Paul Whitsun-Jones
Paul Whitsun-Jones | |
---|---|
Born |
Newport, Monmouthshire, Wales, UK | 25 April 1923
Died |
14 January 1974 50) London, England, UK | (aged
Occupation | Actor |
Paul Whitsun-Jones (25 April 1923 – 14 January 1974) was a Welsh character actor.[1]
Born in Newport in Monmouthshire, he was educated at Merchant Taylors' School in Northwood in Middlesex. He started his acting career in 1948 with two years at York Repertory Theatre. In the West End he appeared in The Moonraker at the Saville Theatre (1952), Dangerous Curves at the Garrick Theatre (1953), and played the Wazir in Kismet at the Stoll Theatre for two years from 1955 to 1957.[2]
Early television appearances included Street Scene, The Last Tycoon, Love from Italy, Berkeley Square and Swedish Match King.[2] He played the role of Mr Bumble in the original West End production of the musical Oliver! (1960). He appeared in two Doctor Who stories: as Squire Edwards in The Smugglers (1966) and the Marshal of Solos in The Mutants (1972).
Whitsun-Jones had two children by his first wife, Joyce Winifred Rankine, whom he married in 1949 and later divorced, and two from his second wife, Sylvia E. Horswell, including the actress Henrietta Whitsun-Jones.
He died of appendicitis in London in 1974 aged 50.
Filmography
Television
Selected filmography
Film | Year | Role | Note |
---|---|---|---|
Room at the Top | 1959 | Man at Bar | |
Let's Get Married | 1960 | Uncle Herbert | |
There Was a Crooked Man | 1960 | Restaurant Gentleman | |
The Boy Who Stole a Million | 1960 | Desk Sergeant | |
Tunes of Glory | 1960 | Major 'Dusty' Miller | |
Doctor in Distress | 1963 | Grimes | |
The Wild Affair | 1963 | Tiny Hearst | |
The Masque of the Red Death | 1964 | Scarlatti | |
Life at the Top | 1965 | Keatley | |
What's Good for the Goose | 1969 | Clark | |
Simon, Simon | 1970 | The Boss | short film |
All the Right Noises | 1971 | Mr. Melchum | |
Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde | 1971 | Sergeant Danvers | |
The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins | 1971 | Elsinore | segment "Avarice" |
Assassin | 1973 | Drunk Man | |
Keep It Up, Jack | 1973 | Mr. Fairbrother |
References
External links
- Paul Whitsun-Jones at the Internet Movie Database
- Whitsun-Jones on the British Film Institute website
|