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Trevor Howard

Trevor Wallace Howard-Smith (29 September 1913 – 7 January 1988)[2] was an English stage, film, and television actor. After varied work in the theatre, he achieved star status with his role in the film Brief Encounter (1945), followed by The Third Man (1949). He is also known for his roles in Golden Salamander (1950), The Clouded Yellow (1951), Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968), Battle of Britain (1969), Lola (1969), Ryan's Daughter (1970), Superman (1978), Windwalker (1981), and Gandhi (1982). For his performance in Sons and Lovers (1960) he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor.

Trevor Howard
Trevor Howard, 1973
Born
Trevor Wallace Howard-Smith

(1913-09-29)29 September 1913[1]
Cliftonville, Kent, England
Died7 January 1988(1988-01-07) (aged 74)
Arkley, London, England
Resting placeSt Peter's Church, Arkley
OccupationActor
Years active1934–1988
Spouse
(m. 1944)

Biography

Early life

Howard was born in Cliftonville, Kent, England the son of Mabel Grey (Wallace) and Arthur John Howard-Smith.[3][4][5] Although Howard later claimed to have been born in 1916, the year quoted by most reference sources, he was born in 1913 (this is supported by school and other records).[6][7]

His father was an insurance underwriter for Lloyd's of London, serving as representative in Colombo, Sri Lanka and elsewhere; Trevor spent the first eight years of his life travelling around the world.[8][9] He was educated at Clifton College[10](to which he left in his will a substantial legacy for a drama scholarship) and at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA).[11] In 1933, at the end of his first year, he was chosen as best actor in his class for his performance as Benedict in a school production of Much Ado About Nothing. While Howard was still studying, he made his professional debut at the Gate Theatre in Revolt in a Reformatory (1934).

When he left school he worked regularly on stage, including in Sheridan's The Rivals, several performances at Stratford-upon-Avon, and in a two-year run in the original production of French Without Tears.[12][13]

Second World War

Howard did little to stop the stories that he had a courageous wartime service in the British Army's Royal Corps of Signals, which earned him much respect among fellow actors and fans. However, as set out in a 2001 biography of Howard by the journalist Terence Pettigrew,[14] files held in the Public Record Office revealed he had actually been discharged from the British Army in 1943 for mental instability and having a "psychopathic personality".[15] Initially Howard's widow, actress Helen Cherry, denied this, but after being confronted with the official records, she said that Howard's mother had claimed he was a holder of the Military Cross adding that her late husband had an honourable military record with "nothing to be ashamed of".[16]

The London Gazette shows that Trevor Wallace Howard-Smith (247202) was actually commissioned into the South Staffordshire Regiment as a Second lieutenant effective 3 October 1942,[17] but he had relinquished his commission on 2 October 1943 "on account of "ill-health", still a 2nd lieutenant,[18] contradicting the stories that he had been a captain in the Royal Corps of Signals.[citation needed]

Early films

After a theatrical role in The Recruiting Officer (1943), Howard began working in films with an uncredited part The Way Ahead (1944), directed by Carol Reed.[19] He was in a big stage hit, A Soldier for Christmas (1944), and a production of Eugene O'Neill's Anna Christie (1944). Howard received his first credit for The Way to the Stars (1945), playing a pilot.[20]

Stardom

Howard's performance in The Way Ahead came to the attention of David Lean, who was looking for someone to play the role of Alec in Brief Encounter (1945). Lean recommended him to Noël Coward, who agreed with the suggestion, and the success of the film launched Howard's film career.[21]

He followed it with I See a Dark Stranger (1946) with Deborah Kerr, and Green for Danger (1947), starring Alastair Sim. Both films were successful as was They Made Me a Fugitive (1947). That year British exhibitors voted Howard the 10th most popular British star at the box office.[22] So Well Remembered (1948) was made with American talent and money and was a hit in Britain but lost money overall. Howard was reunited with Lean for The Passionate Friends (1949), but the film was not a success.

However, The Third Man (1949), which Howard starred in alongside Orson Welles and Joseph Cotten for Carol Reed from a story by Graham Greene, was a huge international success, and became the film of which Howard was most proud.[23] During filming in Vienna, Howard was keen to get to his favourite bar for a drink as soon as filming had finished for the evening. On one occasion Howard was in too much of a hurry to change out of his uniform as a British Army major. After a few drinks, he got into an argument and attracted the attention of the Military Police who detained him for impersonating a British officer. The MPs, being non-commissioned officers, then had to summon an officer to arrest him. On the lieutenant's arrival the matter was settled by an apology.[24]

Howard was the lead in Golden Salamander (1950) and played Peter Churchill in Odette (1950) with Anna Neagle, a big hit in Britain. It was directed by Herbert Wilcox who put Howard under contract.[25] He loaned Howard to Betty Box and Ralph Thomas to make The Clouded Yellow (1950), a popular thriller with Jean Simmons. These films helped Howard be voted the 2nd biggest British star at the box office in 1950[26] and the 5th biggest (and eleventh bigger over-all) in 1951.[27]

Howard was reunited with Carol Reed for Outcast of the Islands (1952) and he made a war film, Gift Horse (1952). That year he made his final appearance in Britain's ten most popular actors, coming in at number nine.[28] He was in another adaptation of a Graham Greene story, The Heart of the Matter (1953). Greene also wrote and produced Howard's next film, the British-Italian The Stranger's Hand (1954). Howard was in a French movie, The Lovers of Lisbon (1955), then supported Jose Ferrer in a war film from Warwick Pictures, The Cockleshell Heroes (1955), which was popular in Britain.[29]

International star

Howard's first Hollywood film was Run for the Sun (1956), where he played a villain to Richard Widmark's hero. He made a cameo in Around the World in 80 Days (1956) and again played a villain to an American star, Victor Mature, in Warwick's Interpol (1957).

Howard starred in Manuela (1957) then supported William Holden in Carol Reed's The Key (1958), for which he received the Best Actor award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. When William Holden dropped out of the lead of The Roots of Heaven (1958), Howard stepped in - the star part in a Hollywood film (although top billing went to Errol Flynn).

After a thriller Moment of Danger (1960) he was in Sons and Lovers (1960), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor. He was nominated for a BAFTA on four other occasions. and received two other Emmy nominations, one as a lead and the other as a supporting actor. He also received three Golden Globe Award nominations.

Howard was reunited with Holden for The Lion (1962). He was Captain Bligh to Marlon Brando's Fletcher Christian in MGM's remake of Mutiny on the Bounty (1962). He was in a TV movie production of Hedda Gabler (1962)[30] and played the title prime minister in "The Invincible Mr Disraeli" (1963), an episode of the Hallmark Hall of Fame for which he won an Emmy Award for his role then supported Robert Mitchum in Man in the Middle (1964) and Cary Grant in Father Goose (1964). After a cameo in Operation Crossbow (1965), Howard supported Frank Sinatra in Von Ryan's Express (1965), Brando and Yul Brynner in Morituri (1965), and Rod Taylor in The Liquidator (1965). After a leading role in The Poppy Is Also a Flower (1966) he made two movies with Brynner, Triple Cross (1966) and The Long Duel (1967).

Character actor

Howard had a change of pace supporting Hayley Mills in Pretty Polly (1968). He went back to military roles: The Charge of the Light Brigade (1968), as Lord Cardigan, and Battle of Britain (1969), as Air Vice Marshal Keith Park. He had support parts in Lola (1969) and Ryan's Daughter (1970), the latter for David Lean.

He made a Swedish film The Night Visitor (1971) then settled into a career as a character actor: To Catch a Spy (1971), supporting Kirk Douglas; Mary, Queen of Scots (1971), as Sir William Cecil; Kidnapped (1971); Pope Joan (1972); Ludwig (1972); The Offence (1972), with Sean Connery; A Doll's House (1973), for Joseph Losey; Who? (1974), supporting Elliott Gould; and Catholics (1974) for British TV.

He appeared in some horror films - Craze (1974), Persecution (1974) - and the more prestigious 11 Harrowhouse (1974), in which his wife Helen Cherry starred with him. In The Count of Monte Cristo (1975), he mentored Richard Chamberlain. He played military men in Hennessy (1975) and Conduct Unbecoming (1975). Around this time he complained that he had to work so hard because of the high rate of tax in Britain.[31]

Howard could be found in Albino (1976), shot in Rhodesia; The Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones (1976); Aces High (1976); Eliza Fraser (1976), shot in Australia;[32] The Last Remake of Beau Geste (1977); and Stevie (1978). He was one of many names in Superman (1978), Hurricane (1979), Meteor (1979) and The Sea Wolves (1980). He appeared in a TV series Shillingbury Tales (1980–81). One of his strangest films, and one he took great delight in, was Vivian Stanshall's Sir Henry at Rawlinson End (1980), in which he played the title role. He and Celia Johnson from Brief Encounter were reunited in Staying On (1980) for British TV.

Howard was also top-billed in Windwalker (1981).

Final films

Howard appeared in some prestigious movies towards the end of his career: The Deadly Game (1982), The Missionary (1982), Gandhi (1982), George Washington (1984), Shaka Zulu (1986), Dust (1985), and Peter the Great (1986).

At the time of filming White Mischief (1988) on location in Kenya during 1987, Howard was seriously ill and suffering from alcoholism. The company wanted to sack him, but co-star Sarah Miles was determined that Howard's distinguished film career would not end that way. In an interview with Terence Pettigrew for his biography of Howard, Miles describes how she gave an ultimatum to the executives, threatening to quit the production if they got rid of him.[33]

The Dawning (1988) was his final film.

Throughout his film career Howard insisted that all his contracts include a clause excusing him from work whenever a cricket Test match was being played.[34]

Audio/radio work

Howard recorded two Shakespeare performances, the first, recorded in the 1960s, was as Petruchio opposite Margaret Leighton's Kate in Caedmon Records' complete recording of The Taming of the Shrew; the second was in the title role of King Lear for the BBC World Service in 1986.[citation needed]

Personal life

He married stage and screen actress Helen Cherry.[3] He died on 7 January 1988 from hepatic failure and cirrhosis of the liver in Arkley, Barnet, aged 74.[35]

Honours

A British government document leaked to the Sunday Times in 2003 shows that Howard was among almost 300 individuals to decline official honours. He declined a CBE in 1982.[36]

Complete filmography

Television credits

See also

References

  1. ^ Pettigrew Trevor Howard: A Personal Biography, London: Peter Owen, 2001, p. 26
  2. ^ Pettigrew Trevor Howard: A Personal Biography, London: Peter Owen, 2001, p. 26 and p. 245
  3. ^ a b "Howard, Trevor [real name Trevor Wallace Howard-Smith] (1913–1988), actor". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/39937. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. ^ Trevor Howard: The Man and His Films, Michael Munn, Robson, 1989, p. 16
  5. ^ British Stars and Stardom: From Alma Taylor to Sean Connery, ed. Bruce Babington, 'Trevor, not Leslie, Howard', Geoffrey McNab, Manchester University Press, 2001, p. 138
  6. ^ Pettigrew Trevor Howard: A Personal Biography, London: Peter Owen, 2001, p. 26
  7. ^ See http://www.freebmd.org where his birth is recorded as Trevor W Howard-Smith
  8. ^ "World news Howard: the epitome of British stoicism". The Canberra Times. Vol. 62, no. 19, 088. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 9 January 1988. p. 4 – via National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ "Popular star Trevor Howard hides behind beard". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 14, no. 13. 7 September 1946. p. 36 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ "Clifton College Register" Muirhead, J.A.O. p394: Bristol; J.W Arrowsmith for Old Cliftonian Society; April, 1948
  11. ^ "BFI Screenonline: Howard, Trevor (1916-1988) Biography". www.screenonline.org.uk.
  12. ^ "Trevor Howard - Theatricalia". theatricalia.com.
  13. ^ Arditti, Michael (10 July 2016). "Theatre reviews: French Without Tears and No Villain".
  14. ^ Pettigrew, Terence (2001). Trevor Howard: A Personal Biography. P. Owen Publishers. p. 154. ISBN 9780720611243.
  15. ^ "Trevor Howard details". The Guardian. 3 March 2008.
  16. ^ "Obituaries: Helen Cherry". 2 October 2001. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
  17. ^ "Supplement to the London Gazette" (PDF). Supplement to the London Gazette, 3 November 1942: 4749. 3 November 1942. (prev. page states "The undermentioned Cadets to be 2nd Lts., 3rd Oct. 1942:")
  18. ^ "Supplement to the London Gazette, 5 October, 1943" (PDF). Supplement to the London Gazette: 4398. 5 October 1943.
  19. ^ "Production of The Recruiting Officer - Theatricalia". theatricalia.com.
  20. ^ "Trevor Howard".
  21. ^ "Brief Encounter (1945) - Articles - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies.
  22. ^ 'Bing's Lucky Number: Pa Crosby Dons 4th B.O. Crown', The Washington Post (1923–1954) [Washington, D.C] 3 Jan 1948: 12.
  23. ^ Variety Staff (15 December 2001). "Trevor Howard: A Personal Biography".
  24. ^ In Search of the Third Man (1999), p. 65
  25. ^ "Actor's safety clause". The Sun. No. 2461. New South Wales, Australia. 18 June 1950. p. 46 – via National Library of Australia.
  26. ^ "Hope tops list for popularity". The Mail. Adelaide. 30 December 1950. p. 5 Supplement: Sunday Magazine – via National Library of Australia.
  27. ^ "Vivien Leigh Actress of the Year". Townsville Daily Bulletin. Qld. 29 December 1951. p. 1 – via National Library of Australia.
  28. ^ "COMEDIAN TOPS FILM POLL". The Sunday Herald. Sydney. 28 December 1952. p. 4 – via National Library of Australia.
  29. ^ "The Cockleshell Heroes (1956) - Articles - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies.
  30. ^ "Ibsens "HEDDA GABLER"". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 30, no. 19. 10 October 1962. p. 4 (Television) – via National Library of Australia.
  31. ^ "AUSTRALIAN FILM FOR THE ACTOR WITH "THE LIVED-IN FACE"?". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 42, no. 52. 28 May 1975. p. 15 – via National Library of Australia.
  32. ^ "Million-dollar movie planned". The Canberra Times. Vol. 50, no. 14, 311. 26 February 1976. p. 16 – via National Library of Australia.
  33. ^ Terence Pettigrew Trevor Howard: A Personal Biography, London: Peter Owen, 2001, p. 149
  34. ^ "The Passionate Lives of Trevor Howard". Ottawa Citizen. 17 February 1961.
  35. ^ Pettigrew Trevor Howard: A Personal Biography, London: Peter Owen, 2001, p. 245
  36. ^ "No Sir! Stars who refused honors". CNN. 21 December 2003.

Sources

External links

trevor, howard, this, article, about, actor, football, player, footballer, trevor, wallace, howard, smith, september, 1913, january, 1988, english, stage, film, television, actor, after, varied, work, theatre, achieved, star, status, with, role, film, brief, e. This article is about the actor For the football player see Trevor Howard footballer Trevor Wallace Howard Smith 29 September 1913 7 January 1988 2 was an English stage film and television actor After varied work in the theatre he achieved star status with his role in the film Brief Encounter 1945 followed by The Third Man 1949 He is also known for his roles in Golden Salamander 1950 The Clouded Yellow 1951 Mutiny on the Bounty 1962 The Charge of the Light Brigade 1968 Battle of Britain 1969 Lola 1969 Ryan s Daughter 1970 Superman 1978 Windwalker 1981 and Gandhi 1982 For his performance in Sons and Lovers 1960 he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor Trevor HowardTrevor Howard 1973BornTrevor Wallace Howard Smith 1913 09 29 29 September 1913 1 Cliftonville Kent EnglandDied7 January 1988 1988 01 07 aged 74 Arkley London EnglandResting placeSt Peter s Church ArkleyOccupationActorYears active1934 1988SpouseHelen Cherry m 1944 wbr Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Second World War 1 3 Early films 1 4 Stardom 1 5 International star 1 6 Character actor 1 7 Final films 1 8 Audio radio work 1 9 Personal life 2 Honours 3 Complete filmography 4 Television credits 5 See also 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksBiography EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early life Edit Howard was born in Cliftonville Kent England the son of Mabel Grey Wallace and Arthur John Howard Smith 3 4 5 Although Howard later claimed to have been born in 1916 the year quoted by most reference sources he was born in 1913 this is supported by school and other records 6 7 His father was an insurance underwriter for Lloyd s of London serving as representative in Colombo Sri Lanka and elsewhere Trevor spent the first eight years of his life travelling around the world 8 9 He was educated at Clifton College 10 to which he left in his will a substantial legacy for a drama scholarship and at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art RADA 11 In 1933 at the end of his first year he was chosen as best actor in his class for his performance as Benedict in a school production of Much Ado About Nothing While Howard was still studying he made his professional debut at the Gate Theatre in Revolt in a Reformatory 1934 When he left school he worked regularly on stage including in Sheridan s The Rivals several performances at Stratford upon Avon and in a two year run in the original production of French Without Tears 12 13 Second World War Edit Howard did little to stop the stories that he had a courageous wartime service in the British Army s Royal Corps of Signals which earned him much respect among fellow actors and fans However as set out in a 2001 biography of Howard by the journalist Terence Pettigrew 14 files held in the Public Record Office revealed he had actually been discharged from the British Army in 1943 for mental instability and having a psychopathic personality 15 Initially Howard s widow actress Helen Cherry denied this but after being confronted with the official records she said that Howard s mother had claimed he was a holder of the Military Cross adding that her late husband had an honourable military record with nothing to be ashamed of 16 The London Gazette shows that Trevor Wallace Howard Smith 247202 was actually commissioned into the South Staffordshire Regiment as a Second lieutenant effective 3 October 1942 17 but he had relinquished his commission on 2 October 1943 on account of ill health still a 2nd lieutenant 18 contradicting the stories that he had been a captain in the Royal Corps of Signals citation needed Early films Edit After a theatrical role in The Recruiting Officer 1943 Howard began working in films with an uncredited part The Way Ahead 1944 directed by Carol Reed 19 He was in a big stage hit A Soldier for Christmas 1944 and a production of Eugene O Neill s Anna Christie 1944 Howard received his first credit for The Way to the Stars 1945 playing a pilot 20 Stardom Edit Howard s performance in The Way Ahead came to the attention of David Lean who was looking for someone to play the role of Alec in Brief Encounter 1945 Lean recommended him to Noel Coward who agreed with the suggestion and the success of the film launched Howard s film career 21 He followed it with I See a Dark Stranger 1946 with Deborah Kerr and Green for Danger 1947 starring Alastair Sim Both films were successful as was They Made Me a Fugitive 1947 That year British exhibitors voted Howard the 10th most popular British star at the box office 22 So Well Remembered 1948 was made with American talent and money and was a hit in Britain but lost money overall Howard was reunited with Lean for The Passionate Friends 1949 but the film was not a success However The Third Man 1949 which Howard starred in alongside Orson Welles and Joseph Cotten for Carol Reed from a story by Graham Greene was a huge international success and became the film of which Howard was most proud 23 During filming in Vienna Howard was keen to get to his favourite bar for a drink as soon as filming had finished for the evening On one occasion Howard was in too much of a hurry to change out of his uniform as a British Army major After a few drinks he got into an argument and attracted the attention of the Military Police who detained him for impersonating a British officer The MPs being non commissioned officers then had to summon an officer to arrest him On the lieutenant s arrival the matter was settled by an apology 24 Howard was the lead in Golden Salamander 1950 and played Peter Churchill in Odette 1950 with Anna Neagle a big hit in Britain It was directed by Herbert Wilcox who put Howard under contract 25 He loaned Howard to Betty Box and Ralph Thomas to make The Clouded Yellow 1950 a popular thriller with Jean Simmons These films helped Howard be voted the 2nd biggest British star at the box office in 1950 26 and the 5th biggest and eleventh bigger over all in 1951 27 Howard was reunited with Carol Reed for Outcast of the Islands 1952 and he made a war film Gift Horse 1952 That year he made his final appearance in Britain s ten most popular actors coming in at number nine 28 He was in another adaptation of a Graham Greene story The Heart of the Matter 1953 Greene also wrote and produced Howard s next film the British Italian The Stranger s Hand 1954 Howard was in a French movie The Lovers of Lisbon 1955 then supported Jose Ferrer in a war film from Warwick Pictures The Cockleshell Heroes 1955 which was popular in Britain 29 International star Edit Howard s first Hollywood film was Run for the Sun 1956 where he played a villain to Richard Widmark s hero He made a cameo in Around the World in 80 Days 1956 and again played a villain to an American star Victor Mature in Warwick s Interpol 1957 Howard starred in Manuela 1957 then supported William Holden in Carol Reed s The Key 1958 for which he received the Best Actor award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts When William Holden dropped out of the lead of The Roots of Heaven 1958 Howard stepped in the star part in a Hollywood film although top billing went to Errol Flynn After a thriller Moment of Danger 1960 he was in Sons and Lovers 1960 for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor He was nominated for a BAFTA on four other occasions and received two other Emmy nominations one as a lead and the other as a supporting actor He also received three Golden Globe Award nominations Howard was reunited with Holden for The Lion 1962 He was Captain Bligh to Marlon Brando s Fletcher Christian in MGM s remake of Mutiny on the Bounty 1962 He was in a TV movie production of Hedda Gabler 1962 30 and played the title prime minister in The Invincible Mr Disraeli 1963 an episode of the Hallmark Hall of Fame for which he won an Emmy Award for his role then supported Robert Mitchum in Man in the Middle 1964 and Cary Grant in Father Goose 1964 After a cameo in Operation Crossbow 1965 Howard supported Frank Sinatra in Von Ryan s Express 1965 Brando and Yul Brynner in Morituri 1965 and Rod Taylor in The Liquidator 1965 After a leading role in The Poppy Is Also a Flower 1966 he made two movies with Brynner Triple Cross 1966 and The Long Duel 1967 Character actor Edit Howard had a change of pace supporting Hayley Mills in Pretty Polly 1968 He went back to military roles The Charge of the Light Brigade 1968 as Lord Cardigan and Battle of Britain 1969 as Air Vice Marshal Keith Park He had support parts in Lola 1969 and Ryan s Daughter 1970 the latter for David Lean He made a Swedish film The Night Visitor 1971 then settled into a career as a character actor To Catch a Spy 1971 supporting Kirk Douglas Mary Queen of Scots 1971 as Sir William Cecil Kidnapped 1971 Pope Joan 1972 Ludwig 1972 The Offence 1972 with Sean Connery A Doll s House 1973 for Joseph Losey Who 1974 supporting Elliott Gould and Catholics 1974 for British TV He appeared in some horror films Craze 1974 Persecution 1974 and the more prestigious 11 Harrowhouse 1974 in which his wife Helen Cherry starred with him In The Count of Monte Cristo 1975 he mentored Richard Chamberlain He played military men in Hennessy 1975 and Conduct Unbecoming 1975 Around this time he complained that he had to work so hard because of the high rate of tax in Britain 31 Howard could be found in Albino 1976 shot in Rhodesia The Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones 1976 Aces High 1976 Eliza Fraser 1976 shot in Australia 32 The Last Remake of Beau Geste 1977 and Stevie 1978 He was one of many names in Superman 1978 Hurricane 1979 Meteor 1979 and The Sea Wolves 1980 He appeared in a TV series Shillingbury Tales 1980 81 One of his strangest films and one he took great delight in was Vivian Stanshall s Sir Henry at Rawlinson End 1980 in which he played the title role He and Celia Johnson from Brief Encounter were reunited in Staying On 1980 for British TV Howard was also top billed in Windwalker 1981 Final films Edit Howard appeared in some prestigious movies towards the end of his career The Deadly Game 1982 The Missionary 1982 Gandhi 1982 George Washington 1984 Shaka Zulu 1986 Dust 1985 and Peter the Great 1986 At the time of filming White Mischief 1988 on location in Kenya during 1987 Howard was seriously ill and suffering from alcoholism The company wanted to sack him but co star Sarah Miles was determined that Howard s distinguished film career would not end that way In an interview with Terence Pettigrew for his biography of Howard Miles describes how she gave an ultimatum to the executives threatening to quit the production if they got rid of him 33 The Dawning 1988 was his final film Throughout his film career Howard insisted that all his contracts include a clause excusing him from work whenever a cricket Test match was being played 34 Audio radio work Edit Howard recorded two Shakespeare performances the first recorded in the 1960s was as Petruchio opposite Margaret Leighton s Kate in Caedmon Records complete recording of The Taming of the Shrew the second was in the title role of King Lear for the BBC World Service in 1986 citation needed Personal life Edit He married stage and screen actress Helen Cherry 3 He died on 7 January 1988 from hepatic failure and cirrhosis of the liver in Arkley Barnet aged 74 35 Honours EditA British government document leaked to the Sunday Times in 2003 shows that Howard was among almost 300 individuals to decline official honours He declined a CBE in 1982 36 Complete filmography EditThe Way Ahead 1944 as Officer on Ship uncredited The Way to the Stars 1945 as Squadron Leader Carter Brief Encounter 1945 as Alec Harvey I See a Dark Stranger 1946 as David Baynes Green for Danger 1946 as Dr Barnes They Made Me a Fugitive 1947 as Clem So Well Remembered 1947 as Richard Whiteside The Passionate Friends 1949 as Professor Steven Stratton The Third Man 1949 as Maj Calloway Golden Salamander 1950 as David Redfern Odette 1950 as Captain Peter Churchill Raoul The Clouded Yellow 1950 as Maj David Somers Lady Godiva Rides Again 1951 as Guest at Theater Accepting Program uncredited Outcast of the Islands 1952 as Peter Willems Gift Horse 1952 as Lieutenant Commander Hugh Algernon Fraser The Heart of the Matter 1953 as Harry Scobie La mano dello straniero 1954 as Major Roger Court Les amants du Tage 1955 as Inspector Lewis The Cockleshell Heroes 1955 as Captain Thompson Run for the Sun 1956 as Browne Around the World in 80 Days 1956 as Denis Fallentin Reform Club Member Interpol 1957 as Frank McNally Manuela 1957 as James Prothero released as Stowaway Girl in the US A Day in Trinidad Land of Laughter 1957 Short as Narrator The Key 1958 as Captain Chris Ford The Roots of Heaven 1958 as Morel Malaga 1960 as John Bain Sons and Lovers 1960 as Walter Morel The Lion 1962 as John Bullit Mutiny on the Bounty 1962 as Captain William Bligh Man in the Middle 1963 as Major John Darryl Kensington Father Goose 1964 as Houghton Operation Crossbow 1965 as Professor Lindermann Von Ryan s Express 1965 as Maj Eric Fincham Morituri 1965 as Colonel Statter The Liquidator 1965 as Mostyn Eagle in a Cage 1965 Hallmark Hall of Fame as Napoleon The Poppy Is Also a Flower 1966 as Sam Lincon Triple Cross 1966 MI 5 The Long Duel 1967 as Young Pretty Polly 1967 as Robert Hook The Charge of the Light Brigade 1968 as Lord Cardigan Battle of Britain 1969 as Air Vice Marshal Sir Keith Park Twinky 1969 as Lola s Grandfather Ryan s Daughter 1970 as Father Hugh Collins The Night Visitor 1971 as The Inspector To Catch a Spy 1971 as Sir Trevor Dawson Mary Queen of Scots 1971 as William Cecil Pope Joan 1972 as Pope Leo Ludwig 1972 as Richard Wagner The Offence 1972 as Detective Superintendent Cartwright Kidnapped 1973 as Lord Advocate Grant A Doll s House 1973 as Dr Rank Who 1973 as Colonel Azarin Catholics 1973 as The Abbot Craze 1974 as Supt Bellamy 11 Harrowhouse 1974 as Clyde Massey Persecution 1974 aka Sheba The Graveyard The Terror of Sheba as Paul Bellamy Cause for Concern 1974 as Narrator The Count of Monte Cristo 1975 TV movie as Abbe Faria Hennessy 1975 as Commander Rice Conduct Unbecoming 1975 as Colonel Benjamin Strang Albino 1976 as Johannes The Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones 1976 as Squire Western Aces High 1976 as Silkin Eliza Fraser 1976 as Captain Foster Fyans The Last Remake of Beau Geste 1977 as Sir Hector Babel Yemen 1977 short as Narrator Slavers 1978 as Alec Mackenzie Stevie 1978 as The Man Superman 1978 as 1st Elder The Spirit of Adventure Night Flight 1979 TV Movie as Riviere Hurricane 1979 as Father Malone Meteor 1979 as Sir Michael Hughes Flashpoint Africa 1980 as Programme Controller The Shillingbury Blowers 1980 as Dan Saltie Wicklow The Sea Wolves 1980 as Jack Cartwright Sir Henry at Rawlinson End 1980 as Sir Henry Rawlinson Windwalker 1980 as Windwalker Staying On 1980 TV movie as Colonel Tusker Smalley Arch of Triumph 1980 Light Years Away aka Les Annees lumiere 1981 as Yoshka Poliakeff The Great Muppet Caper 1981 as Aggressive Man in Restaurant uncredited No Country for Old Men 1981 TV Movie Inside the Third Reich 1982 TV Movie as Professor Heinrich Tessnow Deadly Game 1982 TV Movie as Gustave Kummer The Missionary 1982 as Lord Henry Ames Gandhi 1982 as Judge R S Broomfield Sword of the Valiant 1984 as The King Dust 1985 as Le pere God Rot Tunbridge Wells 1985 as Georg Frederich Handel Memory of the Camps 1985 Documentary as Narrator Time After Time 1986 as Brigadier Foreign Body 1986 as Dr Stirrup Christmas Eve 1986 TV Movie as Maitland Hand in Glove 1987 TV Movie as Vicar White Mischief 1988 as Jack Soames The Unholy 1988 as Father Silva The Dawning 1988 as GrandfatherTelevision credits EditThe Love Boat 1984 TV Series as Sir Albert Demerest George Washington 1984 miniseries as Lord Fairfax Shaka Zulu 1986 1989 as Lord Charles Somerset final appearance Peter the Great 1986 TV series as Sir Isaac NewtonSee also Edit Biography portalReferences Edit Pettigrew Trevor Howard A Personal Biography London Peter Owen 2001 p 26 Pettigrew Trevor Howard A Personal Biography London Peter Owen 2001 p 26 and p 245 a b Howard Trevor real name Trevor Wallace Howard Smith 1913 1988 actor Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press 2004 doi 10 1093 ref odnb 39937 Subscription or UK public library membership required Trevor Howard The Man and His Films Michael Munn Robson 1989 p 16 British Stars and Stardom From Alma Taylor to Sean Connery ed Bruce Babington Trevor not Leslie Howard Geoffrey McNab Manchester University Press 2001 p 138 Pettigrew Trevor Howard A Personal Biography London Peter Owen 2001 p 26 See http www freebmd org where his birth is recorded as Trevor W Howard Smith World news Howard the epitome of British stoicism The Canberra Times Vol 62 no 19 088 Australian Capital Territory Australia 9 January 1988 p 4 via National Library of Australia Popular star Trevor Howard hides behind beard The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 14 no 13 7 September 1946 p 36 via National Library of Australia Clifton College Register Muirhead J A O p394 Bristol J W Arrowsmith for Old Cliftonian Society April 1948 BFI Screenonline Howard Trevor 1916 1988 Biography www screenonline org uk Trevor Howard Theatricalia theatricalia com Arditti Michael 10 July 2016 Theatre reviews French Without Tears and No Villain Pettigrew Terence 2001 Trevor Howard A Personal Biography P Owen Publishers p 154 ISBN 9780720611243 Trevor Howard details The Guardian 3 March 2008 Obituaries Helen Cherry 2 October 2001 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Supplement to the London Gazette PDF Supplement to the London Gazette 3 November 1942 4749 3 November 1942 prev page states The undermentioned Cadets to be 2nd Lts 3rd Oct 1942 Supplement to the London Gazette 5 October 1943 PDF Supplement to the London Gazette 4398 5 October 1943 Production of The Recruiting Officer Theatricalia theatricalia com Trevor Howard Brief Encounter 1945 Articles TCM com Turner Classic Movies Bing s Lucky Number Pa Crosby Dons 4th B O Crown The Washington Post 1923 1954 Washington D C 3 Jan 1948 12 Variety Staff 15 December 2001 Trevor Howard A Personal Biography In Search of the Third Man 1999 p 65 Actor s safety clause The Sun No 2461 New South Wales Australia 18 June 1950 p 46 via National Library of Australia Hope tops list for popularity The Mail Adelaide 30 December 1950 p 5 Supplement Sunday Magazine via National Library of Australia Vivien Leigh Actress of the Year Townsville Daily Bulletin Qld 29 December 1951 p 1 via National Library of Australia COMEDIAN TOPS FILM POLL The Sunday Herald Sydney 28 December 1952 p 4 via National Library of Australia The Cockleshell Heroes 1956 Articles TCM com Turner Classic Movies Ibsens HEDDA GABLER The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 30 no 19 10 October 1962 p 4 Television via National Library of Australia AUSTRALIAN FILM FOR THE ACTOR WITH THE LIVED IN FACE The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 42 no 52 28 May 1975 p 15 via National Library of Australia Million dollar movie planned The Canberra Times Vol 50 no 14 311 26 February 1976 p 16 via National Library of Australia Terence Pettigrew Trevor Howard A Personal Biography London Peter Owen 2001 p 149 The Passionate Lives of Trevor Howard Ottawa Citizen 17 February 1961 Pettigrew Trevor Howard A Personal Biography London Peter Owen 2001 p 245 No Sir Stars who refused honors CNN 21 December 2003 Sources EditDrazin Charles 1999 In Search of the Third Man Methuen ISBN 0413739309 Knight Vivienne 1986 Trevor Howard A Gentleman and a Player Muller Blond amp White ISBN 978 0584111361 Munn Michael June 1989 Trevor Howard The Man and his Films Robson Books Ltd ISBN 978 0860515395 Pettigrew Terence 2001 Trevor Howard A Personal Biography Peter Owen ISBN 978 0720611243 External links EditTrevor Howard at IMDb Trevor Howard at the BFI s Screenonline Trevor Howard papers archived at Bristol University Trevor Howard at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trevor Howard amp oldid 1141039081, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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