Trevor Howard


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For the footballer, see: Trevor Howard (footballer)
Trevor Howard

Born Trevor Wallace Howard-Smith
29 September 1913(1913-09-29)
Cliftonville, Kent, England
Died 7 January 1988 (aged 74)
Bushey, Hertfordshire, England
Occupation Actor
Years active 1944 - 1988
Spouse(s) Helen Cherry (1944 - 1988)

Trevor Howard, CBE (29 September 19137 January 1988), born Trevor Wallace Howard-Smith, was an English film, stage and television actor.

Contents

Early life

Trevor Wallace Howard-Smith was born in Cliftonville, Margate, Kent, England, on 29 September, 1913, the only son and elder child of Arthur John Howard-Smith, who worked as the Ceylon representative for Lloyd's of London, and his Canadian wife, Mabel Grey Wallace, a nurse. Until he was five, he lived in Colombo, Ceylon, but then travelled with his mother until the age of eight, when he was sent to school at Clifton College, Bristol.

Acting career

Howard attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), acting on the London stage for several years before World War II. His first paid work was in the play Revolt in a Reformatory (1934), before he left RADA in 1935 to take small roles. That year, he was spotted by a Paramount studio talent scout, but turned down the offer of film work in favour of a career in theatre. This decision seemed justified when, in 1936, he was invited to join the Stratford Memorial Theatre and, in London, given the role of one of the students in French without Tears by Terence Rattigan, which ran for two years. He returned to Stratford in 1939.

At the outbreak of World War II, Howard volunteered for the RAF and British Army, but was turned down by both. However, in 1940, after working at the Colchester repertory theatre, he was called up into the Royal Corps of Signals, airborne division, becoming a Second Lieutenant, before he was invalided out in 1943. Although stories of his courageous wartime service earned him much respect among fellow actors and fans alike, files held in the Public Records Office reveal he had actually been discharged from the Army for mental instability and having a 'psychopathic personality' [1]. The stories were originally fabricated, without his consent, for publicity purposes,[1] although Howard also recounted how he had parachuted into Nazi occupied Norway and fought in the Allied invasion of Sicily.

Howard moved back to the theatre in The Recruiting Officer (1943), where he met the actress Helen Cherry; they married in 1944 and had no children. He was unfaithful to Cherry on a serial basis.[2][3]

Howard had a certain notoriety as a hellraiser and drinker. Under the influence of alcohol, he could embark on celebrated exploits, one of which led to his arrest in Vienna for impersonating an officer. Despite his drinking, however, he always remained reliable and professional, never allowing alcohol to affect his work.

A short part in one of the best British war films, The Way Ahead (1944), provided a springboard into cinema. This was followed by The Way to the Stars (1945), which led to the role for which Howard became best known, the doctor in the 1945 film Brief Encounter, in which his co-star was Celia Johnson. Directed by David Lean, the film won an award at the Cannes Film Festival and considerable critical acclaim for Howard.

Next came two successful Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat thrillers, I See a Dark Stranger (1945) and Green for Danger (1946), followed by They Made Me a Fugitive (1947), to which the roots of British realism in cinema can be traced. In 1947, he was invited by Laurence Olivier to play Petruchio in an Old Vic production of The Taming of the Shrew. Despite The Times declaring, "We can remember no better Petruchio",[4] the opportunity of working again with David Lean, in The Passionate Friends (1949), drew Howard back to film and, although he had a solid reputation as a theatre actor, his dislike of long runs, and the attractions of travel afforded by film, convinced him to concentrate on cinema from this point.[5]

Howard's film reputation was secured in The Third Man (1949). He played the character type with which he became most associated, the slightly dry, slightly crusty, but capable British military officer. Shortly thereafter, he worked with Lean again, co-starring in The Passionate Friends (1949) with Ann Todd and Claude Rains, playing a very similar character to Alec in Brief Encounter. He also starred in The Key, (1958; based on a Jan de Hartog novel), for which he received the best actor award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts and Sons and Lovers, (1960), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor. Another notable film was The Heart of the Matter (1953), another Graham Greene story, in which he produced probably his best screen performance.

After his time as a star ended, Howard easily shifted to being one of England's finest character actors, many times appearing in war and period pieces. Howard's later works included such films as Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), Father Goose (1964), Morituri (1965), Von Ryan's Express (1965), Battle of Britain (1969), Ryan's Daughter (1970), Superman (1978), and Gandhi (1982). The Dawning (1988) was his final film. One of his strangest films, and one he took great delight in, was Vivian Stanshall's 1980 Sir Henry at Rawlinson End in which he played the title role.

In television, Howard began to find more substantial roles. In 1962, he played Lovborg in Hedda Gabler with Ingrid Bergman. He won an Emmy award the following year as Disraeli in The Invincible Mr Disraeli. In the 1970s, he was acclaimed for his playing of an abbot in Catholics (1973). He received an Emmy nomination in 1975 for his role as Abbé Faria in a television version of The Count of Monte Cristo. The decade ended with him reunited with Celia Johnson, giving a moving performance in the nostalgic Staying On (1980), written by Paul Scott.

The 1980s saw a resurgence of Howard as a film actor. The role of a Cheyenne Indian in Windwalker (1980) revitalized his acting. He continued with cameo roles, including Judge Broomfield in Gandhi (1982). His final films were White Mischief and The Dawning, both released in 1988.

Howard did not abandon the theatre altogether in 1947, returning to the stage on occasion, most notably as Lopakhin in The Cherry Orchard (1954) and the captain in The Father (1964). His last appearance on the British stage was in Waltz of the Toreadors in 1974.

Throughout his film career Howard insisted that all of his contracts held a clause excusing him from work whenever a cricket Test Match was being played.

Shakespeare

Howard left behind only one Shakespeare performance, recorded in the 1960s, as Petruchio opposite Margaret Leighton's Kate in Caedmon Records' complete recording of The Taming of the Shrew.

Death

He died on 7 January 1988, from a combination of bronchitis, influenza and jaundice, in Arkley, Barnet at the age of 74, survived by his widow Helen.

Legacy

Howard made seventy-four films. He embodied the traditional Englishman: his tight-lipped features and quiet, well-bred speaking voice caught the mood of post-war Britain while, in later years, his craggy face and gravelly voice animated the crusty character roles he played. He lacked the looks and physique to be an archetypal male hero, and his tall frame suited military roles. Supporting some of the most notable names in the world of cinema, he often received the highest critical acclaim.

He is commemorated by the Trevor Howard Bar at the Orange Tree Theatre in Richmond.

Partial filmography

References

  1. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Lib Taylor, 'Howard, Trevor (1913–1988)' Online edition
  2. ^ The Guardian, October 4, 2001
  3. ^ The Independent, October 3, 2001
  4. ^ The Times, November 5, 1947
  5. ^ See Pettigrew

External links

References and sources

  • M. Munn, Trevor Howard: the man and his films, 1989
  • V. Knight, Trevor Howard: a gentleman and a player, 1986
  • T. Pettigrew, Trevor Howard: a personal biography, 2001
Persondata
NAME Howard, Trevor
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Howard-Smith, Trevor Wallace
SHORT DESCRIPTION Actor
DATE OF BIRTH 1913-9-29
PLACE OF BIRTH Cliftonville, Kent, England
DATE OF DEATH 1988-1-7
PLACE OF DEATH Bushey, Hertfordshire, England






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