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Michael Denison

John Michael Terence Wellesley Denison CBE (1 November 1915 – 22 July 1998) was an English actor. He often appeared with his wife, Dulcie Gray, with whom he featured in several films and more than 100 West End theatre productions.

Michael Denison
With wife, Dulcie Gray
Born
John Michael Terence Wellesley Denison

(1915-11-01)1 November 1915
Died22 July 1998(1998-07-22) (aged 82)
Resting placeLittle Missenden, Buckinghamshire, England
OccupationActor
Years active1938–1996
SpouseDulcie Gray (1939–1998, his death)

After a conventional public school and university education he studied at a drama school and made his professional début in 1938. His career was interrupted by military service during the Second World War but by the end of the 1940s he re-established himself among leading actors of his generation, and remained so until his death in 1998.

He was primarily a stage actor, and appeared in a wide range of roles from Shakespeare to farce, modern drama, musicals, drawing-room comedy, and thrillers. He made some cinema films, particularly in the late 1940s and the 1950s, including My Brother Jonathan, The Glass Mountain, Angels One Five and the 1952 adaptation of the Oscar Wilde play The Importance of Being Earnest. He became known for his appearance in the title role of the long-running courtroom series Boyd QC which ran on British television from 1956 to 1964.

Life and career

Early years

Denison was born in Doncaster, West Riding of Yorkshire, 1 November 1915, the only child of Gilbert Dixon Denison (1888–1959) − a paint manufacturer − and his wife, Marie Louise, née Bain (1888–1915).[1] His mother died when Denison was three weeks old; he was brought up by his mother's sister and her husband, who had no children of their own.[2] He was educated at Wellesley House School, a preparatory school in the coastal town of Broadstairs in Kent, followed by Harrow School and then Magdalen College, Oxford, studying modern languages. He acted with the Oxford University Dramatic Society (OUDS), making his first radio appearance when the BBC broadcast a studio adaptation of John Gielgud's OUDS production of Richard II in April 1936.[3] He also appeared in As You Like It; in a history of the OUDS, Humphrey Carpenter writes:

Michael Denison, who had just come up to Magdalen from Harrow, "destined for the diplomatic service", walked away with most of the honours as Orlando; King-Wood called him a romantic hero, who ... looks splendid, and shows a delightful flair for comedy".[4]

He later played Macduff in Macbeth, but according to Punch, he was "resolute but hampered by an unfortunate wig".[5] After graduating with a second-class degree in French and German in 1937 Denison went to the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art, where he met Dulcie Gray, a fellow student, who became his wife and his frequent acting partner.[2]

Denison made his professional stage début in 1938 as Lord Fancourt Babberly in a Frinton-on-Sea production of Charley's Aunt and in the same year, he made his first West End appearance with the London Mask company co-directed by J. B. Priestley, at the Westminster Theatre, playing Paris in Troilus and Cressida.[6] He remained with the company until March 1939, playing a range of roles, including Gordon Whitehouse in a revival of Priestley's Dangerous Corner, Redpenny in The Doctor's Dilemma and the Rev Alexander Mill in Candida.[6] He made his television début in January 1939, when the BBC relayed the company's production of Eugene O'Neill's Marco Millions.[7]

Denison and Gray married in London in April 1939; they had no children. The Stage, in an obituary of Denison, observed that the couple appeared in more than 100 West End shows "and their marriage, which lasted very nearly 60 years, was regarded as one of the happiest in showbusiness".[8] The couple, in the words of The Times, "honeymooned in rep in Aberdeen".[2] They joined A. R. Whatmore's repertory company at His Majesty's Theatre, Aberdeen, alongside colleagues including Elspeth March and Stewart Granger.[9][10] The couple appeared there together in plays including Coward's Hay Fever[11] and The Young Idea,[12] Shaw's Arms and the Man,[13] Priestley's Dangerous Corner[14] and Gerald Savory's George and Margaret.[15] Denison and Gray returned to London in October 1939; he appeared again at the Westminster as Peter Horlett in Priestley's Music at Night and Stephen Undershaft in Shaw's Major Barbara.[6] In March 1940 Denison and Gray joined the H. M. Tennent Players, appearing in repertory in Edinburgh and Glasgow.[6] Denison made his film debut in the 1940 British comedy Tilly of Bloomsbury, in which he played the juvenile lead, Dick Mainwaring.[6]

In June 1940 Denison was called up for military service. He joined the Royal Signals and then transferred to the Intelligence Corps. Gray later commented, "He left as a 24-year-old repertory actor and came home six years later as a captain in Intelligence."[2] Denison said that being away from the theatre was a trial for him: "Not to be able to act was terrible. It meant, too, that I missed my opportunity to get a grounding in Shakespeare. I was too old to start after the war".[2]

Post-war

While Denison was serving in the armed forces his wife's acting career flourished, and by the time he returned she was an established star. At first he was seen by some as "Mr Dulcie Gray" and he struggled to re-establish himself in his own right.[2] He toured with Roger Livesey and Ursula Jeans in Priestley's latest play, Ever Since Paradise,[16] and had supporting roles in two films: Hungry Hill (1947) and The Blind Goddess (1948).[17] His career gained momentum after Gray helped to secure for him the leading role of the doctor starring opposite her in the film My Brother Jonathan (1948). This was a considerable success and saw Denison voted the sixth most popular British star of the year.[18]

Denison returned to the West End in August 1948, playing Sir Nicholas Corbel in Rain on the Just at the Aldwych Theatre, and then, from November 1949, Michael Fuller in Queen Elizabeth Slept Here at the Strand Theatre, alongside Gray in both productions.[9] Denison appeared in a war film, Landfall (1949), and a romantic drama film with Gray, The Glass Mountain (1949).[19]

1950s

After a seven-week pre-London tour, beginning in August 1950, Denison and Gray opened at the Ambassadors Theatre as Michael and Agnes in The Fourposter, a two-hander, charting the married life of a couple.[20] For the cinema they starred in The Franchise Affair (1951),[21] and after a cameo as a reporter in The Magic Box (1951),[22] Denison had a major role in a war film, Angels One Five.[8] In December 1951 he and Gray starred in a BBC television adaptation of Arnold Bennett and Edward Knoblock's play Milestones.[23]

In 1950 Associated British Productions (ABP) had acquired the film rights to The Importance of Being Earnest, and chose Denison and Gray to play Algernon Moncrieff and Gwendolen Fairfax. The head of production wanted Gielgud to direct, and asked Denison to approach him with the suggestion.[24] Gielgud declined: "Oh, no, I don't think so. I've been doing the play for years and years. I don't see it as a film, do you?"[25] ABP released the filming rights to the Rank Organisation in 1951; the director, Anthony Asquith, retained Denison but cast Joan Greenwood instead of Gray as Gwendolen.[26] In a survey of productions of Wilde Robert Tanitch describes Denison's performance in Asquith's 1952 film as "a conceited and debonair Algernon, tossing off the epigrams in a bumptious manner".[27]

At the St James's Theatre in December 1952 Denison played Clive Jevons in Sweet Peril, with Gray as Robina Jevons;[9] his next stage role was Brian in The Bad Samaritan at the Criterion Theatre in June, 1953.[6] On film he appeared with Gray in There Was a Young Lady (1954), and supported Richard Greene in Contraband Spain (1955).[28] Denison began appearing regularly on television. He was a panellist in the 1953 series of the BBC's What's My Line? and from 1956 to 1964 he starred in the title role of the ITV series Boyd QC, which ran for 78 episodes. He played what one critic called a "suave and elegant barrister ... Britain's answer to Perry Mason" (although the Boyd series came first).[29] The first 40 episodes were transmitted live.[30]

At the Prince's Theatre in February 1954 Denison appeared as the White Knight, Tweedledee and Humpty Dumpty in Alice Through the Looking Glass; Gray played the White Queen. They reprised these roles the following year.[9] At the Westminster in June 1954 Denison played Francis Oberon in We Must Kill Toni.[6] He toured South Africa with Gray from December 1954 to February 1955, in The Fourposter and Private Lives.[6] He joined the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre Company, Stratford-on-Avon in April 1955. The company that season included Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh and Anthony Quayle, and Gielgud and Peter Brook were among the directors;[31] Denison appeared as Sir Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night, Bertram in All's Well That Ends Well, Dr Caius in The Merry Wives of Windsor, and Lucius in Titus Andronicus.[6]

In November 1955 Denison turned to directing. Gray had written a play, Love Affair, which opened under her husband's direction at the Alexandra Theatre, Birmingham and transferred to the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith in June 1956, with author and director in leading roles.[9] In 1956 Denison appeared at the Edinburgh Festival and later at the Berlin Festival in two Shaw plays: A Village Wooing (as "A") and Fanny's First Play (as Lieut. Duvallet).[6] He appeared in a supporting role in the 1957 film The Truth About Women.[32]

At the Aldwych Theatre in August 1957 Denison played Charles Cuttinghame in Meet Me By Moonlight, an only moderately successful mock-Victorian musical.[33] In 1958 he toured with Gray in a two-hander thriller, Double Cross, but his schedule for Boyd QC prevented him from appearing in the piece when it opened in the West End, and his role was taken by Terence Morgan.[34] Denison's last stage role of the 1950s was the Duke of Hampshire, with Gray as the Duchess, in a revival of Frederick Lonsdale's Let Them Eat Cake at the Cambridge Theatre in May, 1959.[6]

1960s

In June 1960 Denison played the Rev James Morell in Shaw's 1898 play Candida at the Piccadilly and then Wyndham's; the run of 160 performances was the play's longest on record.[9] Variety found the production "an eloquent tribute" to Shaw, and in particular praised Gray and Denison in the lead roles.[35] After the London run the production toured.[36] The couple appeared together in a revival of Heartbreak House at the Oxford Playhouse and then Wyndham's.[9] After this they travelled to Australia, where Denison took over from Robin Bailey as Higgins in My Fair Lady in Melbourne.[6] While in Australia he and Gray made a version of Village Wooing for television.[37] They went to Hong Kong, appearing at the opening of the City Centre Theatre in August 1962 in a double bill of A Village Wooing and A Marriage Has Been Arranged, and then to Berlin, where the two gave a Shakespeare recital at the Berlin Drama Festival.[9]

Back in England Denison and Gray starred in the opening production of the Ashcroft Theatre, Croydon, The Royal Gambit, a play about Henry VIII and his wives, in November 1962.[9] The stars received better notices than the play (Punch wondered why "so inept a play" had been chosen but thought Denison "looking fairly Holbein did his best to lighten this leaden Henry").[38] In the West End they headed the cast in a 1963 adaptation of E. M. Forster's Where Angels Fear to Tread, which ran for 262 performances.[39] From April to July 1964 the couple toured England and Continental Europe in a Shakespeare programme called Merely Players. In London Denison appeared in Hostile Witness at the Haymarket Theatre (November 1964) and in An Ideal Husband at the Strand (December 1965), as Sir Robert Chiltern to Gray's Lady Chiltern.[9] They appeared together at the St Martin's Theatre in December 1966 in On Approval. Denison's later West End roles of the 1960s were Mark in Happy Family (St Martin's, November 1967), Sebastian Fleming in Number Ten (Strand, November 1967), and Andrew Pilgrim in Out of the Question (Strand, October 1968), with Gray and Gladys Cooper.[40]

1970s

During the 1970s Denison toured in six productions: the 18th-century comedy of manners The Clandestine Marriage (1971); a comedy-thriller, The Dragon Variation (1973); a revival of a 1930s comedy, The First Mrs Fraser (1976); a new comedy, The Earl and the Pussycat (1976), a musical, Robert and Elizabeth (1976); and Pinero's comedy The Cabinet Minister (1977).[41]

In London, Denison played a wide range of roles during the 1970s. In 1970 he and Gray appeared in Three – a trio of one-act plays by Shaw, and then in Ibsen's The Wild Duck. The Stage commented:

Mr Denison is the self-deceiving, pitiably inadequate Hjalmar in every way. His rantings and cries, his bogus heroics, the shadows of his suppressed yearnings, his blind selfishness all are there, coming from brilliantly creative characterisation that is whole and consistent.[42]

He appeared in The Tempest (1972 − as "a somewhat declamatory Prospero", according to one critic),[43] and as Malvolio in Twelfth Night (1972 and 1978).[41] and together with Gray and John Mills he starred in a William Douglas-Home comedy, At the End of the Day, at the Savoy in 1973, playing a thinly-disguised Edward Heath to the similarly fictionalised Harold and Mary Wilson of Mills and Gray.[44] Gray and Denison appeared in a comedy, The Sack Race, in 1974,[41] and later that year he played Mr Darling and Captain Hook in the 70th-anniversary production of Peter Pan, as he had long wanted to but other commitments had not until then allowed.[45]

In 1975 Denison was the only white member of the cast of The Black Mikado; he played Pooh-Bah in an adaptation of the original transplanted from Japan to the Caribbean.[46] At the Old Vic in 1978 he played what The Stage called "an amusingly mouth-pursing, bewildered Mayor" in a revival of The Lady's Not for Burning, and appeared in the same season in Twelfth Night, as Malvolio, and in Ivanov as Lebedev.[41] His last stage appearance of the 1970s was in the National Theatre's production of Alan Ayckbourn's Bedroom Farce, in which he played Ernest to Gray's Delia.[41]

1980s

Of the four tours Denison made with Gray between 1980 and 1989, two were in Britain and two were of the Near and Far East. The British tours were in Douglas-Home's The Kingfisher (1980–81) and Enid Bagnold's The Chalk Garden (1989). The eastern tours were in Ayckbourn's Relatively Speaking (1981) and Ray Cooney and John Chapman's There Goes the Bride (1985).[41]

In England they played at Windsor in Fry's Venus Observed (1980) and the farce See How They Run (1986). In the West End they appeared in Ronald Millar's A Coat of Varnish, and Shaw's Captain Brassbound's Conversion (1982); The School for Scandal (1982 and 1983) as Sir Oliver Surface and Lady Sneerwell; and Fry's Ring Round the Moon (1985 and 1988). Denison appeared without Gray in a revival of Shaw's The Apple Cart (Haymarket,1986, playing the prime minister to Peter O'Toole's King Magnus); a French farce, Court in the Act (Old Vic, 1987); and Shaw's You Never Can Tell, (Haymarket, 1987).[41]

1990s

In 1990 and 1991, Denison and Gray toured with Frank Thornton in Hugh Whitemore's The Best of Friends, depicting the friendship between the antiquarian Sydney Cockerell (Denison), the nun Laurentia McLachlan (Gray) and the playwright Bernard Shaw (Thornton).[47] Later in 1991 Denison and Grey toured in The Importance of Being Earnest; she played Miss Prism and he doubled the roles of Lane and Dr Chasuble.[48] They again appeared together in a tour of Bedroom Farce in 1992, and in the same year began a long association with Peter Hall's production of An Ideal Husband, this time in the roles of Lord Caversham and Lady Markby. It opened at the Globe in 1992, toured in 1993, returned to the West End at the Haymarket and played on Broadway in 1996 (their New York débuts), and once back in London played at the Haymarket and finally the Gielgud Theatre in 1997.[41]

His stage commitments left little scope for cinema work, but in 1993 Denison appeared in his last film, Richard Attenborough's Shadowlands.[1] At the Chichester Festival in 1994 he and Gray played Colonel Pickering and Mrs Higgins in Pygmalion and Admiral and Mrs Rankling in Pinero's The Schoolmistress. The Stage said of the former:

Michael Denison's Colonel is a masterpiece of timing and professionalism with movement of which a man 20 years younger would be proud. The change in him from controlling influence to blind enthusiasm for the project before again reverting to reality was alone worth seeing.[49]

Denison's final stage tour was with Gray and Eric Sykes in Two of a Kind, a comedy by Hugh Janes, set in a retirement home.[50] His last appearances on stage were with his wife in March and April 1998 in Curtain Up – An Evening with Michael Denison and Dulcie Gray at the Jermyn Street Theatre.[41]

After a short illness, Denison died of liver cancer at his and Gray's home at Shardeloes, near Amersham on 22 July 1998, aged 82.[51]

Writings

Together with Gray, Denison wrote The Actor and His World (1964). He published two volumes of memoirs, covering both his own and his wife's life and career: Overture and Beginners (1973) and Double Act (1985). For the Dictionary of National Biography he contributed biographies of Sir Noël Coward and Sir Peter Daubeny (1983), Peter Bridge (1987) and Glen Byam Shaw (1994).[41] At the time of his death he was working on a biography of J. B. Priestley, which his widow completed. It was published in 2000.[52]

Offices and honours

For many years Denison was a leading figure in the actors' trade union, Equity. He was a member of its council from 1949 to 1976, and was its vice-president in 1952, 1961–1963 and 1973. From 1975 to 1978 he was a member of the drama panel of the Arts Council of Great Britain.[41]

Denison was decorated by Queen Elizabeth II with the Silver Jubilee Medal in 1977 and both he and his wife were appointed Commanders of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1983. He was a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.[41]

Partial filmography

References

  1. ^ a b McFarlane, Brian. "Gray (married name Denison), Dulcie (real name Dulcie Winifred Catherine Savage Bailey) 1915–2011)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2015. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  2. ^ a b c d e f Obituary, The Times, 23 July 1998, p. 25
  3. ^ "The OUDS in the studio", Radio Times, 10 April 1936, pp. 3 and 19
  4. ^ Carpenter, p. 139
  5. ^ "Macbeth (OUDS)", Punch, 24 February 1937, p. 217
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Herbert, pp. 710–711
  7. ^ "Marco Millions", BBC Genome. Retrieved 6 November 2022
  8. ^ a b Obituary, The Stage, 30 July 1998, p. 24
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Herbert, pp. 710−711 and 853–855
  10. ^ "Staged at H.M. Theatre", Aberdeen Press and Journal, 16 May 1939, p. 8
  11. ^ "Hay Fever", Aberdeen Evening Express, 8 May 1939, p. 11
  12. ^ "The Young Idea", Aberdeen Evening Express, 5 August 1939, p. 7
  13. ^ "His Majesty's Theatre: Arms and the Man", Aberdeen Evening Express, 30 May 1939, p. 9
  14. ^ "Dangerous Corner", Aberdeen Press and Journal, 4 July 1939, p. 7
  15. ^ "George and Margaret", Aberdeen Evening Express, 19 July 1939, p. 11
  16. ^ "Ever Since Paradise", The Stage, 1 August 1946, p. 6
  17. ^ Denison, pp. 288–289
  18. ^ "Wonder-boy Welles for Britain". The Mail. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 22 January 1949. p. 2 Supplement: Sunday Magazine. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  19. ^ "British film star wants role of Matthew Flinders". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 16, no. 42. Australia. 26 March 1949. p. 40. Retrieved 2 September 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  20. ^ "New Theatre", Cambridge Independent Press, 11 August 1950, p. 12; "Chit Chat", The Stage, 17 August 1950, p. 8; and "The Ambassadors", The Stage, 19 October 1950, p. 9
  21. ^ "Fresh Start at ABP", Kinematograph Weekly, 30 March 1950, p. 25
  22. ^ Lejeune, C. A. "At the Cinema", The Sketch, 26 September 1951, p. 310
  23. ^ "Milestones", BBC Genome. Retrieved 6 November 2022
  24. ^ Denison, p. 20
  25. ^ Brandreth, p. 168
  26. ^ Denison, p. 25
  27. ^ Tanitch, p. 279
  28. ^ Denison, pp. 289–290
  29. ^ "Boyd, QC", Nostalgia Central. Retrieved 5 November 2022
  30. ^ Denison, p. 71
  31. ^ Holden, p. 462
  32. ^ "British Lion", Kinematograph Weekly, 12 December 1957, p. 60
  33. ^ Denison, pp. 74–75
  34. ^ Denison, p. 82
  35. ^ Wearing, p. 20
  36. ^ Wearing, p. 38
  37. ^ "Boyd, Q.C., is Dulcie Gray's pin-up". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 30, no. 9. Australia. 1 August 1962. p. 2. Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  38. ^ Keown, Eric. "At the Play", Punch, 14 November 1962, p. 725
  39. ^ Wearing, p. 154
  40. ^ Herbert, pp. 658, 710−711 and 853–855
  41. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l " Denison, Dulcie Winifred Catherine, (Dulcie Gray)" and "Denison, (John) Michael (Terence Wellesley)", Who's Who and Who Was Who, Oxford University Press, 2007 (subscription required)
  42. ^ Marriott, R. B. "Glen Byam Shaw's memorable 'Wild Duck' at the Criterion", The Stage, 19 November 1970, p. 13
  43. ^ Wearing, p. 555
  44. ^ Lewsen, Charles. "At the End of the Day", The Times, 4 October 1973, p. 20
  45. ^ "Still flying high", Middlesex County Times, 20 September 1974, p. 14
  46. ^ Wardle, Irving. "The Black Mikado", The Times, 26 April 1975, p. 9
  47. ^ "Preview", Kilmarnock Standard, 24 May 1991, p. 22
  48. ^ "Alive and agile Earnest", Aberdeen Press and Journal, 12 March 1991, p. 28
  49. ^ "A Shaw thing", The Stage, 7 July 1994, p. 23
  50. ^ "Two of a Kind", The Stage, 17 August 1995, p. 24
  51. ^ " Veteran actor Michael Denison dies", Bucks Free Press, 1 August 1998.
  52. ^ OCLC 44152767
  53. ^ Release date for The Magic Box, in IMDb.

Sources

External links

  • Michael Denison at IMDb
  • Michael Denison at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • Michael Denison at Find a Grave
  • BBC News 22 July 1998: Screen gent Denison dies Retrieved 2012-01-11
  • New York Times 26 July 1998: Michael Denison, Actor of Stage and Screen, Dies at 82 Retrieved 2012-01-11

michael, denison, john, michael, terence, wellesley, denison, november, 1915, july, 1998, english, actor, often, appeared, with, wife, dulcie, gray, with, whom, featured, several, films, more, than, west, theatre, productions, with, wife, dulcie, graybornjohn,. John Michael Terence Wellesley Denison CBE 1 November 1915 22 July 1998 was an English actor He often appeared with his wife Dulcie Gray with whom he featured in several films and more than 100 West End theatre productions Michael DenisonWith wife Dulcie GrayBornJohn Michael Terence Wellesley Denison 1915 11 01 1 November 1915Doncaster West Riding of Yorkshire EnglandDied22 July 1998 1998 07 22 aged 82 Amersham Buckinghamshire EnglandResting placeLittle Missenden Buckinghamshire EnglandOccupationActorYears active1938 1996SpouseDulcie Gray 1939 1998 his death After a conventional public school and university education he studied at a drama school and made his professional debut in 1938 His career was interrupted by military service during the Second World War but by the end of the 1940s he re established himself among leading actors of his generation and remained so until his death in 1998 He was primarily a stage actor and appeared in a wide range of roles from Shakespeare to farce modern drama musicals drawing room comedy and thrillers He made some cinema films particularly in the late 1940s and the 1950s including My Brother Jonathan The Glass Mountain Angels One Five and the 1952 adaptation of the Oscar Wilde play The Importance of Being Earnest He became known for his appearance in the title role of the long running courtroom series Boyd QC which ran on British television from 1956 to 1964 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early years 1 2 Post war 1 3 1950s 1 4 1960s 1 5 1970s 1 6 1980s 1 7 1990s 2 Writings 3 Offices and honours 4 Partial filmography 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksLife and career EditEarly years Edit Denison was born in Doncaster West Riding of Yorkshire 1 November 1915 the only child of Gilbert Dixon Denison 1888 1959 a paint manufacturer and his wife Marie Louise nee Bain 1888 1915 1 His mother died when Denison was three weeks old he was brought up by his mother s sister and her husband who had no children of their own 2 He was educated at Wellesley House School a preparatory school in the coastal town of Broadstairs in Kent followed by Harrow School and then Magdalen College Oxford studying modern languages He acted with the Oxford University Dramatic Society OUDS making his first radio appearance when the BBC broadcast a studio adaptation of John Gielgud s OUDS production of Richard II in April 1936 3 He also appeared in As You Like It in a history of the OUDS Humphrey Carpenter writes Michael Denison who had just come up to Magdalen from Harrow destined for the diplomatic service walked away with most of the honours as Orlando King Wood called him a romantic hero who looks splendid and shows a delightful flair for comedy 4 He later played Macduff in Macbeth but according to Punch he was resolute but hampered by an unfortunate wig 5 After graduating with a second class degree in French and German in 1937 Denison went to the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art where he met Dulcie Gray a fellow student who became his wife and his frequent acting partner 2 Denison made his professional stage debut in 1938 as Lord Fancourt Babberly in a Frinton on Sea production of Charley s Aunt and in the same year he made his first West End appearance with the London Mask company co directed by J B Priestley at the Westminster Theatre playing Paris in Troilus and Cressida 6 He remained with the company until March 1939 playing a range of roles including Gordon Whitehouse in a revival of Priestley s Dangerous Corner Redpenny in The Doctor s Dilemma and the Rev Alexander Mill in Candida 6 He made his television debut in January 1939 when the BBC relayed the company s production of Eugene O Neill s Marco Millions 7 Denison and Gray married in London in April 1939 they had no children The Stage in an obituary of Denison observed that the couple appeared in more than 100 West End shows and their marriage which lasted very nearly 60 years was regarded as one of the happiest in showbusiness 8 The couple in the words of The Times honeymooned in rep in Aberdeen 2 They joined A R Whatmore s repertory company at His Majesty s Theatre Aberdeen alongside colleagues including Elspeth March and Stewart Granger 9 10 The couple appeared there together in plays including Coward s Hay Fever 11 and The Young Idea 12 Shaw s Arms and the Man 13 Priestley s Dangerous Corner 14 and Gerald Savory s George and Margaret 15 Denison and Gray returned to London in October 1939 he appeared again at the Westminster as Peter Horlett in Priestley s Music at Night and Stephen Undershaft in Shaw s Major Barbara 6 In March 1940 Denison and Gray joined the H M Tennent Players appearing in repertory in Edinburgh and Glasgow 6 Denison made his film debut in the 1940 British comedy Tilly of Bloomsbury in which he played the juvenile lead Dick Mainwaring 6 In June 1940 Denison was called up for military service He joined the Royal Signals and then transferred to the Intelligence Corps Gray later commented He left as a 24 year old repertory actor and came home six years later as a captain in Intelligence 2 Denison said that being away from the theatre was a trial for him Not to be able to act was terrible It meant too that I missed my opportunity to get a grounding in Shakespeare I was too old to start after the war 2 Post war Edit While Denison was serving in the armed forces his wife s acting career flourished and by the time he returned she was an established star At first he was seen by some as Mr Dulcie Gray and he struggled to re establish himself in his own right 2 He toured with Roger Livesey and Ursula Jeans in Priestley s latest play Ever Since Paradise 16 and had supporting roles in two films Hungry Hill 1947 and The Blind Goddess 1948 17 His career gained momentum after Gray helped to secure for him the leading role of the doctor starring opposite her in the film My Brother Jonathan 1948 This was a considerable success and saw Denison voted the sixth most popular British star of the year 18 Denison returned to the West End in August 1948 playing Sir Nicholas Corbel in Rain on the Just at the Aldwych Theatre and then from November 1949 Michael Fuller in Queen Elizabeth Slept Here at the Strand Theatre alongside Gray in both productions 9 Denison appeared in a war film Landfall 1949 and a romantic drama film with Gray The Glass Mountain 1949 19 1950s Edit After a seven week pre London tour beginning in August 1950 Denison and Gray opened at the Ambassadors Theatre as Michael and Agnes in The Fourposter a two hander charting the married life of a couple 20 For the cinema they starred in The Franchise Affair 1951 21 and after a cameo as a reporter in The Magic Box 1951 22 Denison had a major role in a war film Angels One Five 8 In December 1951 he and Gray starred in a BBC television adaptation of Arnold Bennett and Edward Knoblock s play Milestones 23 In 1950 Associated British Productions ABP had acquired the film rights to The Importance of Being Earnest and chose Denison and Gray to play Algernon Moncrieff and Gwendolen Fairfax The head of production wanted Gielgud to direct and asked Denison to approach him with the suggestion 24 Gielgud declined Oh no I don t think so I ve been doing the play for years and years I don t see it as a film do you 25 ABP released the filming rights to the Rank Organisation in 1951 the director Anthony Asquith retained Denison but cast Joan Greenwood instead of Gray as Gwendolen 26 In a survey of productions of Wilde Robert Tanitch describes Denison s performance in Asquith s 1952 film as a conceited and debonair Algernon tossing off the epigrams in a bumptious manner 27 At the St James s Theatre in December 1952 Denison played Clive Jevons in Sweet Peril with Gray as Robina Jevons 9 his next stage role was Brian in The Bad Samaritan at the Criterion Theatre in June 1953 6 On film he appeared with Gray in There Was a Young Lady 1954 and supported Richard Greene in Contraband Spain 1955 28 Denison began appearing regularly on television He was a panellist in the 1953 series of the BBC s What s My Line and from 1956 to 1964 he starred in the title role of the ITV series Boyd QC which ran for 78 episodes He played what one critic called a suave and elegant barrister Britain s answer to Perry Mason although the Boyd series came first 29 The first 40 episodes were transmitted live 30 At the Prince s Theatre in February 1954 Denison appeared as the White Knight Tweedledee and Humpty Dumpty in Alice Through the Looking Glass Gray played the White Queen They reprised these roles the following year 9 At the Westminster in June 1954 Denison played Francis Oberon in We Must Kill Toni 6 He toured South Africa with Gray from December 1954 to February 1955 in The Fourposter and Private Lives 6 He joined the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre Company Stratford on Avon in April 1955 The company that season included Laurence Olivier Vivien Leigh and Anthony Quayle and Gielgud and Peter Brook were among the directors 31 Denison appeared as Sir Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night Bertram in All s Well That Ends Well Dr Caius in The Merry Wives of Windsor and Lucius in Titus Andronicus 6 In November 1955 Denison turned to directing Gray had written a play Love Affair which opened under her husband s direction at the Alexandra Theatre Birmingham and transferred to the Lyric Theatre Hammersmith in June 1956 with author and director in leading roles 9 In 1956 Denison appeared at the Edinburgh Festival and later at the Berlin Festival in two Shaw plays A Village Wooing as A and Fanny s First Play as Lieut Duvallet 6 He appeared in a supporting role in the 1957 film The Truth About Women 32 At the Aldwych Theatre in August 1957 Denison played Charles Cuttinghame in Meet Me By Moonlight an only moderately successful mock Victorian musical 33 In 1958 he toured with Gray in a two hander thriller Double Cross but his schedule for Boyd QC prevented him from appearing in the piece when it opened in the West End and his role was taken by Terence Morgan 34 Denison s last stage role of the 1950s was the Duke of Hampshire with Gray as the Duchess in a revival of Frederick Lonsdale s Let Them Eat Cake at the Cambridge Theatre in May 1959 6 1960s Edit In June 1960 Denison played the Rev James Morell in Shaw s 1898 play Candida at the Piccadilly and then Wyndham s the run of 160 performances was the play s longest on record 9 Variety found the production an eloquent tribute to Shaw and in particular praised Gray and Denison in the lead roles 35 After the London run the production toured 36 The couple appeared together in a revival of Heartbreak House at the Oxford Playhouse and then Wyndham s 9 After this they travelled to Australia where Denison took over from Robin Bailey as Higgins in My Fair Lady in Melbourne 6 While in Australia he and Gray made a version of Village Wooing for television 37 They went to Hong Kong appearing at the opening of the City Centre Theatre in August 1962 in a double bill of A Village Wooing and A Marriage Has Been Arranged and then to Berlin where the two gave a Shakespeare recital at the Berlin Drama Festival 9 Back in England Denison and Gray starred in the opening production of the Ashcroft Theatre Croydon The Royal Gambit a play about Henry VIII and his wives in November 1962 9 The stars received better notices than the play Punch wondered why so inept a play had been chosen but thought Denison looking fairly Holbein did his best to lighten this leaden Henry 38 In the West End they headed the cast in a 1963 adaptation of E M Forster s Where Angels Fear to Tread which ran for 262 performances 39 From April to July 1964 the couple toured England and Continental Europe in a Shakespeare programme called Merely Players In London Denison appeared in Hostile Witness at the Haymarket Theatre November 1964 and in An Ideal Husband at the Strand December 1965 as Sir Robert Chiltern to Gray s Lady Chiltern 9 They appeared together at the St Martin s Theatre in December 1966 in On Approval Denison s later West End roles of the 1960s were Mark in Happy Family St Martin s November 1967 Sebastian Fleming in Number Ten Strand November 1967 and Andrew Pilgrim in Out of the Question Strand October 1968 with Gray and Gladys Cooper 40 1970s Edit During the 1970s Denison toured in six productions the 18th century comedy of manners The Clandestine Marriage 1971 a comedy thriller The Dragon Variation 1973 a revival of a 1930s comedy The First Mrs Fraser 1976 a new comedy The Earl and the Pussycat 1976 a musical Robert and Elizabeth 1976 and Pinero s comedy The Cabinet Minister 1977 41 In London Denison played a wide range of roles during the 1970s In 1970 he and Gray appeared in Three a trio of one act plays by Shaw and then in Ibsen s The Wild Duck The Stage commented Mr Denison is the self deceiving pitiably inadequate Hjalmar in every way His rantings and cries his bogus heroics the shadows of his suppressed yearnings his blind selfishness all are there coming from brilliantly creative characterisation that is whole and consistent 42 He appeared in The Tempest 1972 as a somewhat declamatory Prospero according to one critic 43 and as Malvolio in Twelfth Night 1972 and 1978 41 and together with Gray and John Mills he starred in a William Douglas Home comedy At the End of the Day at the Savoy in 1973 playing a thinly disguised Edward Heath to the similarly fictionalised Harold and Mary Wilson of Mills and Gray 44 Gray and Denison appeared in a comedy The Sack Race in 1974 41 and later that year he played Mr Darling and Captain Hook in the 70th anniversary production of Peter Pan as he had long wanted to but other commitments had not until then allowed 45 In 1975 Denison was the only white member of the cast of The Black Mikado he played Pooh Bah in an adaptation of the original transplanted from Japan to the Caribbean 46 At the Old Vic in 1978 he played what The Stage called an amusingly mouth pursing bewildered Mayor in a revival of The Lady s Not for Burning and appeared in the same season in Twelfth Night as Malvolio and in Ivanov as Lebedev 41 His last stage appearance of the 1970s was in the National Theatre s production of Alan Ayckbourn s Bedroom Farce in which he played Ernest to Gray s Delia 41 1980s Edit Of the four tours Denison made with Gray between 1980 and 1989 two were in Britain and two were of the Near and Far East The British tours were in Douglas Home s The Kingfisher 1980 81 and Enid Bagnold s The Chalk Garden 1989 The eastern tours were in Ayckbourn s Relatively Speaking 1981 and Ray Cooney and John Chapman s There Goes the Bride 1985 41 In England they played at Windsor in Fry s Venus Observed 1980 and the farce See How They Run 1986 In the West End they appeared in Ronald Millar s A Coat of Varnish and Shaw s Captain Brassbound s Conversion 1982 The School for Scandal 1982 and 1983 as Sir Oliver Surface and Lady Sneerwell and Fry s Ring Round the Moon 1985 and 1988 Denison appeared without Gray in a revival of Shaw s The Apple Cart Haymarket 1986 playing the prime minister to Peter O Toole s King Magnus a French farce Court in the Act Old Vic 1987 and Shaw s You Never Can Tell Haymarket 1987 41 1990s Edit In 1990 and 1991 Denison and Gray toured with Frank Thornton in Hugh Whitemore s The Best of Friends depicting the friendship between the antiquarian Sydney Cockerell Denison the nun Laurentia McLachlan Gray and the playwright Bernard Shaw Thornton 47 Later in 1991 Denison and Grey toured in The Importance of Being Earnest she played Miss Prism and he doubled the roles of Lane and Dr Chasuble 48 They again appeared together in a tour of Bedroom Farce in 1992 and in the same year began a long association with Peter Hall s production of An Ideal Husband this time in the roles of Lord Caversham and Lady Markby It opened at the Globe in 1992 toured in 1993 returned to the West End at the Haymarket and played on Broadway in 1996 their New York debuts and once back in London played at the Haymarket and finally the Gielgud Theatre in 1997 41 His stage commitments left little scope for cinema work but in 1993 Denison appeared in his last film Richard Attenborough s Shadowlands 1 At the Chichester Festival in 1994 he and Gray played Colonel Pickering and Mrs Higgins in Pygmalion and Admiral and Mrs Rankling in Pinero s The Schoolmistress The Stage said of the former Michael Denison s Colonel is a masterpiece of timing and professionalism with movement of which a man 20 years younger would be proud The change in him from controlling influence to blind enthusiasm for the project before again reverting to reality was alone worth seeing 49 Denison s final stage tour was with Gray and Eric Sykes in Two of a Kind a comedy by Hugh Janes set in a retirement home 50 His last appearances on stage were with his wife in March and April 1998 in Curtain Up An Evening with Michael Denison and Dulcie Gray at the Jermyn Street Theatre 41 After a short illness Denison died of liver cancer at his and Gray s home at Shardeloes near Amersham on 22 July 1998 aged 82 51 Writings EditTogether with Gray Denison wrote The Actor and His World 1964 He published two volumes of memoirs covering both his own and his wife s life and career Overture and Beginners 1973 and Double Act 1985 For the Dictionary of National Biography he contributed biographies of Sir Noel Coward and Sir Peter Daubeny 1983 Peter Bridge 1987 and Glen Byam Shaw 1994 41 At the time of his death he was working on a biography of J B Priestley which his widow completed It was published in 2000 52 Offices and honours EditFor many years Denison was a leading figure in the actors trade union Equity He was a member of its council from 1949 to 1976 and was its vice president in 1952 1961 1963 and 1973 From 1975 to 1978 he was a member of the drama panel of the Arts Council of Great Britain 41 Denison was decorated by Queen Elizabeth II with the Silver Jubilee Medal in 1977 and both he and his wife were appointed Commanders of the Order of the British Empire CBE in 1983 He was a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts 41 Partial filmography EditTilly of Bloomsbury 1940 Hungry Hill 1947 The Blind Goddess 1948 My Brother Jonathan 1948 Landfall 1949 The Glass Mountain 1949 The Franchise Affair 1951 The Magic Box 1951 53 Angels One Five 1952 The Importance of Being Earnest 1952 There Was a Young Lady 1953 Contraband Spain 1955 The Truth About Women 1957 Faces in the Dark 1960 Village Wooing 1962 Shadowlands 1993 References Edit a b McFarlane Brian Gray married name Denison Dulcie real name Dulcie Winifred Catherine Savage Bailey 1915 2011 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2015 subscription or UK public library membership required a b c d e f Obituary The Times 23 July 1998 p 25 The OUDS in the studio Radio Times 10 April 1936 pp 3 and 19 Carpenter p 139 Macbeth OUDS Punch 24 February 1937 p 217 a b c d e f g h i j k l Herbert pp 710 711 Marco Millions BBC Genome Retrieved 6 November 2022 a b Obituary The Stage 30 July 1998 p 24 a b c d e f g h i j Herbert pp 710 711 and 853 855 Staged at H M Theatre Aberdeen Press and Journal 16 May 1939 p 8 Hay Fever Aberdeen Evening Express 8 May 1939 p 11 The Young Idea Aberdeen Evening Express 5 August 1939 p 7 His Majesty s Theatre Arms and the Man Aberdeen Evening Express 30 May 1939 p 9 Dangerous Corner Aberdeen Press and Journal 4 July 1939 p 7 George and Margaret Aberdeen Evening Express 19 July 1939 p 11 Ever Since Paradise The Stage 1 August 1946 p 6 Denison pp 288 289 Wonder boy Welles for Britain The Mail Adelaide National Library of Australia 22 January 1949 p 2 Supplement Sunday Magazine Retrieved 7 July 2012 British film star wants role of Matthew Flinders The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 16 no 42 Australia 26 March 1949 p 40 Retrieved 2 September 2017 via National Library of Australia New Theatre Cambridge Independent Press 11 August 1950 p 12 Chit Chat The Stage 17 August 1950 p 8 and The Ambassadors The Stage 19 October 1950 p 9 Fresh Start at ABP Kinematograph Weekly 30 March 1950 p 25 Lejeune C A At the Cinema The Sketch 26 September 1951 p 310 Milestones BBC Genome Retrieved 6 November 2022 Denison p 20 Brandreth p 168 Denison p 25 Tanitch p 279 Denison pp 289 290 Boyd QC Nostalgia Central Retrieved 5 November 2022 Denison p 71 Holden p 462 British Lion Kinematograph Weekly 12 December 1957 p 60 Denison pp 74 75 Denison p 82 Wearing p 20 Wearing p 38 Boyd Q C is Dulcie Gray s pin up The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 30 no 9 Australia 1 August 1962 p 2 Retrieved 2 September 2017 Keown Eric At the Play Punch 14 November 1962 p 725 Wearing p 154 Herbert pp 658 710 711 and 853 855 a b c d e f g h i j k l Denison Dulcie Winifred Catherine Dulcie Gray and Denison John Michael Terence Wellesley Who s Who and Who Was Who Oxford University Press 2007 subscription required Marriott R B Glen Byam Shaw s memorable Wild Duck at the Criterion The Stage 19 November 1970 p 13 Wearing p 555 Lewsen Charles At the End of the Day The Times 4 October 1973 p 20 Still flying high Middlesex County Times 20 September 1974 p 14 Wardle Irving The Black Mikado The Times 26 April 1975 p 9 Preview Kilmarnock Standard 24 May 1991 p 22 Alive and agile Earnest Aberdeen Press and Journal 12 March 1991 p 28 A Shaw thing The Stage 7 July 1994 p 23 Two of a Kind The Stage 17 August 1995 p 24 Veteran actor Michael Denison dies Bucks Free Press 1 August 1998 OCLC 44152767 Release date for The Magic Box in IMDb Sources EditBrandreth Gyles 2001 John Gielgud An Actor s Life London Isis ISBN 978 0 7531 9681 6 Carpenter Humphrey 1985 OUDS Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 212241 4 Denison Michael 1985 Double Act London Michael Joseph ISBN 978 0 7181 2290 4 Herbert Ian ed 1972 Who s Who in the Theatre fifteenth ed London Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons ISBN 978 0 273 31528 5 Holden Anthony 1988 Olivier London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 79089 1 Tanitch Robert 1999 Oscar Wilde on Stage and Screen London Methuen ISBN 978 0 413 72610 0 Wearing J P 2021 The London Stage 1960 1980 A Calendar of Productions PDF London Wordpress External links EditMichael Denison at IMDb Michael Denison at the Internet Broadway Database Michael Denison at Find a Grave BBC News 22 July 1998 Screen gent Denison dies Retrieved 2012 01 11 New York Times 26 July 1998 Michael Denison Actor of Stage and Screen Dies at 82 Retrieved 2012 01 11 Biography portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michael Denison amp oldid 1169875823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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