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Wikipedia

Peter Finch

Frederick George Peter Ingle Finch (28 September 1916 – 14 January 1977) was an English-Australian actor of theatre, film and radio.[1][2][3]

Peter Finch
Finch in 1955
Born
Frederick George Peter Ingle Finch

(1916-09-28)28 September 1916
South Kensington, London, England
Died14 January 1977(1977-01-14) (aged 60)
Resting placeHollywood Forever Cemetery
OccupationActor
Years active1934–1977
Spouses
(m. 1943; div. 1959)
(m. 1959; div. 1965)
Eletha Barrett
(m. 1973)
Children4; including Charles Finch
AwardsSee below
Military career
Allegiance Australia
Service/branch Australian Army
Years of service1941–1945
Rank Sergeant
Unit2/1st Field Regiment (Australia)
Battles/warsWorld War II

Born in London, he emigrated to Australia as a teenager and was raised in Sydney, where he worked in vaudeville and radio before becoming a star of Australian films. Joining the Old Vic Company after World War II, he achieved widespread critical success in Britain for both stage and screen performances. One of British cinema's most celebrated leading men of the time,[4] Finch won the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role five times, and won a posthumous Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of crazed television anchorman Howard Beale in the 1976 film Network.

According to the British Film Institute, "it is arguable that no other actor ever chalked up such a rewarding CV in British films, and he accumulated the awards to bolster this view".[5] He died only two months before the 49th Academy Awards, making him the first person to win a posthumous Oscar in an acting category. As of 2023, the only other person to have done so was fellow Australian Heath Ledger.

Early life edit

Family edit

Finch was born as Frederick George Peter Ingle Finch[6][7] in London to Alicia Gladys Fisher. At the time, Alicia was married to George Finch.[2][8][9][10]

George Finch was born to British parents in New South Wales, Australia, but was educated in Paris and Zürich. He was a research chemist when he moved to Britain in 1912 and later served during the First World War with the Royal Army Ordnance Depot and the Royal Field Artillery.[11] In 1915, at Portsmouth, Hampshire, George married Alicia Fisher, the daughter of a Kent barrister.[8] However, Peter only learned in his mid-40s that Wentworth Edward Dallas "Jock" Campbell, an Indian Army officer, not George Finch, was his biological father. George Finch divorced his wife in 1920 on the grounds of her adultery with Campbell.[2] Alicia Finch married Jock Campbell in 1922.[8]

Early childhood edit

George gained custody of Peter, who was taken from his biological mother and brought up by his adoptive paternal grandmother, Laura Finch (formerly Black), in Vaucresson, France. In 1925 Laura took Peter with her to Adyar, a theosophical community near Madras, India, for a number of months, and the young boy lived for a time in a Buddhist monastery.[12] Undoubtedly, as a result of his childhood contact with Buddhism, Finch always claimed to be a Buddhist. He is reported to have said: "I think a man dying on a cross is a ghastly symbol for a religion. And I think a man sitting under a bo tree and becoming enlightened is a beautiful one."[13]

In 1926 he was sent to Australia to live with his great-uncle Edward Herbert Finch at Greenwich Point in Sydney. For three years he attended the local school, then North Sydney Intermediate High School, until 1929.[14] RAF pilot and author Paul Brickhill was a school friend.

Early career in Australia edit

After graduating, Finch went to work as a copy boy for the Sydney Sun and began writing. However, he was more interested in acting, and in late 1933 appeared in a play, Caprice, at the Repertory Theatre.[15]

In 1934–35 he appeared in a number of productions for Doris Fitton at the Savoy Theatre, some with a young Sumner Locke Elliott. He also worked as a sideshow spruiker at the Sydney Royal Easter Show, in vaudeville with Joe Cody and as a foil to American comedian Bert le Blanc.[16] At age 19 Finch toured Australia with George Sorlie's travelling troupe.

Radio work edit

He did radio acting work with Hugh Denison's BSA Players (for Broadcasting Service Association, later to become Macquarie Players). He came to the attention of Australian Broadcasting Commission radio drama producer Lawrence H. Cecil, who was to act as his coach and mentor throughout 1939 and 1940. He was "Chris" in the Children's Session and the first Muddle-Headed Wombat.

He later starred with Neva Carr Glyn in an enormously popular series by Max Afford as husband-and-wife detectives Jeffery and Elizabeth Blackburn as well as other ABC radio plays.[17]

First films edit

Finch's first screen performance was in the short film The Magic Shoes (1935), an adaptation of the Cinderella fairy tale, where Finch played Prince Charming.

He made his feature film debut in Ken G. Hall's Dad and Dave Come to Town (1938), playing a small comic role. His performance was well received and Hall subsequently cast Finch in a larger role in Mr. Chedworth Steps Out (1939), supporting Cecil Kellaway.

Finch appeared in a war propaganda film, The Power and the Glory (1941), playing a fifth columnist.

War service edit

Finch enlisted in the Australian Army on 2 June 1941.[18] He served in the Middle East and was an anti-aircraft gunner during the Bombing of Darwin.

During his war service Finch was given leave to act in radio, theatre and film. He appeared in a number of propaganda shorts, including Another Threshold (1942), These Stars Are Mine (1943), While There is Still Time (1943) and South West Pacific (1943), the latter for Ken G. Hall. He also appeared in two of the few Australian feature films made during the war, The Rats of Tobruk (1944) and the less distinguished Red Sky at Morning (1944).

Finch produced and performed Army Concert Party work, and in 1945 toured bases and hospitals with two Terence Rattigan plays he directed, French Without Tears and While the Sun Shines. He narrated the widely seen documentaries Jungle Patrol (1944) and Sons of the Anzacs (1945).

Finch was discharged from the army on 31 October 1945 at the rank of sergeant.[18]

Post-war career in Australia edit

After the war, Finch continued to work extensively in radio and established himself as Australia's leading actor in that medium, winning Macquarie Awards for best actor in 1946 and 1947.[17] He also worked as a compere, producer and writer.

In 1946, Finch co-founded the Mercury Theatre Company, which put on a number of productions in Sydney over the next few years (initially in the diminutive St James' Hall), as well as running a theatre school.[19][20]

Finch continued to appear in the (rare) Australian feature films made around this time including A Son is Born (1946) and Eureka Stockade (1949). He was a leading contender to play Sir Charles Kingsford Smith in Smithy (1946) but lost out to Ron Randell.

Finch was also involved in some documentaries, narrating Indonesia Calling (1946) and helping make Primitive Peoples about the people of Arnhem Land.

Visit of Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh, and return to Britain edit

Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh toured Australia in 1948 with the Old Vic Company. They attended the Mercury production of The Imaginary Invalid on the factory floor of O'Brien's Glass Factory starring Finch. Olivier was impressed with Finch's acting and encouraged him to move to London, his birthplace. He left Australia permanently in 1948.

British career edit

Theatrical success edit

When Finch arrived in Britain, success came relatively early. Harry Watt arranged for a screen test at Ealing Studios which led to his being cast as a murderous actor in the movie Train of Events (1949) under the direction of Basil Dearden.[21][22]

While making the film Olivier cast him as a Pole in a stage play at The Old Vic, James Bridie's Daphne Laureola (1949) supporting Edith Evans. This was a significant critical and commercial success and established Finch in London immediately. Olivier signed Finch to a five-year contract.[23] When Train of Events came out critic C. A. Lejeune praised Finch's work in the London Observer commenting that he "adds good cheekbones to a quick intelligence and is likely to become a cult, I fear."[24] The Scotsman said Finch "should be regarded as one of the most hopeful recruits to the British screen."[25]

Finch had a small role as an Australian prisoner of war in the World War two drama The Wooden Horse (1950), directed by Jack Lee; this film would be the third-most-popular film at the British box office in 1950.

Finch's performance as a Pole in Daphne Laureola led to his casting as a Polish soldier in The Miniver Story (1950), the British-filmed sequel to the wartime morale boosting film Mrs. Miniver; unlike its predecessor, it was poorly received critically, but it did give Finch an experience of working for a movie financed by a major Hollywood studio.[26][27]

During this time, Finch continued to appear on stage in various productions while under contract to Olivier. He directed a stage production of The White Falcon in January 1950.[28] In February 1950 he toured in a production of The Damascus Blade by Bridget Boland under the direction of Olivier, co starring with John Mills.[29]

Finch returned to the London stage in Captain Carvallo by Denis Cannan, once more directed by Olivier.[30]

Finch's closeness to the Olivier family led to an affair with Olivier's wife, Vivien Leigh, which began in 1948, and continued on and off for several years, ultimately ending owing to her deteriorating mental condition.[31]

In March 1951 Finch replaced Dirk Bogarde for six weeks in a production of Point of Departure by Jean Anouilh.[32] Later that year he played Iago opposite Orson Welles in a production of Othello, directed by Welles.[33]

Despite his stage experience, according to the Sunday Times Finch, like his mentor Olivier, had stage fright,[31] and as the 1950s progressed he worked increasingly in film.

Rising film reputation edit

Finch's film career received a considerable boost when cast as the Sheriff of Nottingham in The Story of Robin Hood (1952) for Walt Disney, opposite Richard Todd.

In 1952 Finch performed at St James's Theatre, King Street, London, in Sir Laurence Olivier's and Gilbert Miller's The Happy Time a comedy by Samuel Taylor. He played the part of Papa.[34] He also did Romeo and Juliet at the Old Vic, playing Mercutio, to strong reviews.[35]

He then made two films for Alexander Korda. In The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan (1953) Finch played Richard D'Oyly Carte opposite Robert Morley and Maurice Evans in the lead; the resulting movie was a box office disappointment. In The Heart of the Matter (1953), from the Graham Greene novel, Finch played a priest opposite Trevor Howard; his was a critical success.

Finch returned to the stage at the Old Vic with an appearance in An Italian Straw Hat by Eugène Labiche and Marc Michel adapted by Thomas Walton. He then received an offer from Paramount to star in Elephant Walk (1954), shot in Ceylon and Los Angeles. The part was intended for Laurence Olivier who turned it down, but Vivien Leigh agreed to play the female lead; Dana Andrews was the other star. The circumstances of production were turbulent; Leigh had a nervous breakdown during production, leading to her being replaced by Elizabeth Taylor. The experience helped sour Finch on a Hollywood career and he would only work occasionally there for the rest of his career.

Back in England, Finch was cast as the villain Flambeau in Father Brown (1954), receiving superb reviews opposite Alec Guinness in the title role. He narrated a documentary The Queen in Australia and had his first real star part in the Group 3/British Lion comedy, Make Me an Offer (1954), playing an antiques dealer. He was then a villain in the medieval swashbuckler The Dark Avenger (1955), opposite another Australian, Errol Flynn, for Allied Artists.

He was much in demand. C.G. Scrimgeour of Associated TV wanted Finch to play a patrol officer in a film based on Colin Simpson's articles about Shangri-La Valley in New Guinea. The Rank organisation wanted him to star in a film directed by Hugh Stewart called The Flying Doctor.[36]

Under contract to Rank and stardom edit

 
With Diane Cilento during filming of Passage Home (1955)

In November 1954 Finch's contract with Olivier (five years extended to six) had expired and he signed a seven-year contract with the Rank Organisation worth £87,500 to make one film a year for them. "We are going to build Peter into a major British star", said Earl St. John, Rank's head of production, at the time.[37]

Finch's first roles for Rank under the new arrangement gave him star parts but were, on the whole, undistinguished: Passage Home (1955), a drama with Anthony Steel and fellow Australian Diane Cilento; Josephine and Men (1955), a comedy from the Boulting Brothers with Glynis Johns and Donald Sinden; and Simon and Laura (1955), a comedy with Kay Kendall based on a hit play. None of these films performed particularly well at the box office.

Finch was then cast as an Australian soldier in A Town Like Alice (1956), opposite Virginia McKenna under the direction of Jack Lee from the novel by Neville Shute. The World War II drama, mostly set in Malaya and almost entirely shot at Pinewood Studios, became the third-most-popular film at the British box office in 1956 and won Finch a BAFTA for Best Actor.

Finch followed it with another war movie, The Battle of the River Plate (1956), playing Captain Hans Langsdorff for the team of Powell and Pressburger. This was also hugely popular at home, and British exhibitors voted Finch the seventh-most-popular British star at the box office for 1956.[38] In October 1956, John Davis, managing director of Rank, announced him as one of the actors under contract that Davis thought would become an international star.[39]

Finch returned to Australia to make The Shiralee (1957), made for Ealing Studios and MGM from the novel by D'arcy Niland, under the direction of Leslie Norman. It was one of Finch's favourite parts; the resulting movie was critically acclaimed and the tenth-most-popular movie at the British box office that year.

Finch followed it with another Australian story filmed on location, the bushranger tale Robbery Under Arms (1957), which did less well, despite having the same producer and director as A Town Like Alice. However, exhibitors still voted Finch the third-most-popular British star of 1957, and the fifth most popular overall, regardless of nationality.[40]

Finch's next two films for Rank were not particularly successful: Windom's Way (1957), where he played a doctor caught up in the Malayan Emergency (the film was shot in Corsica and London); and Operation Amsterdam (1959), a war-time diamond thriller. Finch returned to the stage for the London production of Two for the Seesaw by William Gibson, under the direction of Arthur Penn.

The Nun's Story and international stardom edit

Finch's career received a boost when Fred Zinnemann cast him opposite Audrey Hepburn in The Nun's Story (1959). This was an enormous financial and critical success and established Finch's reputation internationally. In August 1959 he said this and The Shiralee were the only two films he had done that he liked.[41]

For Disney he played Alan Breck in a version of Kidnapped (1960) then went to Hollywood to make The Sins of Rachel Cade (shot in 1959, released in 1961), an attempt to repeat the success of The Nun's Story, with Angie Dickinson.

He was much in demand and still owed Rank three films under his contract. They wanted him to appear opposite Dirk Bogarde in The Singer Not the Song. Instead Finch decided to co-write and direct an award-winning short film, The Day (1960). He announced plans to direct a feature – Dig, about Australian exploration – but it did not eventuate.

Then, for a fee of £25,000[citation needed] he played Oscar Wilde in The Trials of Oscar Wilde (1960), winning another BAFTA; the film, however, was not popular.[42] He played a Labour politician in Rank's No Love for Johnnie (1961), and won his third BAFTA for Best Actor – although like Oscar Wilde, the film lost money.

Finch was originally chosen to play Julius Caesar in Cleopatra (1963) opposite Elizabeth Taylor, and filmed some scenes in London, under the direction of Robert Mamoulian. When the film was postponed Finch withdrew; new director Joseph Mankiewicz wanted to still use him, but the actor was unable to make his schedule work, and the role was recast with Rex Harrison.

Finch made two unsuccessful Hollywood films with director Robert Stevens at MGM: I Thank a Fool (1962) and In the Cool of the Day (1963). While filming the latter he was reported in the Los Angeles Times as saying that the star system was dead and the future lay in independent films. He also said he would direct a second film The Hero.[43]

Finch restored his critical reputation with two highly acclaimed British films: The Pumpkin Eater (1964) and Girl with Green Eyes (1964). He had an uncredited cameo in First Men in the Moon (1964), then had a good role in a tough adventure film for Robert Aldrich, The Flight of the Phoenix (1965).

Finch's next three films saw him support high-profile female stars: Sophia Loren in Judith (1966), Melina Mercouri in 10:30 P.M. Summer (1966) and Julie Christie in Far from the Madding Crowd (1967). He was reunited with Aldrich for The Legend of Lylah Clare (1968). The Red Tent (1970) was an expensive international adventure film, with Finch as Umberto Nobile.

Later career edit

Finch's career received another boost when Ian Bannen dropped out of the lead in Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971). Finch replaced him and his performance was rewarded with another BAFTA for Best Actor and an Oscar nomination.

The momentum of this was lost somewhat by Something to Hide (1972) and the disastrous musical remake of Lost Horizon (1973). He played Lord Nelson in Bequest to the Nation (1973) and an opportunistic financier in England Made Me (1973). The Abdication (1974) was an unsuccessful historical drama.

Network edit

Finch was asked to audition for the part of news presenter Howard Beale in Network (1976), written by Paddy Chayefsky and directed by Sidney Lumet.[2] The movie, with Finch as its star, was his biggest commercial and critical hit in years. His line "I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not going to take this any more!" has become iconic.

He then played Yitzhak Rabin in Raid on Entebbe (1977).

Poet edit

Finch was also an occasional poet. He was encouraged by Kenneth Slessor, who published Finch's poem "Tell them" in Australian Poetry 1945, of which he was the editor. Slessor also arranged for a volume of Finch's early poems to be published. Finch's biographer Trader Faulkner reported that Finch told him that "no film award ... ever gave him the sense of fulfillment comparable to seeing a poem he'd written in print".[44]

Personal life edit

Finch was married three times. In 1943, he married Romanian-born French ballerina Tamara Tchinarova; they worked together on a number of films. They had a daughter, Anita, born in 1950. They divorced in 1959, after she discovered his affair with actress Vivien Leigh in California.[45][46][47]

Finch then married South African-born actress Yolande Turner (née Yolande Eileen Turnbull); they had two children together, Samantha and Charles Peter. During their marriage, Finch had an affair with the singer Shirley Bassey. Bassey had a daughter, also named Samantha, born in 1963; Bassey's husband at the time, the openly gay film producer Kenneth Hume, believed that Finch was Samantha's biological father.[citation needed] Finch and Turner divorced in 1965.[2]

On 9 November 1973 in Rome, Finch married Mavis "Eletha" Barrett, who was known as Eletha Finch.[2][48] They had a daughter together, Diana.[47]

Death edit

Shortly after Raid on Entebbe finished shooting, Finch undertook a promotional tour for Network. On 13 January 1977 he appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. George Carlin was also on the show that night; he joked about death. The day after, Finch had a heart attack in the lobby of the Beverly Hills Hotel and died at the age of 60.[49] He is interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.[2]

Oscar edit

Finch was nominated for an Oscar for Network and went on to posthumously win the award, which was accepted by his widow, Eletha Finch. Although James Dean (twice) and Spencer Tracy had previously been posthumously nominated for a Best Actor Oscar, Finch was the first actor to win the award posthumously, as well as the first Australian actor to win a Best Actor award. He was the only posthumous winner of an Oscar in an acting category until fellow Australian Heath Ledger won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in 2009; there were many earlier posthumous Oscar winners in non-acting categories.[50][51] Finch also won five Best Actor awards from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA), including one for Network.

Shortly before he died, Finch told a journalist:

We all say we're going to quit occasionally. I'd like to have been more adventurous in my career. But it's a fascinating and not ignoble profession. No one lives more lives than the actor. Movie making is like geometry and I hated maths. But this kind of jigsaw I relish. When I played Lord Nelson I worked the poop deck in his uniform. I got extraordinary shivers. Sometimes I felt like I was staring at my own coffin. I touched that character. There lies the madness. You can't fake it.[52]

Biographies edit

In 1954, the Australian journalist and author George Johnston wrote a well-researched series of biographical articles on Finch, his life, and his work, which appeared in the Sydney Sun-Herald on four consecutive Sundays, which were certainly the first detailed account of Finch's life to be published. Finch later provided the inspiration for the character Archie Calverton in Johnston's novel, Clean Straw for Nothing.[53]

In 1980, American author Elaine Dundy published a biography of Finch titled Finch, Bloody Finch: A Biography of Peter Finch. That year, his second wife, Yolande Finch, also published a posthumous account of their life together, Finchy: My Life with Peter Finch. Another biography had previously been published by his friend and colleague Trader Faulkner, in 1979.

According to an entry in Brian McFarlane's The Encyclopedia of British Film, republished on the British Film Institute's Screenonline website, Finch "did not emerge unscathed from a life of well-publicised hell-raising, and several biographies chronicle the affairs and the booze, but a serious appraisal of a great actor remains to be written."[54]

A profile of Finch at Screenonline asserts that "it is arguable that no other actor ever chalked up such a rewarding CV in British films."[5]

Filmography edit

Awards and nominations edit

Institution Year Category Film Result
Academy Awards 1971 Best Actor Sunday Bloody Sunday Nominated
1976 Network Won
(Posthumously)
BAFTA Awards 1956 Best British Actor A Town Like Alice Won
1957 Windom's Way Nominated
1959 The Nun's Story Nominated
1960 The Trials of Oscar Wilde Won
1961 No Love for Johnnie Won
1971 Best Actor in a Leading Role Sunday Bloody Sunday Won
1977 Network Won
(Posthumously)
Berlin International Film Festival 1961 Best Actor[55] No Love for Johnnie Won
Golden Globe Awards 1971 Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Sunday Bloody Sunday Nominated
1976 Network Won
(Posthumously)
Moscow International Film Festival 1961 Best Actor[56] The Trials of Oscar Wilde Won
National Board of Review 1967 Best Actor Far from the Madding Crowd Won
National Society of Film Critics 1971 Best Actor Sunday Bloody Sunday Won
New York Film Critics Circle 1971 Best Actor Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards 1977 Outstanding Lead Actor in a Special Program – Drama or Comedy Raid on Entebbe Nominated
(Posthumously)

Notes edit

  1. ^ Obituary Variety, 19 January 1977, p. 94.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Finch, Frederick George Peter (1916–1977)". Finch, Frederick George Peter Ingle (1916–1977). National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 27 July 2008. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  3. ^ "Finch, Frederick George Peter (1916–1977)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  4. ^ "BFI Screenonline: Finch, Peter (1916–1977) Biography". www.screenonline.org.uk. Retrieved 24 September 2022.
  5. ^ a b "BFI Screenonline: Finch, Peter (1916–1977) Biography". www.screenonline.org.uk.
  6. ^ Some sources say that Finch's real name was William Mitchell, but there are no records that substantiate this, and it appears to be an urban myth.
  7. ^ "Index entry". FreeBMD. ONS. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
  8. ^ a b c Faulkner (1979)
  9. ^ Peter Finch at AllMovie.
  10. ^ . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2011. Archived from the original on 20 May 2011. Retrieved 27 July 2008.
  11. ^ "Obituary – George Ingle Finch". The Times. 24 November 1970. p. 14.
  12. ^ "Radio Actor Might Have Become Monk". The Australian Women's Weekly. 27 February 1937. p. 36. Retrieved 17 December 2011.
  13. ^ Paul Croucher, Buddhism in Australia: 1848–1988, New South Wales University Press, 1989, pp. 24–25
  14. ^ "Peter Finch – Actors and Actresses – Films as Actor:, Film as Director:, Publications". www.filmreference.com.
  15. ^ "The Repertory Theatre". The Sydney Morning Herald. 16 December 1933. p. 8. Retrieved 11 February 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  16. ^ Bert le Blanc's real name Bertram Leon Cohn (1889–1974) (National Archives of Australia); and Cohn was widely known as either "the Jew Comedian" () or "the Hebrew comedian" ().
  17. ^ a b Richard Lane, The Golden Age of Australian Radio Drama, Melbourne University Press, 1994
  18. ^ a b "World War II Nominal Roll".
  19. ^ "18 Aug 1949 – The Social Round of Events in Sydney Yesterday". Trove. 18 August 1949.
  20. ^ Stephen Vagg, 'Finch, Fry and Factories: A History of the Mercury Theatre' Australasian Drama Studies April 2007
  21. ^ "The Thames Is Non-Inflammable- But An Australian in London Leapt Up A STAIRWAY TO STARDOM". The Sun-Herald. No. 291. New South Wales, Australia. 22 August 1954. p. 23. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  22. ^ "Big Role for Peter Finch". The Age. No. 29, 241. Victoria, Australia. 14 January 1949. p. 1. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  23. ^ "Finch, In Films, Plays A Zestful Strangler". The Sunday Herald. Sydney. 10 April 1949. p. 8 Supplement: Magazine. Retrieved 12 February 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  24. ^ Lejeune, C. A. (21 August 1949). "International Manners". The Observer. London. p. 6.
  25. ^ "Train of Events": "Star from Platform 13". The Scotsman. Edinburgh, Scotland. 22 August 1949. p. 6.
  26. ^ Time magazine, 23 October 1950
  27. ^ The Age (Melbourne), 26 February 1951
  28. ^ "Peter Finch as Producer". The Age. No. 29, 567. Victoria, Australia. 31 January 1950. p. 2. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  29. ^ "ROLE FOR PETER FINCH". The Sydney Morning Herald. No. 34, 999. 22 February 1950. p. 3. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  30. ^ "Peter Finch Big Star". The Barrier Miner. Vol. LXIII, no. 17, 109. New South Wales, Australia. 17 July 1950. p. 2. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  31. ^ a b Richard Brooks (7 August 2005). "Olivier Worn Out by Love and Lust of Vivien Leigh". The Sunday Times. London. Retrieved 27 July 2008.
  32. ^ "Roles for Peter Finch". The Canberra Times. Vol. 25, no. 7264. 14 March 1951. p. 4. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  33. ^ "Othello (1951 stage production) Wellesnet". www.wellesnet.com.
  34. ^ From an original theatre programme, printer's date 30 January 1952.
  35. ^ "Peter Finch in Limelight". The Barrier Miner. Vol. LXV, no. 17, 257. New South Wales, Australia. 18 September 1952. p. 13. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  36. ^ "World-wide Film and Theatre News". The Daily Telegraph. Vol. XV, no. 48. New South Wales, Australia. 17 October 1954. p. 48. Retrieved 26 June 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  37. ^ "Peter Finch Wins £87,500 Contract". The Sydney Morning Herald. 20 November 1954. p. 3. Retrieved 11 February 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  38. ^ "The Most Popular Film Star in Britain." The Times (London) 7 December 1956: 3. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 11 July 2012.
  39. ^ Wiseman, Thomas (22 November 1956). "Mr Davis Takes on Hollywood". Nottingham Evening Post. p. 9.
  40. ^ "British Actors Head Film Poll: Box-Office Survey". Manchester Guardian. 27 December 1957. p. 3.
  41. ^ HOWARD THOMPSON (2 August 1959). "THE LOCAL FILM SCENE". The New York Times. p. X5.
  42. ^ STEPHEN WATTS (3 March 1960). "Busy Finch". The New York Times. p. X9.
  43. ^ "Star System Finished, Says British Player". Los Angeles Times. 13 August 1962. p. D17.
  44. ^ Geoffrey Dutton, Kenneth Slessor (1991), ch. 11 'Battlefields of Liberation', pp. 265–6
  45. ^ Artsvi Bakhchinyan (2012). Внучка армянского помещика, соперница Вивьен Ли, переводчица балетных звезд [Granddaughter of an Armenian landowner; rival of Vivien Leigh, interpreter to ballet stars]. Inie Berega (in Russian). Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  46. ^ Paul Donnelley (2003). Fade to Black: A Book of Movie Obituaries. Music Sales Group. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-84938-246-5.
  47. ^ a b Dancing into the Unknown, Tamara Tchinarova Finch, 2007; ISBN 978-1-85273-114-4; accessed 20 August 2014.
  48. ^ "Untitled". The Sydney Morning Herald. 28 April 1941. p. 4. Retrieved 11 February 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  49. ^ "Actor Peter Finch, 60, Starring in 'Network,' Dies", The Washington Post, 15 January 1977
  50. ^ ABC Eyewitness News; 23 February 2009; Midnight broadcast
  51. ^ "'Slumdog Millionaire' fulfills its Oscar destiny". TODAY.com.
  52. ^ Paul Rosenfield (9 January 1977). "Peter Finch – Michelin Guide to Show Biz Comes to Rest in Hollywood". Los Angeles Times. p. r29.
  53. ^ "From George, With Sadness". The Australian Women's Weekly. 27 August 1969. p. 13. Retrieved 10 February 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  54. ^ Finch, Peter (1916–1977) at the BFI's Screenonline. (N.B.: Miscalculates age at time of death as 61, not 60.).
  55. ^ . berlinale.de. Archived from the original on 22 March 2016. Retrieved 23 January 2010.
  56. ^ . MIFF. Archived from the original on 16 January 2013. Retrieved 4 November 2012.

References edit

  • Dundy, Elaine. Finch, Bloody Finch: A Biography of Peter Finch. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1980. ISBN 0-03-041796-1 (10). ISBN 978-0-03-041796-2 (13).
  • Faulkner, Trader. Peter Finch: A Biography. London: Angus & Robertson, 1979. ISBN 0-207-95831-9 (10). ISBN 978-0-207-95831-1 (13).
  • Finch, Yolande. Finchy: My Life with Peter Finch. London: Arrow Books, 1980. ISBN 0-09-924190-0 (10). ISBN 978-0-09-924190-4 (13).
  • Johnson, G., "The Success Story of Peter Finch", The Sun-Herald (Sydney) (Sunday, 8 August 1954), pp. 21–23
  • Johnson, G., "The Long Road to London" (Sunday, 15 August 1954), pp. 23–25
  • Johnson, G., "Dad and Dave, and then the War." The Sun-Herald (Sydney) 15 Aug 1954: 23
  • Johnson, G., "The Thames is Non-Inflammable- But an Australian in London Leapt Up a STAIRWAY TO STARDOM." The Sun-Herald (Sydney) 22 Aug 1954: 23
  • Johnson, G., "The Threat and the Promise". The Sun-Herald (Sydney) 29 Aug 1954: 47

External links edit

peter, finch, this, article, about, actor, poet, poet, frederick, george, peter, ingle, finch, september, 1916, january, 1977, english, australian, actor, theatre, film, radio, finch, 1955bornfrederick, george, peter, ingle, finch, 1916, september, 1916south, . This article is about the actor For the poet see Peter Finch poet Frederick George Peter Ingle Finch 28 September 1916 14 January 1977 was an English Australian actor of theatre film and radio 1 2 3 Peter FinchFinch in 1955BornFrederick George Peter Ingle Finch 1916 09 28 28 September 1916South Kensington London EnglandDied14 January 1977 1977 01 14 aged 60 Beverly Hills California U S Resting placeHollywood Forever CemeteryOccupationActorYears active1934 1977SpousesTamara Tchinarova m 1943 div 1959 wbr Yolande Turner m 1959 div 1965 wbr Eletha Barrett m 1973 wbr Children4 including Charles FinchAwardsSee belowMilitary careerAllegiance AustraliaService wbr branchAustralian ArmyYears of service1941 1945RankSergeantUnit2 1st Field Regiment Australia Battles warsWorld War II Bombing of DarwinBorn in London he emigrated to Australia as a teenager and was raised in Sydney where he worked in vaudeville and radio before becoming a star of Australian films Joining the Old Vic Company after World War II he achieved widespread critical success in Britain for both stage and screen performances One of British cinema s most celebrated leading men of the time 4 Finch won the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role five times and won a posthumous Academy Award for Best Actor for his portrayal of crazed television anchorman Howard Beale in the 1976 film Network According to the British Film Institute it is arguable that no other actor ever chalked up such a rewarding CV in British films and he accumulated the awards to bolster this view 5 He died only two months before the 49th Academy Awards making him the first person to win a posthumous Oscar in an acting category As of 2023 the only other person to have done so was fellow Australian Heath Ledger Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Family 1 2 Early childhood 2 Early career in Australia 2 1 Radio work 2 2 First films 3 War service 4 Post war career in Australia 4 1 Visit of Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh and return to Britain 5 British career 5 1 Theatrical success 5 2 Rising film reputation 5 3 Under contract to Rank and stardom 6 The Nun s Story and international stardom 7 Later career 7 1 Network 8 Poet 9 Personal life 10 Death 10 1 Oscar 11 Biographies 12 Filmography 13 Awards and nominations 14 Notes 15 References 16 External linksEarly life editFamily edit Finch was born as Frederick George Peter Ingle Finch 6 7 in London to Alicia Gladys Fisher At the time Alicia was married to George Finch 2 8 9 10 George Finch was born to British parents in New South Wales Australia but was educated in Paris and Zurich He was a research chemist when he moved to Britain in 1912 and later served during the First World War with the Royal Army Ordnance Depot and the Royal Field Artillery 11 In 1915 at Portsmouth Hampshire George married Alicia Fisher the daughter of a Kent barrister 8 However Peter only learned in his mid 40s that Wentworth Edward Dallas Jock Campbell an Indian Army officer not George Finch was his biological father George Finch divorced his wife in 1920 on the grounds of her adultery with Campbell 2 Alicia Finch married Jock Campbell in 1922 8 Early childhood edit George gained custody of Peter who was taken from his biological mother and brought up by his adoptive paternal grandmother Laura Finch formerly Black in Vaucresson France In 1925 Laura took Peter with her to Adyar a theosophical community near Madras India for a number of months and the young boy lived for a time in a Buddhist monastery 12 Undoubtedly as a result of his childhood contact with Buddhism Finch always claimed to be a Buddhist He is reported to have said I think a man dying on a cross is a ghastly symbol for a religion And I think a man sitting under a bo tree and becoming enlightened is a beautiful one 13 In 1926 he was sent to Australia to live with his great uncle Edward Herbert Finch at Greenwich Point in Sydney For three years he attended the local school then North Sydney Intermediate High School until 1929 14 RAF pilot and author Paul Brickhill was a school friend Early career in Australia editAfter graduating Finch went to work as a copy boy for the Sydney Sun and began writing However he was more interested in acting and in late 1933 appeared in a play Caprice at the Repertory Theatre 15 In 1934 35 he appeared in a number of productions for Doris Fitton at the Savoy Theatre some with a young Sumner Locke Elliott He also worked as a sideshow spruiker at the Sydney Royal Easter Show in vaudeville with Joe Cody and as a foil to American comedian Bert le Blanc 16 At age 19 Finch toured Australia with George Sorlie s travelling troupe Radio work edit He did radio acting work with Hugh Denison s BSA Players for Broadcasting Service Association later to become Macquarie Players He came to the attention of Australian Broadcasting Commission radio drama producer Lawrence H Cecil who was to act as his coach and mentor throughout 1939 and 1940 He was Chris in the Children s Session and the first Muddle Headed Wombat He later starred with Neva Carr Glyn in an enormously popular series by Max Afford as husband and wife detectives Jeffery and Elizabeth Blackburn as well as other ABC radio plays 17 First films edit Finch s first screen performance was in the short film The Magic Shoes 1935 an adaptation of the Cinderella fairy tale where Finch played Prince Charming He made his feature film debut in Ken G Hall s Dad and Dave Come to Town 1938 playing a small comic role His performance was well received and Hall subsequently cast Finch in a larger role in Mr Chedworth Steps Out 1939 supporting Cecil Kellaway Finch appeared in a war propaganda film The Power and the Glory 1941 playing a fifth columnist War service editFinch enlisted in the Australian Army on 2 June 1941 18 He served in the Middle East and was an anti aircraft gunner during the Bombing of Darwin During his war service Finch was given leave to act in radio theatre and film He appeared in a number of propaganda shorts including Another Threshold 1942 These Stars Are Mine 1943 While There is Still Time 1943 and South West Pacific 1943 the latter for Ken G Hall He also appeared in two of the few Australian feature films made during the war The Rats of Tobruk 1944 and the less distinguished Red Sky at Morning 1944 Finch produced and performed Army Concert Party work and in 1945 toured bases and hospitals with two Terence Rattigan plays he directed French Without Tears and While the Sun Shines He narrated the widely seen documentaries Jungle Patrol 1944 and Sons of the Anzacs 1945 Finch was discharged from the army on 31 October 1945 at the rank of sergeant 18 Post war career in Australia editAfter the war Finch continued to work extensively in radio and established himself as Australia s leading actor in that medium winning Macquarie Awards for best actor in 1946 and 1947 17 He also worked as a compere producer and writer In 1946 Finch co founded the Mercury Theatre Company which put on a number of productions in Sydney over the next few years initially in the diminutive St James Hall as well as running a theatre school 19 20 Finch continued to appear in the rare Australian feature films made around this time including A Son is Born 1946 and Eureka Stockade 1949 He was a leading contender to play Sir Charles Kingsford Smith in Smithy 1946 but lost out to Ron Randell Finch was also involved in some documentaries narrating Indonesia Calling 1946 and helping make Primitive Peoples about the people of Arnhem Land Visit of Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh and return to Britain edit Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh toured Australia in 1948 with the Old Vic Company They attended the Mercury production of The Imaginary Invalid on the factory floor of O Brien s Glass Factory starring Finch Olivier was impressed with Finch s acting and encouraged him to move to London his birthplace He left Australia permanently in 1948 British career editTheatrical success edit When Finch arrived in Britain success came relatively early Harry Watt arranged for a screen test at Ealing Studios which led to his being cast as a murderous actor in the movie Train of Events 1949 under the direction of Basil Dearden 21 22 While making the film Olivier cast him as a Pole in a stage play at The Old Vic James Bridie s Daphne Laureola 1949 supporting Edith Evans This was a significant critical and commercial success and established Finch in London immediately Olivier signed Finch to a five year contract 23 When Train of Events came out critic C A Lejeune praised Finch s work in the London Observer commenting that he adds good cheekbones to a quick intelligence and is likely to become a cult I fear 24 The Scotsman said Finch should be regarded as one of the most hopeful recruits to the British screen 25 Finch had a small role as an Australian prisoner of war in the World War two drama The Wooden Horse 1950 directed by Jack Lee this film would be the third most popular film at the British box office in 1950 Finch s performance as a Pole in Daphne Laureola led to his casting as a Polish soldier in The Miniver Story 1950 the British filmed sequel to the wartime morale boosting film Mrs Miniver unlike its predecessor it was poorly received critically but it did give Finch an experience of working for a movie financed by a major Hollywood studio 26 27 During this time Finch continued to appear on stage in various productions while under contract to Olivier He directed a stage production of The White Falcon in January 1950 28 In February 1950 he toured in a production of The Damascus Blade by Bridget Boland under the direction of Olivier co starring with John Mills 29 Finch returned to the London stage in Captain Carvallo by Denis Cannan once more directed by Olivier 30 Finch s closeness to the Olivier family led to an affair with Olivier s wife Vivien Leigh which began in 1948 and continued on and off for several years ultimately ending owing to her deteriorating mental condition 31 In March 1951 Finch replaced Dirk Bogarde for six weeks in a production of Point of Departure by Jean Anouilh 32 Later that year he played Iago opposite Orson Welles in a production of Othello directed by Welles 33 Despite his stage experience according to the Sunday Times Finch like his mentor Olivier had stage fright 31 and as the 1950s progressed he worked increasingly in film Rising film reputation edit Finch s film career received a considerable boost when cast as the Sheriff of Nottingham in The Story of Robin Hood 1952 for Walt Disney opposite Richard Todd In 1952 Finch performed at St James s Theatre King Street London in Sir Laurence Olivier s and Gilbert Miller s The Happy Time a comedy by Samuel Taylor He played the part of Papa 34 He also did Romeo and Juliet at the Old Vic playing Mercutio to strong reviews 35 He then made two films for Alexander Korda In The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan 1953 Finch played Richard D Oyly Carte opposite Robert Morley and Maurice Evans in the lead the resulting movie was a box office disappointment In The Heart of the Matter 1953 from the Graham Greene novel Finch played a priest opposite Trevor Howard his was a critical success Finch returned to the stage at the Old Vic with an appearance in An Italian Straw Hat by Eugene Labiche and Marc Michel adapted by Thomas Walton He then received an offer from Paramount to star in Elephant Walk 1954 shot in Ceylon and Los Angeles The part was intended for Laurence Olivier who turned it down but Vivien Leigh agreed to play the female lead Dana Andrews was the other star The circumstances of production were turbulent Leigh had a nervous breakdown during production leading to her being replaced by Elizabeth Taylor The experience helped sour Finch on a Hollywood career and he would only work occasionally there for the rest of his career Back in England Finch was cast as the villain Flambeau in Father Brown 1954 receiving superb reviews opposite Alec Guinness in the title role He narrated a documentary The Queen in Australia and had his first real star part in the Group 3 British Lion comedy Make Me an Offer 1954 playing an antiques dealer He was then a villain in the medieval swashbuckler The Dark Avenger 1955 opposite another Australian Errol Flynn for Allied Artists He was much in demand C G Scrimgeour of Associated TV wanted Finch to play a patrol officer in a film based on Colin Simpson s articles about Shangri La Valley in New Guinea The Rank organisation wanted him to star in a film directed by Hugh Stewart called The Flying Doctor 36 Under contract to Rank and stardom edit nbsp With Diane Cilento during filming of Passage Home 1955 In November 1954 Finch s contract with Olivier five years extended to six had expired and he signed a seven year contract with the Rank Organisation worth 87 500 to make one film a year for them We are going to build Peter into a major British star said Earl St John Rank s head of production at the time 37 Finch s first roles for Rank under the new arrangement gave him star parts but were on the whole undistinguished Passage Home 1955 a drama with Anthony Steel and fellow Australian Diane Cilento Josephine and Men 1955 a comedy from the Boulting Brothers with Glynis Johns and Donald Sinden and Simon and Laura 1955 a comedy with Kay Kendall based on a hit play None of these films performed particularly well at the box office Finch was then cast as an Australian soldier in A Town Like Alice 1956 opposite Virginia McKenna under the direction of Jack Lee from the novel by Neville Shute The World War II drama mostly set in Malaya and almost entirely shot at Pinewood Studios became the third most popular film at the British box office in 1956 and won Finch a BAFTA for Best Actor Finch followed it with another war movie The Battle of the River Plate 1956 playing Captain Hans Langsdorff for the team of Powell and Pressburger This was also hugely popular at home and British exhibitors voted Finch the seventh most popular British star at the box office for 1956 38 In October 1956 John Davis managing director of Rank announced him as one of the actors under contract that Davis thought would become an international star 39 Finch returned to Australia to make The Shiralee 1957 made for Ealing Studios and MGM from the novel by D arcy Niland under the direction of Leslie Norman It was one of Finch s favourite parts the resulting movie was critically acclaimed and the tenth most popular movie at the British box office that year Finch followed it with another Australian story filmed on location the bushranger tale Robbery Under Arms 1957 which did less well despite having the same producer and director as A Town Like Alice However exhibitors still voted Finch the third most popular British star of 1957 and the fifth most popular overall regardless of nationality 40 Finch s next two films for Rank were not particularly successful Windom s Way 1957 where he played a doctor caught up in the Malayan Emergency the film was shot in Corsica and London and Operation Amsterdam 1959 a war time diamond thriller Finch returned to the stage for the London production of Two for the Seesaw by William Gibson under the direction of Arthur Penn The Nun s Story and international stardom editFinch s career received a boost when Fred Zinnemann cast him opposite Audrey Hepburn in The Nun s Story 1959 This was an enormous financial and critical success and established Finch s reputation internationally In August 1959 he said this and The Shiralee were the only two films he had done that he liked 41 For Disney he played Alan Breck in a version of Kidnapped 1960 then went to Hollywood to make The Sins of Rachel Cade shot in 1959 released in 1961 an attempt to repeat the success of The Nun s Story with Angie Dickinson He was much in demand and still owed Rank three films under his contract They wanted him to appear opposite Dirk Bogarde in The Singer Not the Song Instead Finch decided to co write and direct an award winning short film The Day 1960 He announced plans to direct a feature Dig about Australian exploration but it did not eventuate Then for a fee of 25 000 citation needed he played Oscar Wilde in The Trials of Oscar Wilde 1960 winning another BAFTA the film however was not popular 42 He played a Labour politician in Rank s No Love for Johnnie 1961 and won his third BAFTA for Best Actor although like Oscar Wilde the film lost money Finch was originally chosen to play Julius Caesar in Cleopatra 1963 opposite Elizabeth Taylor and filmed some scenes in London under the direction of Robert Mamoulian When the film was postponed Finch withdrew new director Joseph Mankiewicz wanted to still use him but the actor was unable to make his schedule work and the role was recast with Rex Harrison Finch made two unsuccessful Hollywood films with director Robert Stevens at MGM I Thank a Fool 1962 and In the Cool of the Day 1963 While filming the latter he was reported in the Los Angeles Times as saying that the star system was dead and the future lay in independent films He also said he would direct a second film The Hero 43 Finch restored his critical reputation with two highly acclaimed British films The Pumpkin Eater 1964 and Girl with Green Eyes 1964 He had an uncredited cameo in First Men in the Moon 1964 then had a good role in a tough adventure film for Robert Aldrich The Flight of the Phoenix 1965 Finch s next three films saw him support high profile female stars Sophia Loren in Judith 1966 Melina Mercouri in 10 30 P M Summer 1966 and Julie Christie in Far from the Madding Crowd 1967 He was reunited with Aldrich for The Legend of Lylah Clare 1968 The Red Tent 1970 was an expensive international adventure film with Finch as Umberto Nobile Later career editFinch s career received another boost when Ian Bannen dropped out of the lead in Sunday Bloody Sunday 1971 Finch replaced him and his performance was rewarded with another BAFTA for Best Actor and an Oscar nomination The momentum of this was lost somewhat by Something to Hide 1972 and the disastrous musical remake of Lost Horizon 1973 He played Lord Nelson in Bequest to the Nation 1973 and an opportunistic financier in England Made Me 1973 The Abdication 1974 was an unsuccessful historical drama Network edit Finch was asked to audition for the part of news presenter Howard Beale in Network 1976 written by Paddy Chayefsky and directed by Sidney Lumet 2 The movie with Finch as its star was his biggest commercial and critical hit in years His line I m as mad as hell and I m not going to take this any more has become iconic He then played Yitzhak Rabin in Raid on Entebbe 1977 Poet editFinch was also an occasional poet He was encouraged by Kenneth Slessor who published Finch s poem Tell them in Australian Poetry 1945 of which he was the editor Slessor also arranged for a volume of Finch s early poems to be published Finch s biographer Trader Faulkner reported that Finch told him that no film award ever gave him the sense of fulfillment comparable to seeing a poem he d written in print 44 Personal life editFinch was married three times In 1943 he married Romanian born French ballerina Tamara Tchinarova they worked together on a number of films They had a daughter Anita born in 1950 They divorced in 1959 after she discovered his affair with actress Vivien Leigh in California 45 46 47 Finch then married South African born actress Yolande Turner nee Yolande Eileen Turnbull they had two children together Samantha and Charles Peter During their marriage Finch had an affair with the singer Shirley Bassey Bassey had a daughter also named Samantha born in 1963 Bassey s husband at the time the openly gay film producer Kenneth Hume believed that Finch was Samantha s biological father citation needed Finch and Turner divorced in 1965 2 On 9 November 1973 in Rome Finch married Mavis Eletha Barrett who was known as Eletha Finch 2 48 They had a daughter together Diana 47 Death editShortly after Raid on Entebbe finished shooting Finch undertook a promotional tour for Network On 13 January 1977 he appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson George Carlin was also on the show that night he joked about death The day after Finch had a heart attack in the lobby of the Beverly Hills Hotel and died at the age of 60 49 He is interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery 2 Oscar edit Finch was nominated for an Oscar for Network and went on to posthumously win the award which was accepted by his widow Eletha Finch Although James Dean twice and Spencer Tracy had previously been posthumously nominated for a Best Actor Oscar Finch was the first actor to win the award posthumously as well as the first Australian actor to win a Best Actor award He was the only posthumous winner of an Oscar in an acting category until fellow Australian Heath Ledger won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in 2009 there were many earlier posthumous Oscar winners in non acting categories 50 51 Finch also won five Best Actor awards from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts BAFTA including one for Network Shortly before he died Finch told a journalist We all say we re going to quit occasionally I d like to have been more adventurous in my career But it s a fascinating and not ignoble profession No one lives more lives than the actor Movie making is like geometry and I hated maths But this kind of jigsaw I relish When I played Lord Nelson I worked the poop deck in his uniform I got extraordinary shivers Sometimes I felt like I was staring at my own coffin I touched that character There lies the madness You can t fake it 52 Biographies editIn 1954 the Australian journalist and author George Johnston wrote a well researched series of biographical articles on Finch his life and his work which appeared in the Sydney Sun Herald on four consecutive Sundays which were certainly the first detailed account of Finch s life to be published Finch later provided the inspiration for the character Archie Calverton in Johnston s novel Clean Straw for Nothing 53 In 1980 American author Elaine Dundy published a biography of Finch titled Finch Bloody Finch A Biography of Peter Finch That year his second wife Yolande Finch also published a posthumous account of their life together Finchy My Life with Peter Finch Another biography had previously been published by his friend and colleague Trader Faulkner in 1979 According to an entry in Brian McFarlane s The Encyclopedia of British Film republished on the British Film Institute s Screenonline website Finch did not emerge unscathed from a life of well publicised hell raising and several biographies chronicle the affairs and the booze but a serious appraisal of a great actor remains to be written 54 A profile of Finch at Screenonline asserts that it is arguable that no other actor ever chalked up such a rewarding CV in British films 5 Filmography editMain article Peter Finch on stage screen and radioAwards and nominations editInstitution Year Category Film ResultAcademy Awards 1971 Best Actor Sunday Bloody Sunday Nominated1976 Network Won Posthumously BAFTA Awards 1956 Best British Actor A Town Like Alice Won1957 Windom s Way Nominated1959 The Nun s Story Nominated1960 The Trials of Oscar Wilde Won1961 No Love for Johnnie Won1971 Best Actor in a Leading Role Sunday Bloody Sunday Won1977 Network Won Posthumously Berlin International Film Festival 1961 Best Actor 55 No Love for Johnnie WonGolden Globe Awards 1971 Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama Sunday Bloody Sunday Nominated1976 Network Won Posthumously Moscow International Film Festival 1961 Best Actor 56 The Trials of Oscar Wilde WonNational Board of Review 1967 Best Actor Far from the Madding Crowd WonNational Society of Film Critics 1971 Best Actor Sunday Bloody Sunday WonNew York Film Critics Circle 1971 Best Actor NominatedPrimetime Emmy Awards 1977 Outstanding Lead Actor in a Special Program Drama or Comedy Raid on Entebbe Nominated Posthumously Notes edit Obituary Variety 19 January 1977 p 94 a b c d e f g Finch Frederick George Peter 1916 1977 Finch Frederick George Peter Ingle 1916 1977 National Centre of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 27 July 2008 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Finch Frederick George Peter 1916 1977 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University BFI Screenonline Finch Peter 1916 1977 Biography www screenonline org uk Retrieved 24 September 2022 a b BFI Screenonline Finch Peter 1916 1977 Biography www screenonline org uk Some sources say that Finch s real name was William Mitchell but there are no records that substantiate this and it appears to be an urban myth Index entry FreeBMD ONS Retrieved 6 May 2011 a b c Faulkner 1979 Peter Finch at AllMovie Peter Finch Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2011 Archived from the original on 20 May 2011 Retrieved 27 July 2008 Obituary George Ingle Finch The Times 24 November 1970 p 14 Radio Actor Might Have Become Monk The Australian Women s Weekly 27 February 1937 p 36 Retrieved 17 December 2011 Paul Croucher Buddhism in Australia 1848 1988 New South Wales University Press 1989 pp 24 25 Peter Finch Actors and Actresses Films as Actor Film as Director Publications www filmreference com The Repertory Theatre The Sydney Morning Herald 16 December 1933 p 8 Retrieved 11 February 2012 via National Library of Australia Bert le Blanc s real name Bertram Leon Cohn 1889 1974 National Archives of Australia and Cohn was widely known as either the Jew Comedian or the Hebrew comedian a b Richard Lane The Golden Age of Australian Radio Drama Melbourne University Press 1994 a b World War II Nominal Roll 18 Aug 1949 The Social Round of Events in Sydney Yesterday Trove 18 August 1949 Stephen Vagg Finch Fry and Factories A History of the Mercury Theatre Australasian Drama Studies April 2007 The Thames Is Non Inflammable But An Australian in London Leapt Up A STAIRWAY TO STARDOM The Sun Herald No 291 New South Wales Australia 22 August 1954 p 23 Retrieved 26 June 2020 via National Library of Australia Big Role for Peter Finch The Age No 29 241 Victoria Australia 14 January 1949 p 1 Retrieved 26 June 2020 via National Library of Australia Finch In Films Plays A Zestful Strangler The Sunday Herald Sydney 10 April 1949 p 8 Supplement Magazine Retrieved 12 February 2012 via National Library of Australia Lejeune C A 21 August 1949 International Manners The Observer London p 6 Train of Events Star from Platform 13 The Scotsman Edinburgh Scotland 22 August 1949 p 6 Time magazine 23 October 1950 The Age Melbourne 26 February 1951 Peter Finch as Producer The Age No 29 567 Victoria Australia 31 January 1950 p 2 Retrieved 26 June 2020 via National Library of Australia ROLE FOR PETER FINCH The Sydney Morning Herald No 34 999 22 February 1950 p 3 Retrieved 26 June 2020 via National Library of Australia Peter Finch Big Star The Barrier Miner Vol LXIII no 17 109 New South Wales Australia 17 July 1950 p 2 Retrieved 26 June 2020 via National Library of Australia a b Richard Brooks 7 August 2005 Olivier Worn Out by Love and Lust of Vivien Leigh The Sunday Times London Retrieved 27 July 2008 Roles for Peter Finch The Canberra Times Vol 25 no 7264 14 March 1951 p 4 Retrieved 26 June 2020 via National Library of Australia Othello 1951 stage production Wellesnet www wellesnet com From an original theatre programme printer s date 30 January 1952 Peter Finch in Limelight The Barrier Miner Vol LXV no 17 257 New South Wales Australia 18 September 1952 p 13 Retrieved 26 June 2020 via National Library of Australia World wide Film and Theatre News The Daily Telegraph Vol XV no 48 New South Wales Australia 17 October 1954 p 48 Retrieved 26 June 2020 via National Library of Australia Peter Finch Wins 87 500 Contract The Sydney Morning Herald 20 November 1954 p 3 Retrieved 11 February 2012 via National Library of Australia The Most Popular Film Star in Britain The Times London 7 December 1956 3 The Times Digital Archive Web 11 July 2012 Wiseman Thomas 22 November 1956 Mr Davis Takes on Hollywood Nottingham Evening Post p 9 British Actors Head Film Poll Box Office Survey Manchester Guardian 27 December 1957 p 3 HOWARD THOMPSON 2 August 1959 THE LOCAL FILM SCENE The New York Times p X5 STEPHEN WATTS 3 March 1960 Busy Finch The New York Times p X9 Star System Finished Says British Player Los Angeles Times 13 August 1962 p D17 Geoffrey Dutton Kenneth Slessor 1991 ch 11 Battlefields of Liberation pp 265 6 Artsvi Bakhchinyan 2012 Vnuchka armyanskogo pomeshika sopernica Viven Li perevodchica baletnyh zvezd Granddaughter of an Armenian landowner rival of Vivien Leigh interpreter to ballet stars Inie Berega in Russian Retrieved 21 March 2015 Paul Donnelley 2003 Fade to Black A Book of Movie Obituaries Music Sales Group p 240 ISBN 978 1 84938 246 5 a b Dancing into the Unknown Tamara Tchinarova Finch 2007 ISBN 978 1 85273 114 4 accessed 20 August 2014 Untitled The Sydney Morning Herald 28 April 1941 p 4 Retrieved 11 February 2012 via National Library of Australia Actor Peter Finch 60 Starring in Network Dies The Washington Post 15 January 1977 ABC Eyewitness News 23 February 2009 Midnight broadcast Slumdog Millionaire fulfills its Oscar destiny TODAY com Paul Rosenfield 9 January 1977 Peter Finch Michelin Guide to Show Biz Comes to Rest in Hollywood Los Angeles Times p r29 From George With Sadness The Australian Women s Weekly 27 August 1969 p 13 Retrieved 10 February 2012 via National Library of Australia Finch Peter 1916 1977 at the BFI s Screenonline N B Miscalculates age at time of death as 61 not 60 Berlinale 1961 Prize Winners berlinale de Archived from the original on 22 March 2016 Retrieved 23 January 2010 2nd Moscow International Film Festival 1961 MIFF Archived from the original on 16 January 2013 Retrieved 4 November 2012 References editDundy Elaine Finch Bloody Finch A Biography of Peter Finch New York Holt Rinehart amp Winston 1980 ISBN 0 03 041796 1 10 ISBN 978 0 03 041796 2 13 Faulkner Trader Peter Finch A Biography London Angus amp Robertson 1979 ISBN 0 207 95831 9 10 ISBN 978 0 207 95831 1 13 Finch Yolande Finchy My Life with Peter Finch London Arrow Books 1980 ISBN 0 09 924190 0 10 ISBN 978 0 09 924190 4 13 Johnson G The Success Story of Peter Finch The Sun Herald Sydney Sunday 8 August 1954 pp 21 23 Johnson G The Long Road to London Sunday 15 August 1954 pp 23 25 Johnson G Dad and Dave and then the War The Sun Herald Sydney 15 Aug 1954 23 Johnson G The Thames is Non Inflammable But an Australian in London Leapt Up a STAIRWAY TO STARDOM The Sun Herald Sydney 22 Aug 1954 23 Johnson G The Threat and the Promise The Sun Herald Sydney 29 Aug 1954 47External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Peter Finch nbsp Biography portal nbsp Film portalFinch Peter 1916 1977 at the BFI s Screenonline N B Miscalculates age at time of death as 61 not 60 Peter Finch at IMDb Peter Finch Australian theatre credits at AusStage Peter Finch at Australian Dictionary of Biography Audio interview with Peter Finch from 1973 discussing Australia Documentation relating to Peter Finch s war service at National Archives of Australia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Finch amp oldid 1192794950, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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