie mogul Harry Cohn of Columbia Pictures, and to Paulene Stone. Harvey had met Stone on the set of A Dandy in Aspic, and he became a father for the first time while married to Joan Perry Cohn when Stone gave birth to a daughter in 1969. Eventually, Harvey divorced Joan Perry Cohn and married Stone in 1972.

Laurence Harvey and Paulene Stone with toddler Domino. (Splash News)
Enlarge
Laurence Harvey and Paulene Stone with toddler Domino. (Splash News)

Paulene Stone became Laurence Harvey's widow when he died from stomach cancer at age of 45. Their daughter Domino Harvey (1969-2005) won renown as a bounty hunter.

Filmography

Books about Laurence Harvey

  • Hickey, Des and Smith, Gus. The Prince: The Public and Private Life of Laurence Harvey. Leslie Frewin. 1975.
  • Stone, Paulene. One Tear is Enough: My Life with Laurence Harvey. 1975.
  • Sinai, Anne. Reach for the Top: The Turbulent Life of Laurence Harvey. Scarecrow Press. 2003.

Footnotes

  1. ^ John Osborne, who wrote the screenplay, alleges in his autobiography that Tony Richardson shot those scenes "French", which is movie jargon for a director going through the motions because of some obligation, but with no film in the camera. source: Almost a Gentleman by John Osborne: Faber & Faber 1991, ISBN 0-571-16635-0; page 146

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