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Timothy West

 
Actor: Timothy West
  • Born: Oct 20, 1944 in Bradford, Yorkshire, England, UK
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '70s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Mystery
  • Career Highlights: Hedda, Framed!, The Tragedy of Flight 103: The Inside Story
  • First Major Screen Credit: Edward II (1970)

Biography

Gifted with gravitas, Timothy West is a master at playing authority figures. Over his long and distinguished career, he has portrayed Winston Churchill in three productions (Hiroshima, 1995; The Last Bastion, 1984; and Churchill and the Generals, 1979), King Francis in Ever After (1998), Emperor Vespasian in Masada (1981), Cardinal Wolsey in Henry VIII (1979), King Edward VII in Edward the King (1975), and Bolingbroke -- the future King Henry IV -- in The Tragedy of King Richard II (1970). He has also portrayed sundry sirs, lords, judges, overseers, superintendents, doctors, professors, and high-ranking military officers. Remove him to the fantasy world of animated features, and it's the same. In two cartoon series, he was the voice of King Otto (The Big Knights, 1999) and King Hrothgar (Beowulf, 1998). Often, he plays the head of a family rather than the head of an army or a country. For example, he portrayed Charles Dickens' father, John, in the 2002 TV miniseries Dickens; Gloucester, father of Edgar and Edmund, in a 1997 TV production of Shakespeare's King Lear; and James Tyrone, the head of a dysfunctional family, in the 1991 British National Theatre adaptation of Eugene O'Neill's A Long Day's Journey Into Night. West also portrayed still another king -- Harry King -- in a 1987 TV production, Harry's Kingdom.

West was born in Bradford, Yorkshire, England, on October 20, 1934. Whether his veins ran with royal blood -- the kind that would later enable him to play those kings and emperors -- is doubtful. But there is no question that his veins ran with acting blood: Both of his parents were theater professionals. It was only natural, therefore, that he would marry an actress, Prunella Scales, and that he would father children, Samuel and Joseph, who grew up to act in films of their own. On occasion, Scales and West perform together, as in the O'Neill play and in Harold Pinter's The Birthday Party at London's Piccadilly Theatre in 1999. West has also acted with his sons. In the aforementioned Edward the King, they played his onscreen sons. West began his professional film, stage, and TV career in the 1960s. In the early '70s, his appearance in two important motion pictures -- Nicholas and Alexandra (1971) and The Day of the Jackal (1973) -- helped win him roles in other major productions, including adaptations of such literary classics as Joseph Andrews, Hard Times, Crime and Punishment, and Oliver Twist. ~ Mike Cummings, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Timothy West
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Timothy West, CBE

West, in 2006.
Born Timothy Lancaster West
20 October 1934 (1934-10-20) (age 74)
Bradford, Yorkshire, England
Occupation Actor
Years active 1956–present
Spouse(s) Prunella Scales CBE (1963–present)
Jacqueline Boyer (divorced)

Timothy Lancaster West,[1] CBE (born 20 October 1934) is an English film, stage and television actor.

Contents

Career

West's craggy looks ensured a career as a character actor rather than a leading man. He began his career as an Assistant Stage Manager at the Wimbledon Theatre in 1956, and followed this with several seasons of repertory theatre. He acted at the Piccadilly Theatre in 1959 and was with the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1965 at Stratford where he appeared in The Comedy of Errors, Timon of Athens, The Jew of Malta, Love's Labour's Lost, and Peter Hall's outstanding production of The Government Inspector at the Aldwych Theatre with Paul Scofield, Eric Porter, Donald Burton, Stanley Lebor, Bruce Condell, John Corvin and Tim Wylton, among others. He was Artistic Director of the Forum Theatre, Billingham from 1980-81 and was appointed Director-in-Residence at the University of Western Australia in 1982.

Having spent years as a familiar face who never quite became a household name, his big chance came with the major television series, Edward the Seventh (1975), in which he played the title role and his real-life sons, Samuel and Joseph, played the sons of King Edward VII as children. Other major roles have included parts in the films, Nicholas and Alexandra (1972), The Day of the Jackal (1973), The Thirty-Nine Steps (1978) and Cry Freedom (1987).

In lighter vein, West starred as patriarch Bradley Hardacre in Granada TV's satirical Northern super-soap Brass over three seasons (1982-1990).

West also made a brief appearance in the Miss Marple series in 1985, starring Joan Hickson as the redoubtable Miss Jane Marple, in A Pocket Full of Rye as the notorious Rex Fortescue.

In 1997, he played Gloucester in the BBC television production of King Lear. In 2001, West played the older Maurice in Iris, while his actor son, Samuel West, played young Maurice. In 2002 he made a guest appearance in the BBC Radio 4 series The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. In 2004, he toured Australia with the Carl Rosa Opera Company as Director of the production of HMS Pinafore, also singing the role of Sir Joseph Porter. He was replaced in the singing role by Dennis Olsen for the Perth and Brisbane performances.

He is president of the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, and a supporter of the charity Cancer Research UK.

West has also appeared as the presenter for Midlands (Central TV) Waterworld.

In 2008, he starred in Harold Pinter's "The Lover" & "The Collection" at the Comedy Theatre in London.

Personal life

West was born in Bradford, Yorkshire, the son of Olive (née Carleton-Crowe) and actor Harry Lockwood West, known as Lockwood West.[1] He is of the Earl De La Warr family, and was educated at the John Lyon School, a boys' independent school in Harrow on the Hill in London and also at Bristol Grammar School in Bristol, where he was a classmate of Julian Glover. West is married to the actress Prunella Scales and with her, prominently supports the British Labour Party. The couple are both patrons of the Lace Market Theatre in Nottingham.

Timothy is an Ambassador of SOS Children's Villages, an international orphan charity providing homes and mothers for orphaned and abandoned children. He currently supports the charity's annual World Orphan Week campaign which takes place each February.

Honours

He was created a CBE for his services to drama in 1984.

Stage roles

TV roles

  • Big Breadwinner Hog (1969) as Lennox
  • Edward the Seventh (1975) as Prince of Wales
  • Churchill and the Generals (1979) as Winston Churchill
  • Brass (1982) as Bradley Hardacre
  • The Good Doctor Bodkin Adams (1986): this was a TV docudrama based on the 1957 trial of John Bodkin Adams, played by West; Adams was controversially acquitted of murdering an elderly female patient, but is thought to have been Britain's second worst serial killer.
  • Framed (1992) as DCI Jimmy McKinnes
  • King Lear (1997) as Gloucester
  • Goodnight Sweetheart (1998), comedy series as MI6 agent "MacDuff"
  • Bedtime (series, 2001)
  • Bleak House (series, 2005) as Sir Leicester Dedlock
  • Since 2000 he has been presenting ITV's series Water World, a programme dedicated to 'the people who live and work on the canals of the Midlands'.

Film roles

Autobiography

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Hedda (1975 Drama Film)
A Pocketful of Rye (1985 Mystery Film)
Prunella Scales (Actor, Comedy/Drama)

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Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Timothy West" Read more