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Robert Eddison

Robert Leadam Eddison, OBE (10 June 1908 – 14 December 1991) was an English actor, who despite his lengthy career as a classical stage actor, is probably most widely remembered in the role of the Grail Knight in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. He also played Merlin in the BBC television series The Legend of King Arthur, and the tragic ferryman in The Storyteller episode "The Luck Child".

Robert Eddison

Born
Robert Leadam Eddison

(1908-06-10)10 June 1908
Yokohama, Japan
Died14 December 1991(1991-12-14) (aged 83)
NationalityBritish
OccupationActor
Years active1930–1991

Eddison was an award-winning actor, known for his mellifluously resonant, baritone voice and long, lean 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) figure. Throughout his 60-year career he was constantly in demand as an actor and worked with many of Britain's greatest stage actors, often during the early formative years of their careers including Ian McKellen, Derek Jacobi and Maggie Smith.

Early life

Eddison was born in Yokohama, Japan, to Edwin Eddison and Hilda Muriel Leadham. He had a twin brother,[citation needed] Talbot Leadam Eddison, who later became a Rear Admiral in the Royal Navy and received the Distinguished Service Cross[1] and The Most Honourable Order of the Bath. Another brother became a director of an engineering company, while the youngest brother was Roger Eddison.[citation needed]

From the age of five, Eddison knew that he wanted to be an actor. Both of his parents were members of the Yokohama Dramatic Club, where he often saw them both perform on stage. He recalls in his later memoir how "As they bent down to kiss me goodnight...the smell of the make-up and powder totally bewitched me. My father's make-up box had the same smell of spirit-gum and its effect on me was very potent".[citation needed]

His father was a civil engineer and died in 1917. Consequently, his mother decided to return to England with her four sons by way of British Columbia, Canada. It was here that Eddison along with his twin brother went to boarding school in Victoria for the next few years. After the Armistice in 1919, the family arrived back in England. Although his mother's family originally came from Leeds, she settled in Haywards Heath, Sussex.[2]

Education

Eddison, aged 14, along with his three other brothers, were all educated at Charterhouse School. He was extremely disappointed to discover that there was no dramatic society, especially considering that its past alumni included such theatre luminaries as Johnston Forbes-Robertson, Cyril Maude, Richard Goolden and Max Beerbohm.[3]

It was anticipated that he would follow in the footsteps of his maternal grandfather and paternal uncle and become a doctor, consequently yet uncertain, Eddison later studied at Trinity College, Cambridge where he read medicine. During his time there he developed his passion for acting and the theatre. He was a member of the ADC and of The Marlowe Society and from 1929 to 1930 served as President of the Cambridge Amateur Dramatics Club. As President, he later recalled how he shamefully blackballed Alastair Cooke due to "A very suspect Lancashire accent". During his time there he played Virginia alongside George Rylands in Coriolanus and as Beatrice opposite Michael Redgrave as Florindo in Goldoni's A Servant of Two Masters.[3]

It was whilst at Cambridge that Eddison made his professional debut at the Festival Theatre, Cambridge in Lady Audley's Secret on 23 June 1930 opposite Flora Robson as Lady Audley. Eddison later said he viewed this as his first professional credit, however "In fact, I drew no salary, but a silver cigarette-case at the end of the ten weeks."[3]

As a result of his passions evidently remaining elsewhere, Eddison later revealed that he "came down" without a degree, but "didn't think it mattered at all, but had my chosen profession failed me, I would probably not have felt in any way light-hearted."[3]

Early career

In his early career, he spent a year at the Westminster Theatre, making his London debut in The Anatomist again with Flora Robson and Henry Ainley and directed by Tyrone Guthrie. He later spent a long period in weekly rep in Croydon. In 1934 he caught the attention of Ben Greet and until 1939 appeared in several productions, over the course of three seasons, at the Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park. He was seen and noted by Noël Coward whilst performing in a comedy titled Yes and No and later invited by Val Gielgud to appear in radio productions at the BBC.[3]

During his varied career he played six seasons with the Old Vic. One of his first was taking over the roles of Le Beau and William from Alec Guinness with Edith Evans as Rosalind.

In 1938, and with war imminent, he "joined up" but soon temporarily postponed, in order to appear in as many plays as possible until he was truly needed. Consequently, in 1939, he was able to appear as Pericles and Oberon in Regent's Park. He was also free to accept an engagement from H.M. Tennent to appear alongside and in Noël Coward's This Happy Breed and his semi-autobiographical stage play Present Laughter in the part of Roland Maule. Eddison later recalled how "Sometimes in an actor's life there crops up a part that seems to be his own. Not often with me, but Roland Maule in 'Present Laughter' was one of them (and I think Noël meant it to be)". However the imminent productions were halted mid-rehearsal by the Second World War and to his regret he was not able to "create" Roland, this honour was given to James Donald. He did later appear in a revival in 1947, but in his own words "Some of the gilt was off the gingerbread." One of his last productions prior to leaving was Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet in 1940, where he played Romeo opposite Pamela Brown's Juliet.[3]

The war really exasperated him, as he had been due to appear in two sure-fire Coward hits in the West End, with a Broadway transfer expected. In 1940 he was called up to the Royal Navy, but officially became an enlisted man on 5 May 1941 and was trained at a naval establishment in Fareham, later moving barracks to Portsmouth. It was during a medical X-ray that they discovered that Eddison's heart was on the wrong side of his chest, but it was the view that if it hadn't caused any trouble before that was no reason it should do now. He was drafted to HMS King George V at Rosyth. He soon rose through the ranks, and was sent to HMS King Alfred, which was a training depot for officers. As a result, he was now able to wear the uniform of an officer (he enjoyed the fact that it was tailor-made by Gieves). One part of his officer training was to attend a knife and fork course in Greenwich where, as an officer, he would be taught, literally, how to use the utensils. He was then appointed to the aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious as a Temporary Lieutenant. Upon arriving on board he was greeted by another officer, Michael Hordern, who later also became an acclaimed actor. During his time there the ship was attacked by Kamikaze aircraft on Easter Day 1945. Eddison eventually spent three years aboard Illustrious, feeling very much "the man the Admiralty forgot" as appointments were usually only for two years.[3]

Ian McKellen later recalled one anecdote of Eddison's wartime experience when he was performing the Gertrude Lawrence part in an officers performance of Coward's Red Peppers and Fumed Oak: "After the show, the Petty Officer breathed heavily, what Robert always considered the best notice he ever had: "You know, Eddison, I never knew you were so f*****g lovely!"[4]

Eddison was finally demobbed in March 1946. Not long after he spent two further seasons at the Bristol Old Vic where he played Iago and was noted for his Hamlet, opposite Jane Wenham as Ophelia which later transferred to the St James' Theatre in 1948. Eddison eventually got to play the parts he'd hope to create opposite Coward in the revival of Coward's double bill which had been interrupted by the war.

In 1950 he was invited to join the prestigious Old Vic Company and was part of the company who reopened London's Old Vic Theatre after it had been severely damaged during the war. The opening production was Twelfth Night with Peggy Ashcroft as Viola and Paul Rogers as Malvolio, the production later toured Italy.

Throughout his career, Eddison had a steady stream of work and performed in Shakespeare and other classics, later playing the comic roles of Feste and Sir Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night, and King Lear on the New York stage. He was also a familiar figure in plays by Ibsen, Chekhov, and Sophocles, and played Canon Chasuble in Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest again alongside Flora Robson as Miss Prism.

In April 1958 he became an active committee member of The Society for Theatre Research and often gave lectures, later becoming its Chairman and Vice-President.

In 1960, he played Polonius to Jeremy Brett's Hamlet at the Strand Theatre. He was later to play Captain Hook in Peter Pan, as Alastair Sim refused to play twice daily.

Later career

In 1967 he was engaged to play The Player in Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead in New York. The play opened in Washington, with Variety saying he was "superb", but after five performances he was replaced, an experience which left him feeling very wounded. "It seemed that the trouble was that I wasn't Graham Crowden" he would later remember.

In 1969, he developed a lifelong friendship with Ian McKellen whom he first met when they appeared in the since legendary double bill Prospect Theatre Company productions of Shakespeare's Richard II and Marlowe's Edward II, with McKellen playing both leading parts on alternate nights and Eddison playing Lightborn and the Duke of York respectively. Eddison won the 1970 Clarence Derwent Award for 'Best male in a supporting role' for his performance of Lightborn[5] He later recalled that "I was ashamed at how much I enjoyed playing Lightborn in Edward II (surely one of the best small parts in dramaturgy!)"

When being interviewed by McKellen's biographer he reminisced that "It was a wonderful time… At the Piccadilly Theatre there were always queues at the Box Office and the younger members of the cast got very excited and I thought, poor things, they have been deprived". Eddison loved being in the company and had "the greatest admiration and affection for Ian. The Duke of York was a dull part, really, but I loved playing it - and Richard Cottrell exercised his considerable persuasive powers [as director] on me to do this and Lightborn. I was quite happy to do that as I thought it was the only possible part for me - I couldn't really see myself as one of those Lancastrian barons."[6]

In 1974, he was invited to join McKellen and Edward Petherbridge's democratically run Actor's Company. The aim of the Company, through majority decisions, meant that the collective company of actors would all choose the plays on a democratic basis and to alternate between leading and supporting parts. Eddison later stated "I was very touched when I was asked to join the company. I was so much older than all the others. But it was all the greatest fun, huge fun, though I did find the meetings endless and ghastly. I never knew what to say!"[6]

During the season he played the title role in King Lear, a part he played to great acclaim. Upon being offered the part Eddison later remembered "I was very touched to be asked to play Lear. I had been to do a play at Colchester and on my return I found this note from the rest of the company offering me the part. I wept, amazingly, for I had always wanted to do the part."[6]

During this period he performed in both the UK and America. McKellen later recalled how when performing Chekhov's 'The Wood Demon' at the Brooklyn Academy of Music they shared the stage-level dressing-room where Enrico Caruso reputedly died.[7]

He was part of the company at the National Theatre during its final performance at the Old Vic. On 4 October 1976 he delivered the first speech in the Olivier Theatre at the Royal National Theatre as the Prologue in Christopher Marlowe's Tamburlaine the Great. Eddison was quite proud to be able to say that he was the only actor in the world and forever will be, who opened both the South Bank and (six years later) The Barbican.

In 1978, he also won the Society of West End Theatre Award (now Laurence Olivier Award) for 'Best Actor in a Supporting Role' for his performances in Twelfth Night of Andrew Aguecheek / Feste, a part he had last played in 1950.

In 1985, he was later asked by his friend McKellen to join the new McKellen/Petherbridge Company at the Royal National Theatre, which sadly he was unable to join, but was again "touched to be asked".

Eddison also made his mark in radio, in countless BBC dramas through the decades, with some of his last roles including Death in The Canterbury Tales and parts in an adaptation of Japanese Noh plays. His television work included a bravura performance as Uncle Silas in a 1968 production for the Thames Television series Mystery and Imagination. His film career was limited, but included a supporting role in Peter Ustinov's 1948 comedy Vice Versa, the electrical 'Nick' in The Boy Who Turned Yellow (1972) and the college president in American Friends (1991).

However, Eddison's most notable, albeit small, role was in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade as the ancient Grail Knight. The part was briefly considered to be played by Laurence Olivier, but he was too ill.[8] Eddison was 81 at the time of filming. His line "He chose poorly" is one of the film's most famously quoted lines. Julian Glover, who played villain Walter Donovan, recalled Eddison was excited and nervous for his return to film, often asking if he had performed correctly. Recalling working with Eddison later on Glover said:

"He was such a wonderful actor, Robert. Fantastic voice too, a wonderful rolling voice. He came in and I thought he lent a tremendous gravitas to that part, but at the same time, he was able to take that wonderful line "He chose poorly" in such a dry way, that it was really funny. When I saw it, it got an absolute belly laugh"

His final production with McKellen was in Martin Sherman's Bent as Uncle Freddie in 1990, the same part McKellen was later to play in the 1997 film.

Eddison was awarded the OBE in the 1988 Queen's Birthday Honours List for his services to drama.

Death

A lifelong smoker, and despite annually giving up smoking for Lent, Eddison died of bronchial pneumonia at a London hospital in 1991, aged 83.[9]

Throughout his lengthy career, Eddison amassed an extensive personal collection of theatrical material. The collection included ceramics, architectural plans and drawings, and watercolours, prints, rare books and wax figures. The majority of the collection was built up following World War II, with acquisitions from well-known London dealers and from country outlets visited while on tour. It was regarded as "One of the finest collections of Georgian theatrical material in private hands, with a high proportion of the material being rare or unique and of national importance". Upon his death, the collection was later acquired by the Theatre Museum from the Executors of his estate as an acceptance in lieu of Inheritance Tax. His collection is now curated by the Victoria and Albert Museum.[10]

He was later discovered to have written the beginnings of a memoir titled Majestic Service: An Autobiographical Memoir. The 22 pages were later published by the Society for Theatre Research in 1992.

Eddison was the great uncle of the television presenter Dallas Campbell. Campbell later said "I remember sitting in the cinema as a ten-year-old in 1981 watching Harrison Ford in the first Indiana Jones film and immediately getting interested in archaeology. I was in my late teens when Uncle Bob was in the third film, The Last Crusade, and I was so proud of him. I remember going to the cinema and telling people he was my uncle, but nobody believed me."

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1938 Sixty Glorious Years Lanternist Professor Film debut
1940 Convoy HMS Apollo Pilot Uncredited
1946 School for Secrets Air Traffic Control Radio Announcer Uncredited
1948 Vice Versa Mr. Blinkhorn
1954 The Angel Who Pawned Her Harp The Voice
1965 Out of the Unknown Tzhilyantsi Episode: Andover and the Android
1966 I Was Happy Here
1968 Mystery and Imagination Karswell in Casting the Runes/Silas Ruthyn 2 episodes
1972 The Boy Who Turned Yellow Nick
1979 The Legend of King Arthur Merlin 2 episodes
1987 Scoop The Country - Troutbeck TV movie
1988 The Storyteller Ferryman Episode: The Luck Child
1989 Campion Robert Skinn Episode: The Case of the Late Pig: Part 2
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade Grail Knight
1990 A TV Dante Charon Episode: Cantos 3 and 4
1991 American Friends Rushden - The President Final film

References

  1. ^ "No. 37119". The London Gazette (Supplement). 14 June 1945. p. 2969.
  2. ^ Beer, Stafford (August 2000). "Roger Tatham Eddison: an appreciation". Journal of the Operational Research Society. 51 (8): 1004–1007. doi:10.1057/palgrave.jors.2600989. ISSN 0160-5682.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Eddison, Robert (1992). Majestic Service: An Autobiographical Memoir. London, UK: The British Society of Theatre Research.
  4. ^ Rebellato, Dan (1999). 1956 and All That: The Making of Modern British Drama. London, UK: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415189392.
  5. ^ "Prospect Theatre Company". Ian McKellen.
  6. ^ a b c Gibson, Joy Leslie (1986). Ian McKellen: A Biography. London, UK: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297810568.
  7. ^ "The Actors' Company". Ian McKellen.
  8. ^ Knolle, Sharon (24 May 2014). . Moviefone. Archived from the original on 31 March 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  9. ^ Andrews, Deborah; Turner, Roland (1991). The Annual Obituary. St. James Press. pp. 730–732. ISBN 978-1-558621756.
  10. ^ "First night present". Victoria and Albert Museum.

External links

  • Robert Eddison at IMDb

robert, eddison, robert, leadam, eddison, june, 1908, december, 1991, english, actor, despite, lengthy, career, classical, stage, actor, probably, most, widely, remembered, role, grail, knight, indiana, jones, last, crusade, also, played, merlin, television, s. Robert Leadam Eddison OBE 10 June 1908 14 December 1991 was an English actor who despite his lengthy career as a classical stage actor is probably most widely remembered in the role of the Grail Knight in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade He also played Merlin in the BBC television series The Legend of King Arthur and the tragic ferryman in The Storyteller episode The Luck Child Robert EddisonOBEBornRobert Leadam Eddison 1908 06 10 10 June 1908Yokohama JapanDied14 December 1991 1991 12 14 aged 83 Westminster London EnglandNationalityBritishOccupationActorYears active1930 1991Eddison was an award winning actor known for his mellifluously resonant baritone voice and long lean 6 ft 3 in 1 91 m figure Throughout his 60 year career he was constantly in demand as an actor and worked with many of Britain s greatest stage actors often during the early formative years of their careers including Ian McKellen Derek Jacobi and Maggie Smith Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Early career 4 Later career 5 Death 6 Filmography 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditEddison was born in Yokohama Japan to Edwin Eddison and Hilda Muriel Leadham He had a twin brother citation needed Talbot Leadam Eddison who later became a Rear Admiral in the Royal Navy and received the Distinguished Service Cross 1 and The Most Honourable Order of the Bath Another brother became a director of an engineering company while the youngest brother was Roger Eddison citation needed From the age of five Eddison knew that he wanted to be an actor Both of his parents were members of the Yokohama Dramatic Club where he often saw them both perform on stage He recalls in his later memoir how As they bent down to kiss me goodnight the smell of the make up and powder totally bewitched me My father s make up box had the same smell of spirit gum and its effect on me was very potent citation needed His father was a civil engineer and died in 1917 Consequently his mother decided to return to England with her four sons by way of British Columbia Canada It was here that Eddison along with his twin brother went to boarding school in Victoria for the next few years After the Armistice in 1919 the family arrived back in England Although his mother s family originally came from Leeds she settled in Haywards Heath Sussex 2 Education EditEddison aged 14 along with his three other brothers were all educated at Charterhouse School He was extremely disappointed to discover that there was no dramatic society especially considering that its past alumni included such theatre luminaries as Johnston Forbes Robertson Cyril Maude Richard Goolden and Max Beerbohm 3 It was anticipated that he would follow in the footsteps of his maternal grandfather and paternal uncle and become a doctor consequently yet uncertain Eddison later studied at Trinity College Cambridge where he read medicine During his time there he developed his passion for acting and the theatre He was a member of the ADC and of The Marlowe Society and from 1929 to 1930 served as President of the Cambridge Amateur Dramatics Club As President he later recalled how he shamefully blackballed Alastair Cooke due to A very suspect Lancashire accent During his time there he played Virginia alongside George Rylands in Coriolanus and as Beatrice opposite Michael Redgrave as Florindo in Goldoni s A Servant of Two Masters 3 It was whilst at Cambridge that Eddison made his professional debut at the Festival Theatre Cambridge in Lady Audley s Secret on 23 June 1930 opposite Flora Robson as Lady Audley Eddison later said he viewed this as his first professional credit however In fact I drew no salary but a silver cigarette case at the end of the ten weeks 3 As a result of his passions evidently remaining elsewhere Eddison later revealed that he came down without a degree but didn t think it mattered at all but had my chosen profession failed me I would probably not have felt in any way light hearted 3 Early career EditIn his early career he spent a year at the Westminster Theatre making his London debut in The Anatomist again with Flora Robson and Henry Ainley and directed by Tyrone Guthrie He later spent a long period in weekly rep in Croydon In 1934 he caught the attention of Ben Greet and until 1939 appeared in several productions over the course of three seasons at the Open Air Theatre Regent s Park He was seen and noted by Noel Coward whilst performing in a comedy titled Yes and No and later invited by Val Gielgud to appear in radio productions at the BBC 3 During his varied career he played six seasons with the Old Vic One of his first was taking over the roles of Le Beau and William from Alec Guinness with Edith Evans as Rosalind In 1938 and with war imminent he joined up but soon temporarily postponed in order to appear in as many plays as possible until he was truly needed Consequently in 1939 he was able to appear as Pericles and Oberon in Regent s Park He was also free to accept an engagement from H M Tennent to appear alongside and in Noel Coward s This Happy Breed and his semi autobiographical stage play Present Laughter in the part of Roland Maule Eddison later recalled how Sometimes in an actor s life there crops up a part that seems to be his own Not often with me but Roland Maule in Present Laughter was one of them and I think Noel meant it to be However the imminent productions were halted mid rehearsal by the Second World War and to his regret he was not able to create Roland this honour was given to James Donald He did later appear in a revival in 1947 but in his own words Some of the gilt was off the gingerbread One of his last productions prior to leaving was Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet in 1940 where he played Romeo opposite Pamela Brown s Juliet 3 The war really exasperated him as he had been due to appear in two sure fire Coward hits in the West End with a Broadway transfer expected In 1940 he was called up to the Royal Navy but officially became an enlisted man on 5 May 1941 and was trained at a naval establishment in Fareham later moving barracks to Portsmouth It was during a medical X ray that they discovered that Eddison s heart was on the wrong side of his chest but it was the view that if it hadn t caused any trouble before that was no reason it should do now He was drafted to HMS King George V at Rosyth He soon rose through the ranks and was sent to HMS King Alfred which was a training depot for officers As a result he was now able to wear the uniform of an officer he enjoyed the fact that it was tailor made by Gieves One part of his officer training was to attend a knife and fork course in Greenwich where as an officer he would be taught literally how to use the utensils He was then appointed to the aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious as a Temporary Lieutenant Upon arriving on board he was greeted by another officer Michael Hordern who later also became an acclaimed actor During his time there the ship was attacked by Kamikaze aircraft on Easter Day 1945 Eddison eventually spent three years aboard Illustrious feeling very much the man the Admiralty forgot as appointments were usually only for two years 3 Ian McKellen later recalled one anecdote of Eddison s wartime experience when he was performing the Gertrude Lawrence part in an officers performance of Coward s Red Peppers and Fumed Oak After the show the Petty Officer breathed heavily what Robert always considered the best notice he ever had You know Eddison I never knew you were so f g lovely 4 Eddison was finally demobbed in March 1946 Not long after he spent two further seasons at the Bristol Old Vic where he played Iago and was noted for his Hamlet opposite Jane Wenham as Ophelia which later transferred to the St James Theatre in 1948 Eddison eventually got to play the parts he d hope to create opposite Coward in the revival of Coward s double bill which had been interrupted by the war In 1950 he was invited to join the prestigious Old Vic Company and was part of the company who reopened London s Old Vic Theatre after it had been severely damaged during the war The opening production was Twelfth Night with Peggy Ashcroft as Viola and Paul Rogers as Malvolio the production later toured Italy Throughout his career Eddison had a steady stream of work and performed in Shakespeare and other classics later playing the comic roles of Feste and Sir Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night and King Lear on the New York stage He was also a familiar figure in plays by Ibsen Chekhov and Sophocles and played Canon Chasuble in Oscar Wilde s The Importance of Being Earnest again alongside Flora Robson as Miss Prism In April 1958 he became an active committee member of The Society for Theatre Research and often gave lectures later becoming its Chairman and Vice President In 1960 he played Polonius to Jeremy Brett s Hamlet at the Strand Theatre He was later to play Captain Hook in Peter Pan as Alastair Sim refused to play twice daily Later career EditIn 1967 he was engaged to play The Player in Tom Stoppard s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead in New York The play opened in Washington with Variety saying he was superb but after five performances he was replaced an experience which left him feeling very wounded It seemed that the trouble was that I wasn t Graham Crowden he would later remember In 1969 he developed a lifelong friendship with Ian McKellen whom he first met when they appeared in the since legendary double bill Prospect Theatre Company productions of Shakespeare s Richard II and Marlowe s Edward II with McKellen playing both leading parts on alternate nights and Eddison playing Lightborn and the Duke of York respectively Eddison won the 1970 Clarence Derwent Award for Best male in a supporting role for his performance of Lightborn 5 He later recalled that I was ashamed at how much I enjoyed playing Lightborn in Edward II surely one of the best small parts in dramaturgy When being interviewed by McKellen s biographer he reminisced that It was a wonderful time At the Piccadilly Theatre there were always queues at the Box Office and the younger members of the cast got very excited and I thought poor things they have been deprived Eddison loved being in the company and had the greatest admiration and affection for Ian The Duke of York was a dull part really but I loved playing it and Richard Cottrell exercised his considerable persuasive powers as director on me to do this and Lightborn I was quite happy to do that as I thought it was the only possible part for me I couldn t really see myself as one of those Lancastrian barons 6 In 1974 he was invited to join McKellen and Edward Petherbridge s democratically run Actor s Company The aim of the Company through majority decisions meant that the collective company of actors would all choose the plays on a democratic basis and to alternate between leading and supporting parts Eddison later stated I was very touched when I was asked to join the company I was so much older than all the others But it was all the greatest fun huge fun though I did find the meetings endless and ghastly I never knew what to say 6 During the season he played the title role in King Lear a part he played to great acclaim Upon being offered the part Eddison later remembered I was very touched to be asked to play Lear I had been to do a play at Colchester and on my return I found this note from the rest of the company offering me the part I wept amazingly for I had always wanted to do the part 6 During this period he performed in both the UK and America McKellen later recalled how when performing Chekhov s The Wood Demon at the Brooklyn Academy of Music they shared the stage level dressing room where Enrico Caruso reputedly died 7 He was part of the company at the National Theatre during its final performance at the Old Vic On 4 October 1976 he delivered the first speech in the Olivier Theatre at the Royal National Theatre as the Prologue in Christopher Marlowe s Tamburlaine the Great Eddison was quite proud to be able to say that he was the only actor in the world and forever will be who opened both the South Bank and six years later The Barbican In 1978 he also won the Society of West End Theatre Award now Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his performances in Twelfth Night of Andrew Aguecheek Feste a part he had last played in 1950 In 1985 he was later asked by his friend McKellen to join the new McKellen Petherbridge Company at the Royal National Theatre which sadly he was unable to join but was again touched to be asked Eddison also made his mark in radio in countless BBC dramas through the decades with some of his last roles including Death in The Canterbury Tales and parts in an adaptation of Japanese Noh plays His television work included a bravura performance as Uncle Silas in a 1968 production for the Thames Television series Mystery and Imagination His film career was limited but included a supporting role in Peter Ustinov s 1948 comedy Vice Versa the electrical Nick in The Boy Who Turned Yellow 1972 and the college president in American Friends 1991 However Eddison s most notable albeit small role was in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade as the ancient Grail Knight The part was briefly considered to be played by Laurence Olivier but he was too ill 8 Eddison was 81 at the time of filming His line He chose poorly is one of the film s most famously quoted lines Julian Glover who played villain Walter Donovan recalled Eddison was excited and nervous for his return to film often asking if he had performed correctly Recalling working with Eddison later on Glover said He was such a wonderful actor Robert Fantastic voice too a wonderful rolling voice He came in and I thought he lent a tremendous gravitas to that part but at the same time he was able to take that wonderful line He chose poorly in such a dry way that it was really funny When I saw it it got an absolute belly laugh His final production with McKellen was in Martin Sherman s Bent as Uncle Freddie in 1990 the same part McKellen was later to play in the 1997 film Eddison was awarded the OBE in the 1988 Queen s Birthday Honours List for his services to drama Death EditA lifelong smoker and despite annually giving up smoking for Lent Eddison died of bronchial pneumonia at a London hospital in 1991 aged 83 9 Throughout his lengthy career Eddison amassed an extensive personal collection of theatrical material The collection included ceramics architectural plans and drawings and watercolours prints rare books and wax figures The majority of the collection was built up following World War II with acquisitions from well known London dealers and from country outlets visited while on tour It was regarded as One of the finest collections of Georgian theatrical material in private hands with a high proportion of the material being rare or unique and of national importance Upon his death the collection was later acquired by the Theatre Museum from the Executors of his estate as an acceptance in lieu of Inheritance Tax His collection is now curated by the Victoria and Albert Museum 10 He was later discovered to have written the beginnings of a memoir titled Majestic Service An Autobiographical Memoir The 22 pages were later published by the Society for Theatre Research in 1992 Eddison was the great uncle of the television presenter Dallas Campbell Campbell later said I remember sitting in the cinema as a ten year old in 1981 watching Harrison Ford in the first Indiana Jones film and immediately getting interested in archaeology I was in my late teens when Uncle Bob was in the third film The Last Crusade and I was so proud of him I remember going to the cinema and telling people he was my uncle but nobody believed me Filmography EditYear Title Role Notes1938 Sixty Glorious Years Lanternist Professor Film debut1940 Convoy HMS Apollo Pilot Uncredited1946 School for Secrets Air Traffic Control Radio Announcer Uncredited1948 Vice Versa Mr Blinkhorn1954 The Angel Who Pawned Her Harp The Voice1965 Out of the Unknown Tzhilyantsi Episode Andover and the Android1966 I Was Happy Here1968 Mystery and Imagination Karswell in Casting the Runes Silas Ruthyn 2 episodes1972 The Boy Who Turned Yellow Nick1979 The Legend of King Arthur Merlin 2 episodes1987 Scoop The Country Troutbeck TV movie1988 The Storyteller Ferryman Episode The Luck Child1989 Campion Robert Skinn Episode The Case of the Late Pig Part 2Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade Grail Knight1990 A TV Dante Charon Episode Cantos 3 and 41991 American Friends Rushden The President Final filmReferences Edit No 37119 The London Gazette Supplement 14 June 1945 p 2969 Beer Stafford August 2000 Roger Tatham Eddison an appreciation Journal of the Operational Research Society 51 8 1004 1007 doi 10 1057 palgrave jors 2600989 ISSN 0160 5682 a b c d e f g Eddison Robert 1992 Majestic Service An Autobiographical Memoir London UK The British Society of Theatre Research Rebellato Dan 1999 1956 and All That The Making of Modern British Drama London UK Routledge ISBN 978 0 415189392 Prospect Theatre Company Ian McKellen a b c Gibson Joy Leslie 1986 Ian McKellen A Biography London UK Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297810568 The Actors Company Ian McKellen Knolle Sharon 24 May 2014 25 Things You Probably Didn t Know About Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade Moviefone Archived from the original on 31 March 2017 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Andrews Deborah Turner Roland 1991 The Annual Obituary St James Press pp 730 732 ISBN 978 1 558621756 First night present Victoria and Albert Museum Benedick Adam 16 December 1991 Obituary Robert Eddison The Independent Hanson Norman 1979 Carrier Pilot Cambridge Patrick Stephens ISBN 978 0 850593495 External links EditRobert Eddison at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Eddison amp oldid 1145631932, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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