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Alec McCowen

Alexander Duncan McCowen, CBE (26 May 1925[1] – 6 February 2017) was an English actor. He was known for his work in numerous film and stage productions.

Alec McCowen

Born
Alexander Duncan McCowen

(1925-05-26)26 May 1925
Died6 February 2017(2017-02-06) (aged 91)
London, England
NationalityBritish
Other namesAlex McCowen
EducationSkinners' School
Alma materRoyal Academy of Dramatic Art
OccupationActor
Years active1942–2002
Partner(s)Geoffrey Burridge
(– 1987; his death)

Early life

McCowen was born in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, the son of Mary (née Walkden), a dancer, and Duncan McCowen, a shopkeeper.[2] He attended The Skinners' School in Tunbridge Wells - he was known as 'Squeaker' McCowan by his friends - and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.

 
Young Alec

Career

Early theatre work

McCowen first appeared on stage at the Repertory Theatre, Macclesfield, in August 1942 as Micky in Paddy the Next Best Thing. He appeared in repertory in York and Birmingham 1943–45, and toured India and Burma in a production of Kenneth Horne's West End comedy Love in a Mist during 1945 with the Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA). He continued in repertory 1946–49, during which time he played a season at St John's, Newfoundland, Canada.

He made his London debut on 20 April 1950 at the Arts Theatre as Maxim in Anton Chekhov's Ivanov, and made his first appearances on the New York City stage at the Ziegfeld Theatre on 19 December 1951 as an Egyptian Guard in Caesar and Cleopatra, and on 20 December 1951 as the Messenger in Antony and Cleopatra. Following a series of roles at the Arts and with the Repertory Players, he had rising success as Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec in Moulin Rouge at the then New Theatre, Bromley, and appeared as Barnaby Tucker in The Matchmaker at the Theatre Royal Haymarket, both 1954.

After appearances as Dr Bird in The Caine Mutiny Court Martial at the London Hippodrome in 1956, and Michael Claverton-Ferry in T. S. Eliot's The Elder Statesman, first at the Edinburgh Festival in 1958, then at the Cambridge Theatre, he joined the Old Vic Company for its 1959–60 season, among several parts taking the title role in Richard II, then stayed on for the 1960–61 season to play Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet, Oberon in A Midsummer Night's Dream and Malvolio in Twelfth Night.

He joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in September 1962, appearing at Stratford-upon-Avon playing Antipholus of Syracuse in The Comedy of Errors and the Fool to Paul Scofield's King Lear, subsequently appearing in both plays at the Aldwych Theatre in December 1962 – performing these roles again for a British Council tour of the Soviet Union, Europe and the United States from February to June 1964. With the RSC he also played "the gruelling role"[3] of Father Riccardo Fontana in Rolf Hochhuth's controversial play The Representative at the Aldwych in December 1963.

Later theatre work

He enjoyed a career breakthrough at the Mermaid Theatre in April 1968 as Fr. William Rolfe in Hadrian the Seventh, winning his first Evening Standard Award as Best Actor for the London production and a Tony nomination after the transfer to Broadway.

At the Royal Court in August 1970, McCowen was cast to play the title role in Christopher Hampton's sophisticated comedy, The Philanthropist. If a philanthropist is literally someone who likes people, McCowen's Philip was a philologist with a compulsive urge not to hurt people's feelings – the inverse of Molière's The Misanthrope. Following enthusiastic reviews the production played to packed houses and transferred to the Mayfair Theatre where it ran for a further three years, making it the Royal Court's most successful straight play. McCowen and his co-star Jane Asher went with it to Broadway in March 1971 where he won the 1971 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Performance.

His next big successes were in National Theatre Company productions at the Old Vic. In February 1973 he co-starred with Diana Rigg in Molière's The Misanthrope for which he won his second Evening Standard award; followed in July 1973 by the role of psychiatrist Martin Dysart ("played on a knife edge of professional skill and personal disgust by McCowen", according to Irving Wardle reviewing for The Times) in the world premiere of Peter Shaffer's Equus.

McCowen devised and directed his own solo performance of the complete text of the St. Mark's Gospel, for which he received international acclaim and another Tony nomination. It opened first at the Riverside Studios in January 1978 before beginning a long West End season at the Mermaid Theatre then at the Comedy Theatre. Taking the production to New York, he appeared at the Marymount Manhattan and Playhouse theatres.

Christopher Hampton's stage adaptation of George Steiner's novel The Portage to San Cristobal of A.H. at the Mermaid in 1982 gave McCowen a great final speech, an attempted vindication of racial extermination delivered by Adolf Hitler, which for Guardian critic Michael Billington was "one of the greatest pieces of acting I have ever seen: a shuffling, grizzled, hunched, baggy figure, yet suggesting the monomaniac power of the Nuremberg Rallies, inhabiting the frail vessel of this old man's body." It was a performance that also won him his third Evening Standard Best Actor award, a record equalled only by Laurence Olivier and Paul Scofield.

Two years later, again at the Mermaid, McCowen gave a portrayal of the British poet Rudyard Kipling in a one-man play by Brian Clark, performed in a setting that exactly matched Kipling's own study at Bateman's (his Jacobean rustic haven in Sussex) "and turning", as Michael Billington wrote, "an essentially private man into a performer." McCowen appeared in the play on Broadway and on television for Channel 4.

Directing

While preparing to co-star as Vladimir to John Alderton's Estragon in Michael Rudman's acclaimed production of Waiting for Godot at the National Theatre in November 1987, McCowen also spent a busy autumn staging Martin Crimp's trilogy of short plays Definitely the Bahamas at the Orange Tree Theatre in Richmond upon Thames, having previously enjoyed Crimp's style of writing in a BBC radio version of Three Attempted Acts. As Charles Spencer wrote in The Daily Telegraph: "As a director McCowen captures both the subtlety and the richness of these three original and beautifully written plays."

At the Hampstead Theatre in December 1972 he directed a revival of Terence Rattigan's wartime London comedy While the Sun Shines.

Film and television

McCowen made his film debut in The Cruel Sea released in 1953. His other film credits include roles in Town on Trial (1957), A Night to Remember (1958), The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (1962), The Witches (1966), Alfred Hitchcock's Frenzy (1972), Travels with My Aunt (1972, for which he received a Golden Globe nomination), Never Say Never Again (1983), Personal Services (1987) and Henry V (1989).

Television roles included the BBC's four-part adaptation of J. B. Priestley's Angel Pavement (1958), and his one-man stage performance of The Gospel According to Saint Mark, transferred to television by Thames for Easter 1979.[4]

He appeared alongside Maureen Lipman and Arthur Askey performing comic monologues in The Green Tie on the Little Yellow Dog, which was recorded 1982, and broadcast by Channel 4 in 1983.[5]

He appeared in the BBC Television Shakespeare series as Malvolio in Twelfth Night and as Chorus in Henry V. In 1984 and 1985 McCowen starred in the ten episodes of the short-lived television series Mr Palfrey of Westminster as a "spy catcher" working for British intelligence under the direction of a female boss (played by Caroline Blakiston).

His one-man performance as Rudyard Kipling was broadcast on television in 1984.[citation needed] His later appearances included playing Albert Speer and Rudolf Hess in the BBC docudramas The World Walk in 1984 and 1985, and as astronomer Sir Frank Dyson in Longitude in 2000.[6] He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1989, when he was surprised by Michael Aspel at the Strand Theatre in London.[citation needed] He was annoyed when no mention was made of his long-term male partner, fellow actor Geoffrey Burridge and threatened to stop the show from being broadcast. The dispute was resolved by the host, Michael Aspel, adding a voiceover over the final credits acknowledging the relationship.

Literature

McCowen published his first volume of autobiography, Young Gemini in 1979, followed a year later by Double Bill (Elm Tree Books).

Personal life

His partner, the actor Geoffrey Burridge, died from AIDS complications in 1987.[7][8][9]

Death

McCowen died, aged 91, on 6 February 2017.[10]

Filmography

List of theatre roles

Honours

He was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1972 New Year Honours[11] and promoted to Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1986 New Year Honours.[12]

On 2 May 2017 McCowen was accorded a memorial service at St. Paul's Church in Covent Garden (known as "the actors' church"), conducted by the Reverend Simon Grigg. McCowen's nephew, Reverend Nigel Mumford, read an affectionate remembrance from McCowen's sister Jean Mumford's memoirs titled "Childhood memories of Pantos". The tribute was read by Dame Penelope Wilton, followed by a tribute from the playwright Christopher Hampton. Rebecca Trehearn sang "Bill" from Show Boat, which was followed by a tribute from the theatre critic Michael Billington and a tribute by the actor Malcolm Sinclair. After final prayers a plaque to McCowen was dedicated by Grigg to the left of the altar.[citation needed]

Bibliography

  • Theatre Record and its annual Indexes
  • Who's Who in the Theatre, 17th edition, ed Ian Herbert, Gale (1981) ISBN 0-8103-0234-9.
  • Double Bill (autobiography) by Alec McCowen, Elm Tree Books (1980) ISBN 0-241-10395-9.
  • The National: The Theatre and its Work 1963–1997 by Simon Callow, Nick Hern Books/NT (1997) ISBN 1-85459-323-4.
  • Halliwell's Who's Who in the Movies, 4th (and final) edition, ed John Walker, HarperCollins 2006 ISBN 978-0-00-716957-3
  • Halliwell's Television Companion, 3rd edition, Grafton (1986) ISBN 0-246-12838-0.
  • Memorial service notes added by Bryan Hewitt

See also

References

  1. ^ . The Telegraph. 26 May 2011. Archived from the original on 27 May 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2014. Mr Alec McCowen, actor, is 86
  2. ^ "Alec McCowen Biography (1925–)". Filmreference.com. 26 May 1925. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  3. ^ Double Bill by Alec McCowen, Elm Tree Books (1980), ISBN 0-241-10395-9, page 7.
  4. ^ . Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. 16 April 2009. Archived from the original on 2 August 2012. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  5. ^ [1] The Green Tie on the Little Yellow Dog production website
  6. ^ "Longitude © (1999)". Retrieved 22 June 2021.
  7. ^ Clum, John M. (2000). Still Acting Gay: Male Homosexuality in Modern Drama. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-22384-7.[page needed]
  8. ^ Raymond, Gerard (June 1990). "Smart Alec". Advocate (553): 52.
  9. ^ The Advocate: The National Gay & Lesbian Newsmagazine. Liberation Publications. April 1990.
  10. ^ "Alec McCowen obituary". The Guardian. 7 February 2017. Retrieved 7 February 2017.
  11. ^ "Viewing Page 11 of Issue 45554". London-gazette.co.uk. 31 December 1971. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  12. ^ . Ftvdb.bfi.org.uk. 2 July 2015. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 10 August 2015.

External links

alec, mccowen, alexander, duncan, mccowen, 1925, february, 2017, english, actor, known, work, numerous, film, stage, productions, cbebornalexander, duncan, mccowen, 1925, 1925tunbridge, wells, kent, englanddied6, february, 2017, 2017, aged, london, englandnati. Alexander Duncan McCowen CBE 26 May 1925 1 6 February 2017 was an English actor He was known for his work in numerous film and stage productions Alec McCowenCBEBornAlexander Duncan McCowen 1925 05 26 26 May 1925Tunbridge Wells Kent EnglandDied6 February 2017 2017 02 06 aged 91 London EnglandNationalityBritishOther namesAlex McCowenEducationSkinners SchoolAlma materRoyal Academy of Dramatic ArtOccupationActorYears active1942 2002Partner s Geoffrey Burridge 1987 his death Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Early theatre work 2 2 Later theatre work 2 3 Directing 2 4 Film and television 2 5 Literature 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 Filmography 6 List of theatre roles 7 Honours 8 Bibliography 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life EditMcCowen was born in Tunbridge Wells Kent the son of Mary nee Walkden a dancer and Duncan McCowen a shopkeeper 2 He attended The Skinners School in Tunbridge Wells he was known as Squeaker McCowan by his friends and the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art Young AlecCareer EditEarly theatre work Edit McCowen first appeared on stage at the Repertory Theatre Macclesfield in August 1942 as Micky in Paddy the Next Best Thing He appeared in repertory in York and Birmingham 1943 45 and toured India and Burma in a production of Kenneth Horne s West End comedy Love in a Mist during 1945 with the Entertainments National Service Association ENSA He continued in repertory 1946 49 during which time he played a season at St John s Newfoundland Canada He made his London debut on 20 April 1950 at the Arts Theatre as Maxim in Anton Chekhov s Ivanov and made his first appearances on the New York City stage at the Ziegfeld Theatre on 19 December 1951 as an Egyptian Guard in Caesar and Cleopatra and on 20 December 1951 as the Messenger in Antony and Cleopatra Following a series of roles at the Arts and with the Repertory Players he had rising success as Henri de Toulouse Lautrec in Moulin Rouge at the then New Theatre Bromley and appeared as Barnaby Tucker in The Matchmaker at the Theatre Royal Haymarket both 1954 After appearances as Dr Bird in The Caine Mutiny Court Martial at the London Hippodrome in 1956 and Michael Claverton Ferry in T S Eliot s The Elder Statesman first at the Edinburgh Festival in 1958 then at the Cambridge Theatre he joined the Old Vic Company for its 1959 60 season among several parts taking the title role in Richard II then stayed on for the 1960 61 season to play Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet Oberon in A Midsummer Night s Dream and Malvolio in Twelfth Night He joined the Royal Shakespeare Company in September 1962 appearing at Stratford upon Avon playing Antipholus of Syracuse in The Comedy of Errors and the Fool to Paul Scofield s King Lear subsequently appearing in both plays at the Aldwych Theatre in December 1962 performing these roles again for a British Council tour of the Soviet Union Europe and the United States from February to June 1964 With the RSC he also played the gruelling role 3 of Father Riccardo Fontana in Rolf Hochhuth s controversial play The Representative at the Aldwych in December 1963 Later theatre work Edit He enjoyed a career breakthrough at the Mermaid Theatre in April 1968 as Fr William Rolfe in Hadrian the Seventh winning his first Evening Standard Award as Best Actor for the London production and a Tony nomination after the transfer to Broadway At the Royal Court in August 1970 McCowen was cast to play the title role in Christopher Hampton s sophisticated comedy The Philanthropist If a philanthropist is literally someone who likes people McCowen s Philip was a philologist with a compulsive urge not to hurt people s feelings the inverse of Moliere s The Misanthrope Following enthusiastic reviews the production played to packed houses and transferred to the Mayfair Theatre where it ran for a further three years making it the Royal Court s most successful straight play McCowen and his co star Jane Asher went with it to Broadway in March 1971 where he won the 1971 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Performance His next big successes were in National Theatre Company productions at the Old Vic In February 1973 he co starred with Diana Rigg in Moliere s The Misanthrope for which he won his second Evening Standard award followed in July 1973 by the role of psychiatrist Martin Dysart played on a knife edge of professional skill and personal disgust by McCowen according to Irving Wardle reviewing for The Times in the world premiere of Peter Shaffer s Equus McCowen devised and directed his own solo performance of the complete text of the St Mark s Gospel for which he received international acclaim and another Tony nomination It opened first at the Riverside Studios in January 1978 before beginning a long West End season at the Mermaid Theatre then at the Comedy Theatre Taking the production to New York he appeared at the Marymount Manhattan and Playhouse theatres Christopher Hampton s stage adaptation of George Steiner s novel The Portage to San Cristobal of A H at the Mermaid in 1982 gave McCowen a great final speech an attempted vindication of racial extermination delivered by Adolf Hitler which for Guardian critic Michael Billington was one of the greatest pieces of acting I have ever seen a shuffling grizzled hunched baggy figure yet suggesting the monomaniac power of the Nuremberg Rallies inhabiting the frail vessel of this old man s body It was a performance that also won him his third Evening Standard Best Actor award a record equalled only by Laurence Olivier and Paul Scofield Two years later again at the Mermaid McCowen gave a portrayal of the British poet Rudyard Kipling in a one man play by Brian Clark performed in a setting that exactly matched Kipling s own study at Bateman s his Jacobean rustic haven in Sussex and turning as Michael Billington wrote an essentially private man into a performer McCowen appeared in the play on Broadway and on television for Channel 4 Directing Edit While preparing to co star as Vladimir to John Alderton s Estragon in Michael Rudman s acclaimed production of Waiting for Godot at the National Theatre in November 1987 McCowen also spent a busy autumn staging Martin Crimp s trilogy of short plays Definitely the Bahamas at the Orange Tree Theatre in Richmond upon Thames having previously enjoyed Crimp s style of writing in a BBC radio version of Three Attempted Acts As Charles Spencer wrote in The Daily Telegraph As a director McCowen captures both the subtlety and the richness of these three original and beautifully written plays At the Hampstead Theatre in December 1972 he directed a revival of Terence Rattigan s wartime London comedy While the Sun Shines Film and television Edit McCowen made his film debut in The Cruel Sea released in 1953 His other film credits include roles in Town on Trial 1957 A Night to Remember 1958 The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner 1962 The Witches 1966 Alfred Hitchcock s Frenzy 1972 Travels with My Aunt 1972 for which he received a Golden Globe nomination Never Say Never Again 1983 Personal Services 1987 and Henry V 1989 Television roles included the BBC s four part adaptation of J B Priestley s Angel Pavement 1958 and his one man stage performance of The Gospel According to Saint Mark transferred to television by Thames for Easter 1979 4 He appeared alongside Maureen Lipman and Arthur Askey performing comic monologues in The Green Tie on the Little Yellow Dog which was recorded 1982 and broadcast by Channel 4 in 1983 5 He appeared in the BBC Television Shakespeare series as Malvolio in Twelfth Night and as Chorus in Henry V In 1984 and 1985 McCowen starred in the ten episodes of the short lived television series Mr Palfrey of Westminster as a spy catcher working for British intelligence under the direction of a female boss played by Caroline Blakiston His one man performance as Rudyard Kipling was broadcast on television in 1984 citation needed His later appearances included playing Albert Speer and Rudolf Hess in the BBC docudramas The World Walk in 1984 and 1985 and as astronomer Sir Frank Dyson in Longitude in 2000 6 He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1989 when he was surprised by Michael Aspel at the Strand Theatre in London citation needed He was annoyed when no mention was made of his long term male partner fellow actor Geoffrey Burridge and threatened to stop the show from being broadcast The dispute was resolved by the host Michael Aspel adding a voiceover over the final credits acknowledging the relationship Literature Edit McCowen published his first volume of autobiography Young Gemini in 1979 followed a year later by Double Bill Elm Tree Books Personal life EditHis partner the actor Geoffrey Burridge died from AIDS complications in 1987 7 8 9 Death EditMcCowen died aged 91 on 6 February 2017 10 Filmography EditThe Cruel Sea 1953 Tonbridge The Divided Heart 1954 Reporter The Deep Blue Sea 1955 Ken Thompson Private s Progress 1956 2nd Medical Orderly uncredited The Long Arm 1956 House Surgeon Town on Trial 1957 Peter Crowley Time Without Pity 1957 Alec Graham The Good Companions 1957 Albert Oakroyd The One That Got Away 1957 Duty Officer Hucknall The Silent Enemy 1958 Able Seaman Morgan A Night to Remember 1958 Wireless Operator Harold Thomas Cottam Carpathia The Doctor s Dilemma 1958 Redpenny A Midsummer Night s Dream 1959 Bottom voice The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner 1962 Brown In the Cool of the Day 1963 Dickie Bayliss The Agony and the Ecstasy 1965 uncredited The Witches 1966 Alan Bax The Hawaiians 1970 Micah Hale Frenzy 1972 Chief Inspector Oxford Travels with My Aunt 1972 Henry Pulling Stevie 1978 Freddy Hanover Street 1979 Major Trumbo Twelfth Night 1980 Malvolio Forever Young 1983 Father Vincent Never Say Never Again 1983 Q Algy The Young Visiters 1984 J M Barrie The Assam Garden 1985 Mr Philpott Personal Services 1987 Wing Commander Morten Cry Freedom 1987 Acting High Commissioner Henry V 1989 Bishop of Ely The Age of Innocence 1993 Sillerton Jackson Gangs of New York 2002 Reverend Raleigh final film role List of theatre roles EditSir Henry Harcourt Reilly in The Cocktail Party Phoenix Theatre July 1986 Nikolai in Brian Friel s Turgenev adaptation Fathers and Sons National Theatre July 1987 Vladimir in Waiting for Godot National Theatre November 1987 Harry Rivers in Jeffrey Archer s Exclusive Strand Theatre September 1989 George in A Single Man Greenwich Theatre June 1990 Jack in Brian Friel s Dancing at Lughnasa Abbey Theatre Dublin and National Theatre October 1990 Phoenix Theatre March 1991 and Garrick Theatre December 1991 Caesar in Bernard Shaw s Caesar and Cleopatra Greenwich Theatre February 1992 Michael in Someone Who ll Watch Over Me Hampstead Theatre July 1992 Vaudeville Theatre September 1992 the Booth Theatre New York November 1992 to June 1993 Edward Elgar in David Pownall s Elgar s Rondo RSC The Pit May 1994 Prospero in The Tempest RSC Barbican Theatre July 1994 Reginald Pager a retired opera singer in Ronald Harwood s Quartet Yvonne Arnaud Theatre and Albery Theatre September 1999 January 2000 Honours EditHe was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire OBE in the 1972 New Year Honours 11 and promoted to Commander of the Order of the British Empire CBE in the 1986 New Year Honours 12 On 2 May 2017 McCowen was accorded a memorial service at St Paul s Church in Covent Garden known as the actors church conducted by the Reverend Simon Grigg McCowen s nephew Reverend Nigel Mumford read an affectionate remembrance from McCowen s sister Jean Mumford s memoirs titled Childhood memories of Pantos The tribute was read by Dame Penelope Wilton followed by a tribute from the playwright Christopher Hampton Rebecca Trehearn sang Bill from Show Boat which was followed by a tribute from the theatre critic Michael Billington and a tribute by the actor Malcolm Sinclair After final prayers a plaque to McCowen was dedicated by Grigg to the left of the altar citation needed Bibliography EditTheatre Record and its annual Indexes Who s Who in the Theatre 17th edition ed Ian Herbert Gale 1981 ISBN 0 8103 0234 9 Double Bill autobiography by Alec McCowen Elm Tree Books 1980 ISBN 0 241 10395 9 The National The Theatre and its Work 1963 1997 by Simon Callow Nick Hern Books NT 1997 ISBN 1 85459 323 4 Halliwell s Who s Who in the Movies 4th and final edition ed John Walker HarperCollins 2006 ISBN 978 0 00 716957 3 Halliwell s Television Companion 3rd edition Grafton 1986 ISBN 0 246 12838 0 Memorial service notes added by Bryan HewittSee also EditTale Spinners for ChildrenReferences Edit Birthday s today The Telegraph 26 May 2011 Archived from the original on 27 May 2011 Retrieved 24 May 2014 Mr Alec McCowen actor is 86 Alec McCowen Biography 1925 Filmreference com 26 May 1925 Retrieved 10 August 2015 Double Bill by Alec McCowen Elm Tree Books 1980 ISBN 0 241 10395 9 page 7 BFI Film amp TV Database The GOSPEL ACCORDING TO ST MARK 1979 Ftvdb bfi org uk 16 April 2009 Archived from the original on 2 August 2012 Retrieved 1 March 2012 1 The Green Tie on the Little Yellow Dog production website Longitude c 1999 Retrieved 22 June 2021 Clum John M 2000 Still Acting Gay Male Homosexuality in Modern Drama Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 22384 7 page needed Raymond Gerard June 1990 Smart Alec Advocate 553 52 The Advocate The National Gay amp Lesbian Newsmagazine Liberation Publications April 1990 Alec McCowen obituary The Guardian 7 February 2017 Retrieved 7 February 2017 Viewing Page 11 of Issue 45554 London gazette co uk 31 December 1971 Retrieved 1 March 2012 Alec McCowen BFI Ftvdb bfi org uk 2 July 2015 Archived from the original on 25 September 2012 Retrieved 10 August 2015 External links EditSelected performances in the Theatre Archive University of Bristol Alec McCowen at IMDb Alec McCowen on BFI Alec McCowen at the Internet Broadway Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alec McCowen amp oldid 1106321457, 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