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Actor:

Paul Freeman

  • Born: 1943 in London, England, UK
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '80s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy
  • Career Highlights: Raiders of the Lost Ark, A World Apart, Without a Clue
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Dogs of War (1981)

Biography

A noted character actor in England, Paul Freeman spent his early performing years on the stage, moving into film with the abysmal Whose Child Am I?, which still turns up on cable once in a while. TV appearances (including The Life of Shakespeare in which he played Burbage) followed. In 1979 he was drafted to play Colin, the best friend of fictional British crime boss Harold Shand (played by Bob Hoskins) in the controversial and troubled The Long Good Friday. Equally as controversial was Death of a Princess, a docudrama about the 1977 execution of a Saudi Arabian princess for adultery, in which Freeman portrayed journalist Anthony Thomas.

The Dogs of War took Freeman to Africa, co-starring with Christopher Walken and Tom Berenger, and it was during this shoot that he met his wife, Maggie Scott, who was cast in the key role of Gabrielle. Tunisia was one of the next stops for Freeman, who stepped into one of the defining roles of his career at this point -- that of crooked archaeologist Rene Belloq, chief rival to Harrison Ford's Indiana Jones in Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Freeman returned briefly to television, as the villainous Gustav Riebman in Falcon Crest, then returned to feature work with The Sender,The Final Option, and others, salting these with Sakharov for HBO and the miniseries A.D., which led to him being cast in the title role of the aborted Pontius Pilate project, based on the Paul Maier novel.

Over the years, he has essayed a remarkable number of roles, from parts in the universally panned Shanghai Surprise (which sank George Harrison's Handmade Films company) to the role of Moriarty in Without a Clue and even, buried under pounds of makeup, the evil Ivan Ooze in Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie. On occasion he has even managed to turn up in controversial projects, such as 1990's barely-seen Prisoner of Rio, in which he played Ronald Biggs, a fugitive British train robber living handsomely in Brazil. By late 1997, early 1998, he was working with the Royal Shakespeare Company. Paul Freeman is not to be confused with a producer by the same name. ~ Steven E. McDonald, All Movie Guide

 
 
Black Biography: Paul Freeman

conductor; music director

Personal Information

Born Paul Douglas Freeman on January 2, 1936, in Richmond, VA.
Education: Studied music at Virginia State University, Petersburg, VA; Eastman School of Music, Rochester, NY, BM, 1956, MM, 1957, PhD, 1963; studied at Hochschule für Musik, Berlin, Germany.

Career

Opera Theater of Rochester, conductor, 1961-66; San Francisco Community Music Center, director, 1966-68; Dallas Symphony Orchestra, associate conductor, 1968-70; Detroit Symphony Orchestra, conductor-in-residence, 1970-79; Victoria Symphony Orchestra, Victoria, BC, Canada, music director, 1979-89; Chicago Sinfonietta, co-founder and conductor, 1987-; Czech National Symphony Orchestra, music director, 1996-; numerous guest conducting slots with top orchestras in the United States and Europe.

Life's Work

In the minds of many classical music concertgoers, Paul Freeman is recognized as one of the first major African-American orchestral conductors to make a mark in the symphonic world and, rivaled only by James DePreist, as one of the most successful. In the minds of classical record buyers, Freeman is known as a champion of African-American classical composers--a conductor who opened up a musical world that until he came along had been largely invisible. He has conducted more than 100 orchestras in 28 countries, and has made more than 200 recordings, performing music ranging from the mainstream European repertory to completely unfamiliar pieces by composers from a great variety of backgrounds. In the words of the motto of the Chicago Sinfonietta, an orchestra he founded, Freeman has achieved "excellence through diversity."

Paul Douglas Freeman was born in Richmond, Virginia, on January 2, 1936. His father ran a produce shop, and he grew up in modest circumstances in the American South in the middle of the twentieth century--difficult beginnings for any African American. "Growing up in segregation in Richmond ... to have fulfilled my personal dreams and to have helped to found an entity [the Chicago Sinfonietta] that brings dreams to others, even I sometimes can't believe what we've done," Freeman told the Chicago Sun-Times. The dream began with Freeman's music-loving family. Symphony orchestra concerts on the radio and the weekly Saturday broadcast from New York's Metropolitan Opera were required listening for all 12 Freeman siblings.

Filled in as Band Conductor

So were music lessons when they grew old enough to handle them; Freeman started piano lessons at age five, and he soon took up the clarinet as well. He took clarinet lessons at Richmond's Armstrong High School while still in elementary school and took lessons at Virginia State College in Petersburg while in high school. His conducting debut came at age 14 or 15, when his clarinet teacher fell ill and was unable to conduct the Armstrong school band for its scheduled performance at a PTA meeting. Freeman stepped in as a substitute. "Although the ministry was an earlier career interest, a maestro was born that evening," Freeman wrote in a letter quoted in the book Black Conductors.

Freeman soon added the cello to his instrumental arsenal, and his teachers started urging him to consider a career in music. He won a scholarship to the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, and studied one summer with Swiss conductor Pierre Monteux. Freeman graduated from Eastman in 1956 and stayed on to earn a master's degree a year later. After that he won a Fulbright fellowship for study in Europe and plunged into what might be called classical music's hard core, enrolling at the Hochschule für Musik (University for Music) in Berlin, Germany. There he studied conducting for three to six hours a day with noted German conductor Ewald Lindemann. Back in the United States, Freeman returned to Eastman, earning a doctoral degree in 1963. While there, he conducted the orchestra of a local Jewish organization and also served as conductor of the Opera Theater of Rochester from 1961-66. Then Freeman and his wife, Cornelia, a pianist and organist whom Freeman had met at Eastman, moved to San Francisco in the mid-1960s.

Despite this top-flight training, it took Freeman several years to consistently land conducting engagements; he pointed out that he faced a double barrier in being not only black but also American--most U.S. orchestras were headed by European conductors at the time. Freeman won the Dmitri Mitropoulos Conducting Competition in 1967, and one big break came that year when he filled in for ailing San Francisco Symphony conductor André Cluytens, winning rave reviews in local newspapers. Not long after that, Freeman was profiled in Sepia magazine.

Discovered Black Classical Composers

Another 1967 conducting slot had an even greater impact on Freeman's career. He shared conducting duties with Atlanta Symphony music director Robert Shaw during a special concert series held at the city's historically black Spelman College. The series explored music by black composers from the eighteenth century to the present. "It was a revelation. ... I had not been exposed to the works of black composers in conservatory," Freeman told the Chicago Sun-Times. Freeman's profile was raised when he was hired as associate conductor of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra in 1968 and as composer-in-residence of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in 1970, and soon he got the chance to record for the Columbia record label, a powerhouse in the classical record industry.

The Black Composers Series--nine records total--were critically and commercially successful. Working with various ensembles, Freeman recorded and in many cases introduced to the musical world classical works by such composers as William Grant Still, Ulysses Kay, and Joseph Boulogne Chevalier de Saint-Georges, a Guadeloupe-born black eighteenth-century composer later dubbed the black Mozart. In 1977 Freeman and another Richmond-born black conductor, Leon Thompson, conducted a five-concert series that the New York Philharmonic Orchestra devoted to African-American classical music. Two years later Freeman was named music director of the Victoria, British Columbia, Symphony Orchestra in Canada, and for much of the 1980s he divided his time between Canada and the United States.

Co-Founded Orchestra

In 1987 Freeman co-founded the Chicago Sinfonietta, a group of about 45 players dedicated in part to the presentation of works by composers of various ethnic backgrounds. Its multiracial and gender-balanced membership contrasted sharply with that of the nearly all-white and all-male Chicago Symphony Orchestra. In an era of budget crises and declining attendance for many classical ensembles, the Sinfonietta was a hit from the start. The Chicago Sun-Times praised Freeman's "flair for programming that expertly blends the familiar and the new," and quoted an executive from a major donor, the MacArthur Foundation, as saying that "you go to their concerts and you just feel an excitement in the crowd that is sometimes lacking in some of the older and more established institutions."

The Chicago Sinfonietta was particularly noted for presenting works by black composers, many of whom felt that they had been unable to get a hearing anywhere else. Freeman avoided programming works by composers such as Duke Ellington and Wynton Marsalis, which had already reached large audiences through commercial channels, in favor of the new and unfamiliar. In general the range of music heard on Sinfonietta concerts was wide, and Freeman avoided racial categories. "Do you know what I like to say black music is?" he asked the Memphis Commercial Appeal. "It's the black notes on a white page."

In 1996 Freeman was named music director of the Czech National Philharmonic Orchestra in Prague; there he unearthed and recorded forgotten works by early Czech composers and also brought a range of American music to European audiences. He kept up a busy schedule of guest conducting appearances around the world, making his debut with the Moscow Philharmonic in 2003, and he continued to hold his music director post and to appear and record with the Chicago Sinfonietta (classical conductors frequently hold positions with more than one organization). In the early 2000s he launched a new African Heritage Symphonic Series of recordings on the Cedille label, with an album of works by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, William Grant Still, and the Nigerian-born composer Fela Sowande. Sensible Sound noted that "this disc is sure to be an audio crowd-pleaser and is highly recommended." It marked yet another new chapter in Freeman's long and still-unfolding career.

Awards

Selected: Won Dmitri Mitropoulos International Conductors' Competition, 1967; Fulbright fellowship; honorary doctorates, Dominican University, Chicago, Loyola University, Chicago.

Works

Selected discography

  • Black Composers Series, (nine LPs), Columbia, mid-1970s.
  • Paul Freeman Introduces ..., CD series, Albany, late 1990s.
  • African Heritage Symphonic Series, Cedille, early 2000s.
  • Has recorded more than 200 LPs and CDs as conductor with orchestras in the United States and Europe.

Further Reading

Books

  • Handy, D. Antoinette, Black Conductors, Scarecrow Press, 1995.
  • Sadie, Stanley, ed., The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 2nd ed., Macmillan, 2001.
  • Slonimsky, Nicolas, ed. emeritus, Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Music and Musicians, centennial ed., Schirmer, 2001.
Periodicals
  • American Record Guide, September 1999, p. 271.
  • Chicago Sun-Times, January 15, 1995, p. Show-10; December 13, 1995, p. 57; October 13, 1996, p. Show-14; February 2, 2003, p. Show-3.
  • Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN), February 20, 2003, p. E1.
  • Sensible Sound, June 2001, p. 72.
On-line
  • "Paul Freeman," All Classical Guide, www.allclassical.com (March 20, 2003).
  • "Paul Freeman, Conductor," Cedille Records, www.cedillerecords.org/freeman.html (March 20, 2003).
  • "Paul Freeman, Founding Music Director," Chicago Sinfonietta, www.chicagosinfonietta.org/about/about_pf.html (March 20, 2003).

— James M. Manheim

 
Wikipedia: Paul Freeman
This article is about the British actor. For the Bigfoot hunter see Paul Freeman (cryptozoologist).
Paul Freeman
ReneBelloq.jpg
Paul Freeman in Raiders of the Lost Ark
Born January 18 1943 (1943--) (age 64)
Hertfordshire, England

Paul Freeman (born January 18 1943) is a British film and television actor.

Freeman was born in Hertfordshire, England. He began his career in advertising and teaching and like many British actors he landed small roles in the theater appearing in productions of A Midsummer Night's Dream and Hamlet. He then went on to play starring roles in the National Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company and later co-founded his own theater group, the Joint Stock Theatre Company, in 1974 together with director Max Stafford-Clark.

In 1978, he made his British television debut in the acclaimed mini-series Life of Shakespeare (1978) and Winston Churchill: The Wilderness Years (1981). Freeman also acted in the ATV docudrama Death of a Princess, a controversial film about the execution of a Saudi Arabian woman. In 1980 he began his movie career when he appeared in The Long Good Friday alongside Bob Hoskins and The Dogs of War (1981) in which he met Maggie Scott who went on to become his wife.

In the same year, 1981, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas chose Freeman to play the main villain, Rene Belloq, in Raiders of the Lost Ark, the first of three movies depicting the exploits of archeologist and adventurer Indiana Jones. The movie was a smash hit and Freeman was expected to play in the sequel as well, however Spielberg decided to alter the story and thus Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom would be produced without Freeman.

The movie was a springboard for Freeman in Hollywood and he continued playing villains both in Hollywood and in his native Britain using his uncanny talent for foreign accents. In 1988 he played Professor Moriarty in Without a Clue starring Michael Caine as an untalented Sherlock Holmes and in 1995, Ivan Ooze in Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers: The Movie for very little money.

Freeman continues working for television as well as in movies. He guest starred in hit shows such as Monarch of the Glen, ER, Falcon Crest and The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles. He also played in several mini-series such as Murderers Among Us: The Simon Wiesenthal Story (1989) and The Final Cut (1995). In 2004, Freeman played Angus, Bobby Jones' caddie, in Bobby Jones: A Stroke of Genius. Recently in 2007, he played the Rev. Philip Shooter of Sandford in Hot Fuzz alongside Timothy Dalton.

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Copyrights:

Actor. Copyright © 2006 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Paul Freeman" Read more

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