Richard Harris

For other people named Richard Harris, see Richard Harris (disambiguation).
Richard Harris

Harris in 1985
Born (1930-10-01)1 October 1930
Limerick, County Limerick, Ireland
Died 25 October 2002(2002-10-25) (aged 72)
Fitzrovia, London, England
Occupation Actor, singer, songwriter, producer, director, writer
Years active 1958–2002
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Rees-Williams (m. 1957; div. 1969)
Ann Turkel (m. 1974; div. 1982)
Children 3, including Jared and Damian

Richard St John Harris (1 October 1930 – 25 October 2002) was an Irish actor, singer, songwriter, producer, director, and writer. He appeared on stage and in many films, appearing as Frank Machin in This Sporting Life, and King Arthur in the 1967 film Camelot and the subsequent 1981 revival of the show. He played an aristocrat and prisoner in A Man Called Horse (1970), a gunfighter in Clint Eastwood's Western film Unforgiven (1992), Emperor Marcus Aurelius in Gladiator (2000), and Albus Dumbledore in the first two Harry Potter films: The Philosopher's Stone (2001) and the Chamber of Secrets (2002). Harris had a top ten hit in the United Kingdom and United States with his 1968 recording of Jimmy Webb's song "MacArthur Park".

Early life

Harris, the sixth of nine children of Mildred Josephine (née Harty) and Ivan John Harris, was born in Limerick. He was raised in a middle-class and staunchly Roman Catholic family.[1] Harris' siblings included Patrick Ivan (1929-2008), Noel William Michael (1932-1996), Diarmid (Dermot, 1939–1985), and William George Harris (1942-2007).[2][3] His maternal niece is actress Annabelle Wallis.

Harris was schooled by the Jesuits at Crescent College. A talented rugby player, he was on several Munster Junior and Senior Cup teams for Crescent, and played for Garryowen.[4] Harris' athletic career was cut short when he caught tuberculosis in his teens. He remained an ardent fan of the Munster Rugby and Young Munster teams until his death, attending many of their matches, and there are numerous stories of japes at rugby matches with actors and fellow rugby fans Peter O'Toole and Richard Burton.

After recovering from tuberculosis, Harris moved to England, wanting to become a director. He could not find any suitable training courses, and enrolled in the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art (LAMDA) to learn acting. He had failed an audition at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) and had been rejected by the Central School of Speech and Drama, because they felt he was too old at 24.[5] While still a student, Harris rented the tiny "off-West End" Irving Theatre, and there directed his own production of Clifford Odets's play Winter Journey (The Country Girl). This show was a critical success, but was a financial failure, and Harris lost all his savings in this venture.

As a result, Harris ended up temporarily homeless, sleeping in a coal cellar for six weeks. Accounts of Harris' contemporaries from his hometown of Limerick, however, indicate that Harris may have exaggerated these stories somewhat and that he actually stayed with a few aunts, sleeping on their living room sofas. After completing his studies at the Academy, Harris joined Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop. He began getting roles in West End theatre productions, starting with The Quare Fellow in 1956, a transfer from the Theatre Workshop. Harris spent nearly a decade in obscurity, learning his profession on stages throughout Britain.[6]

Career

Harris made his film debut in 1958 in the film Alive and Kicking, and played the lead role in The Ginger Man in the West End in 1959. He hated filming The Wreck of the Mary Deare so much that he refused to return to Hollywood for several years, turning down the role of Commodus in The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964). He had a memorable bit part in the film The Guns of Navarone (1961) as a Royal Australian Air Force pilot who reports that blowing up the "bloody guns" of the island of Navarone is impossible by an air raid.

For his role in the film Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), despite being virtually unknown to film audiences, Harris reportedly insisted on third billing, behind Trevor Howard and Marlon Brando. He did not get along at all with Brando during filming.

Harris' first starring role was in the film This Sporting Life (1963), as a bitter young coal miner, Frank Machin, who becomes an acclaimed rugby league football player. The film proved the greatest moment of Harris' acting career, for which he was rightly critically acclaimed. For his role, Harris won Best Actor in 1963 at the Cannes Film Festival and an Academy Award nomination. Harris followed this with a leading role in the Italian film, Michelangelo Antonioni's Il Deserto Rosso (Red Desert, 1964), and he also won notice for his role in Sam Peckinpah's Major Dundee (1965), as an Irish immigrant who became a Confederate cavalryman during the American Civil War.

He played Cain in John Huston's film The Bible: In the Beginning.... Harris next performed the role of King Arthur in the film adaptation of the musical play Camelot (1967). He continued to appear on stage in this role for many years, including a successful Broadway run in 1981–82. He played the title role in the film Cromwell in 1970 opposite Alec Guinness as King Charles I of England. In A Man Called Horse (1970) Harris starred as an 1825 English aristocrat who is captured by Indians. He lives with them and begins to understand/accept their lifestyles. That year British exhibitors voted him the 9th most popular star at the UK box office.[7]

Harris recorded several albums of music, one of which, A Tramp Shining, included the seven-minute hit song "MacArthur Park" (Harris insisted on singing the lyric as "MacArthur's Park").[8] This song had been written by Jimmy Webb, and it reached number 2 on the American Billboard Hot 100 chart. It also topped several music sales charts in Europe during the summer of 1968. "MacArthur Park" sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc.[9] A second album, also consisting entirely of music composed by Webb, The Yard Went on Forever, was released in 1969.[10]

Other film performances followed, among them a role as a reluctant police informant in the coal-mining tale The Molly Maguires (1970), also starring Sean Connery. Harris starred in Cromwell (1970), a film based on the life of Oliver Cromwell who led the Parliamentary forces during the English Civil War and, as Lord Protector, ruled Great Britain and Ireland in the 1650s.

In 1971 Harris starred in a BBC TV film adaptation "The Snow Goose", from a screenplay by Paul Gallico. It won a Golden Globe for Best Movie made for TV and was nominated for both a BAFTA and an Emmy.[11] and was shown in the U.S. as part of the Hallmark Hall of Fame.

Harris starred in Man in the Wilderness (1971), Juggernaut (1974), a British suspense film about the hijacking of an ocean liner, The Cassandra Crossing (1976), along with the actresses Sophia Loren and Ava Gardner, and in a B-film, Orca (1977). His highest-grossing film of this era was the action ensemble film The Wild Geese (1978), co-starring his friend Richard Burton, although the film was a massive failure in the United States.

In 1973, Harris published a book of poetry, I, In the Membership of My Days, which was later reissued in part in an audio LP format, augmented by self-penned songs such as "I Don't Know."

Harris' film career collapsed after the late 1970s and in the next decade he was rarely seen on screen, although he continued to act on stage. By the late 1980s roles in Mack the Knife and the TV film version of Maigret, opposite Barbara Shelley, indicated declining popularity which Harris told his biographer, Michael Feeney Callan, he was "utterly reconciled to". He also starred in Bruno Mattei's 1988 action movie Strike Commando 2 opposite to Brent Huff and Mary Stavin.

In June 1989, director Jim Sheridan cast Harris in the lead role in The Field, written by the esteemed Irish playwright John B. Keane. The lead role of "Bull" McCabe was to be played by former Abbey Theatre actor Ray McAnally. When McAnally died suddenly on 15 June 1989, Harris was offered the McCabe role. The Field was released in 1990 and earned Harris his second Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. He lost to Jeremy Irons for Reversal of Fortune. In 1992, Harris had a supporting role in the film Patriot Games, as a fundraiser for the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA).

A lifelong supporter of Jesuit education principles,[12] Harris established a friendship with University of Scranton President J. A. Panuska[13][14] and raised funds for a scholarship for Irish students established in honour of his brother and manager, Dermot, who had died the previous year of a heart attack.[13][14] He chaired acting workshops and cast the university's production of Julius Caesar in November 1987.

Over several years in the late 1980s, Harris worked with Irish author Michael Feeney Callan on his biography, which was published by Sidgwick & Jackson in 1990.

Harris appeared in two films which won the Academy Award for Best Picture. First, as the gunfighter "English Bob" in the Western Unforgiven (1992); second, as the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius in Ridley Scott's Gladiator (2000). He also played a lead role alongside James Earl Jones in the Darrell Roodt film adaptation of Cry, the Beloved Country (1995). In 1999, Harris starred in the film To Walk with Lions. After Gladiator, Harris played the supporting role of Albus Dumbledore in the first two of the Harry Potter films, and as Abbé Faria in Kevin Reynolds' film adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo (2002). The film Kaena: The Prophecy (2003) was dedicated to him posthumously as he had voiced the character Opaz before his death.

Concerning his role as Dumbledore, Harris had stated that he did not intend to take the part at first, since he knew that his health was in decline, but he relented and accepted it because his 11-year-old granddaughter threatened never to speak to him again if he did not take it.[15] In an interview with the Toronto Star in 2001, Harris expressed his concern that his association with the Harry Potter films would outshine the rest of his career. He explained, "Because, you see, I don't just want to be remembered for being in those bloody films, and I'm afraid that's what's going to happen to me."[16]

Richard Harris also made part of the Bible TV movie project filmed as a cinema production for the TV, a project produced by Lux Vide Italy with the collaboration of Radio Televisione Italiana RAI and Channel 5 of France,[17] and premiered in the United States in the channel TNT in the 1990s. He portrayed the main and title character in the production Abraham (1993)[18] as well as Saint John of Patmos in the 2000 TV movie production Apocalypse.[19]

Personal life

In 1957, Harris married Elizabeth Rees-Williams, daughter of David Rees-Williams, 1st Baron Ogmore. They had three children: actor Jared Harris, who was once married to Emilia Fox; actor Jamie Harris; and director Damian Harris, who was once married to Annabel Brooks and was once the partner of Peta Wilson. Harris and Rees-Williams divorced in 1969, after which Elizabeth married Rex Harrison. Harris' second marriage was to the American actress Ann Turkel. In 1982, they divorced.

Harris was a member of the Roman Catholic Knights of Malta, and was also dubbed a knight by the Queen of Denmark in 1985.

Harris paid £75,000 for William Burges' Tower House in Holland Park in 1968, after discovering that the American entertainer Liberace had arranged to buy the house but not yet put down a deposit.[20][21] Harris employed the original decorators, Campbell Smith & Company Ltd. to carry out extensive restoration work on the interior.[21]

Harris was a vocal supporter of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) from 1973 until 1984.[22] In January 1984 remarks he made on the previous month's Harrods bombing caused great controversy after which he disavowed his support for the PIRA.[23][24][25]

At the height of his stardom in the 1960s and early 1970s Harris was almost as well known for his hellraiser lifestyle and heavy drinking as he was for his acting career. He was a longtime alcoholic until he became a teetotaler in 1981, although he did resume drinking Guinness a decade later. He gave up drugs after almost dying from a cocaine overdose in 1978.

Death

Harris was diagnosed with Hodgkin's disease in August 2002, reportedly after being hospitalised with pneumonia.[26] He died at University College Hospital in Fitzrovia, London on 25 October 2002, aged 72. He had fallen into a coma in his final three days.[27]

Harris was a lifelong friend of actor Peter O'Toole,[28] and his family reportedly hoped that O'Toole would replace Harris as Dumbledore in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.[28] There were, however, worries of insuring O'Toole for the six remaining films in the series, and he was ultimately replaced as Dumbledore by the Irish-born actor Michael Gambon.

Harris' body was cremated, and his ashes were scattered in the Bahamas, where he had owned a home.[29]

Memorials

A statue in Kilkee, Republic of Ireland, of the young Richard Harris playing squash

On 30 September 2006, Manuel Di Lucia, of Kilkee, County Clare, a longtime friend, organised the placement in Kilkee of a bronze life-size statue of Richard Harris. It shows Harris at the age of eighteen playing squash. The sculptor was Seamus Connolly and the work was unveiled by Russell Crowe.[30] Harris was an accomplished squash player, winning the Tivoli Cup in Kilkee four years in a row from 1948 to 1951, a record unsurpassed to this day.[31]

Another life-size statue of Richard Harris, as King Arthur from his film, Camelot, has been erected in Bedford Row, in the centre of his home town of Limerick. The sculptor of this statue was the Irish sculptor Jim Connolly, a graduate of the Limerick School of Art and Design.

At the 2009 BAFTAs, Mickey Rourke dedicated his Best Actor award to Harris, calling him a "good friend, and great actor.

In 2013, actor Zeb Moore founded the annual Richard Harris International Film Festival.

Awards and nominations

Academy Awards

Golden Globes

Cannes

Golden Raspberry Awards

Grammy Awards

Moscow Film Festival

Filmography

Discography

Albums

Singles

CD releases and compilations

See also

References

  1. "A hell-raiser and shining star". Daily Mail. Retrieved 19 October 2010.
  2. "Harris was one of the most outstanding film stars of his time". Irish Independent. 27 October 2002. Retrieved 10 December 2007.
  3. Severo, Richard (26 October 2002). "Richard Harris, Versatile And Volatile Star, 72, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 December 2007.
  4. "Limerick rugby full of heroes". Wesclark.com. 24 May 2002. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  5. Archived 11 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. "Entertainment | Obituary: Richard Harris". BBC News. 25 October 2002. Retrieved 10 November 2012.
  7. Staff Reporter. "Paul Newman Britain's favourite star." Times [London, England] 31 December 1970: 9. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 11 July 2012.
  8. Fresh Air interview with Jimmy Webb by Terry Gross on NPR, 2004
  9. Murrells, Joseph (1978). The Book of Golden Discs (2nd ed.). London: Barrie and Jenkins Ltd. p. 241. ISBN 978-0-214-20512-5. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  10. Album liner notes for "Richard Harris – the Webb Sessions 1968–1969"
  11. The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present. Ballantine Books. 2003. p. 1422. ISBN 0-345-45542-8.
  12. Callan, Michael Feeney (2004). Richard Harris: Sex, Death and the Movies. London: Robson Books. p. 212. ISBN 978-1861057662.
  13. 1 2 "Harris Welcomed at U.S. University". Lewistown Journal. Associated Press. 18 November 1987. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  14. 1 2 "Richard Harris Establishes Scholarship Fund in Scranton". Ocala Star-Banner. 9 May 1987. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  15. The Late Show With David Letterman interview, 2001
  16. Kristin. "On Richard Harris – The Leaky Cauldron". The-leaky-cauldron.org. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
  17. [cite web|title=Bible Project for TV|url=http://www.luxvide.it/en/productions.php?categoria2=4]
  18. [cite web|title:Abraham (1993)|url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0109036/]
  19. [cite web|title:Saint John the Apocalypse TV Movie (2000)|url=http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0303668/]
  20. Cliff Goodwin (31 May 2011). Behaving Badly: Richard Harris. Ebury Publishing. pp. 175–. ISBN 978-0-7535-4651-2. Retrieved 21 June 2012.
  21. 1 2 Caroline Dakers (11 December 1999). The Holland Park Circle: Artists and Victorian Society. Yale University Press. pp. 276–. ISBN 978-0-300-08164-0. Retrieved 28 June 2012.
  22. Richard Harris: Sex, Death and the Movies (2004) Michael Feeney Callan p267
  23. "Richard Harris Says IRA Has A Just Cause". Star-Banner. 24 January 1984. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  24. "Richard Harris ducking IRA "bombs"". The Gettysburg Times. 25 November 1988. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  25. Richard Harris: Sex, Death and the Movies (2004) Michael Feeney Callan p267
  26. "Entertainment | Harris's Potter role unaffected by illness". BBC News. 30 August 2002. Retrieved 10 November 2012.
  27. "Lionhearted - Death, Richard Harris". People.com. 2014-05-26. Retrieved 2015-08-19.
  28. 1 2 Peter O'Toole at the Internet Movie Database
  29. "Entertainment | Obituary: Richard Harris". BBC News. 2002-10-25. Retrieved 2015-08-19.
  30. "Crowe pays tribute to Harris at Irish ceremony". BreakingNews.ie. 2 October 2006.
  31. "Tivoli Cup in Kilkee". kilkee.ie. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  32. "7th Moscow International Film Festival (1971)". MIFF. Retrieved 23 December 2012.

Further reading

External links

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