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Peter O'Toole Irish actor movie star

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Great Irish actor Peter O'Toole .
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Peter Seamus Lorcan O'Toole[1][2] (2 August 1932 – 15 December 2013) was an Irish actor of stage and screen.[3] He attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, and began working in the theatre, gaining recognition as a Shakespearean actor at the Bristol Old Vic and with the English Stage Company, before making his film debut in 1959.

He achieved stardom playing T. E. Lawrence in Lawrence of Arabia (1962) for which he received his first Academy Award nomination. He received seven further Oscar nominations – for Becket (1964), The Lion in Winter (1968), Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1969), The Ruling Class (1972), The Stunt Man (1980), My Favorite Year (1982) and Venus (2006) – and holds the record for the most Academy Award acting nominations without a win. He won four Golden Globes, a BAFTA and an Emmy, and was the recipient of an Honorary Academy Award in 2003.

Contents

1 Peter O'Toole Early life
2 Peter O'Toole Career
3 Peter O'Toole Personal life
4 Peter O'Toole Death
5 Peter O'Toole Academy Award nominations
6 Peter O'Toole Filmography
7 Peter O'Toole Stage appearances
7.1 1955–1958 Bristol Old Vic
7.2 1959 Royal Court Theatre
7.3 1960 Royal Shakespeare Company, Stratford
7.4 1963 National Theatre
7.5 1963–1965
7.6 1966 Gaiety Theatre, Dublin
7.7 1969 Abbey Theatre, Dublin
7.8 1973–1974 Bristol Old Vic
7.9 1978 Toronto, Washington and Chicago
7.10 1980–1999
8 Peter O'Toole References
9 Peter O'Toole External links

Early life

Peter Seamus O'Toole was born in 1932. Some sources give his birthplace as Connemara, County Galway, Ireland, and others as Leeds, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, England, where he grew up. O'Toole himself was not certain of his birthplace or date, noting in his autobiography that, while he accepted 2 August as his birthdate, he had a birth certificate from each country, with the Irish one giving a June 1932 birthdate.[2] He was the son of Constance Jane Eliot (née Ferguson), a Scottish[4] nurse, and Patrick Joseph O'Toole, an Irish metal plater, football player, and racecourse bookmaker.[5][6][7] When O'Toole was one year old, his family began a five-year tour of major racecourse towns in Northern England. He was brought up as a Catholic.[8][9] O'Toole was evacuated from Leeds early in World War II and went to a Catholic school for seven or eight years, St Joseph's Secondary School, David Street, Holbeck, Leeds, where he was "implored" to become right-handed. “I used to be scared stiff of the nuns: their whole denial of womanhood – the black dresses and the shaving of the hair – was so horrible, so terrifying,” he later commented. “Of course, that's all been stopped. They're sipping gin and tonic in the Dublin pubs now, and a couple of them flashed their pretty ankles at me just the other day.”[10]

Upon leaving school O'Toole obtained employment as a trainee journalist and photographer on the Yorkshire Evening Post, until he was called up for national service as a signaller in the Royal Navy. As reported in a radio interview in 2006 on NPR, he was asked by an officer whether he had something he had always wanted to do. His reply was that he had always wanted to try being either a poet or an actor. O'Toole attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) from 1952 to 1954 on a scholarship after being rejected by the Abbey Theatre's drama school in Dublin by the director Ernest Blythe, because he couldn't speak Irish. At RADA, he was in the same class as Albert Finney, Alan Bates and Brian Bedford. O'Toole described this as "the most remarkable class the academy ever had, though we weren't reckoned for much at the time. We were all considered dotty."[11]
Career
Publicity photo for Lawrence of Arabia

O'Toole began working in the theatre, gaining recognition as a Shakespearean actor at the Bristol Old Vic and with the English Stage Company, before making his television debut in 1954. He first appeared on film in 1959 in a bit- part in The Day They Robbed the Bank of England.[12] O'Toole's major break came when he was chosen to play T. E. Lawrence in David Lean's Lawrence of Arabia (1962), after Marlon Brando proved unavailable and Albert Finney turned down the role.[13] His performance was ranked number one in Premiere magazine's list of the 100 Greatest Performances of All Time.[14] The role introduced him to U.S. audiences and earned him the first of his eight nominations for the Academy Award for Best Actor.

O'Toole is one of a handful of actors to be Oscar-nominated for playing the same role in two different films; he played King Henry II in both Becket (1964) and The Lion in Winter (1968). O'Toole played Hamlet under Laurence Olivier's direction in the premiere production of the Royal National Theatre in 1963. He demonstrated his straight-man comedic abilities alongside legendary British comic-actor Peter Sellers in the Woody Allen scripted feature-comedy What's New Pussycat (1965). He also appeared in Seán O'Casey's Juno and the Paycock at Gaiety Theatre, Dublin.
As King Henry II in The Lion in Winter (1968)

O'Toole fulfilled a lifetime ambition when taking to the stage of the Irish capital's Abbey Theatre in 1970, to perform in Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot alongside Donal McCann. In 1972, he played both Miguel de Cervantes and his fictional creation Don Quixote in Man of La Mancha, the motion picture adaptation of the 1965 hit Broadway musical, opposite Sophia Loren. It was much criticised for using mostly non-singing actors and shunned by the public at the time. O'Toole's singing was dubbed by tenor Simon Gilbert,[15] but the other actors sang their own parts. O'Toole and co-star James Coco, who played both Cervantes's manservant and Sancho Panza, both received Golden Globe nominations for their performances. In 1980, O'Toole starred as Tiberius in the Penthouse-funded biographical film Caligula.

In 1980, he received wide critical acclaim for playing the director in the behind-the-scenes film The Stunt Man. He received good reviews as John Tanner in Man and Superman and Henry Higgins in Pygmalion, and won a Laurence Olivier Award for his performance in Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell (1989).[16] O'Toole was nominated for another Oscar for My Favorite Year (1982), a light romantic comedy about the behind-the-scenes at a 1950s TV variety-comedy show, much like Your Show of Shows, in which O'Toole plays an ageing swashbuckling film star strongly reminiscent (intentionally) of Errol Flynn.He also appeared in 1987's much-garlanded The Last Emperor. The late eighties and nineties brought fewer film roles but more work for television as well as the occasional stage performance.

O'Toole won an Emmy Award for his role in the 1999 mini-series Joan of Arc. In 2004, he played King Priam in the summer blockbuster Troy. In 2005, he appeared on television as the older version of legendary 18th century Italian adventurer Giacomo Casanova in the BBC drama serial Casanova. O'Toole's role was mainly to frame the drama, telling the story of his life to serving-maid Edith (Rose Byrne). The younger Casanova, seen for most of the action, was played by David Tennant, who had to wear contact lenses to match his brown eyes to O'Toole's blue.

He was once again nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award for his portrayal of Maurice in the 2006 film Venus, directed by Roger Michell, his eighth such nomination. Most recently, O'Toole co-starred in the Pixar animated film Ratatouille (2007), an animated film about a rat with dreams of becoming the greatest chef in Paris, as Anton Ego, a food critic. O'Toole appeared in the second season of Showtime's successful drama series The Tudors (2008), portraying Pope Paul III, who excommunicates King Henry VIII from the church; an act which leads to a showdown between the two men in seven of the ten episodes.

On 10 July 2012, O'Toole released a statement that he was retiring from acting.[17]
Personal life
This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2013)

In a BBC Radio interview in January 2007, O'Toole said he had studied women for a very long time, had given it his best try, but knew "nothing." In 1959, he married Welsh actress Siân Phillips, with whom he had two daughters: actress Kate and Patricia. Peter and Siân were divorced in 1979. Phillips later revealed in two autobiographies that O'Toole had subjected her to mental cruelty, largely fuelled by drinking, and was subject to bouts of extreme jealousy when she finally left him for a younger lover.[18]
In the TV film Present Laughter (1968)

O'Toole and his girlfriend, model Karen Brown, had a son, Lorcan Patrick O'Toole (born 17 March 1983), when O'Toole was fifty years old. Lorcan, now an actor, was a pupil at Harrow School, boarding at West Acre from 1996.

Severe illness almost ended his life in the late 1970s. His stomach cancer was misdiagnosed as resulting from his alcoholic excess.[19] O'Toole underwent surgery in 1976 to have his pancreas and a large portion of his stomach removed, which resulted in insulin-dependent diabetes. In 1978, he nearly died from a blood disorder. He eventually recovered and returned to work.

He resided on the Sky Road, just outside Clifden in Connemara in County Galway, Ireland, from 1963, and at the height of his career maintained homes in Dublin, London, and Paris (at the Ritz, which was where his character supposedly lived in the film How to Steal a Million). Finally, he made his home solely in London.

While studying at RADA in the early 1950s he was active in protesting against British involvement in the Korean War. Later, in the 1960s, he was an active opponent of the Vietnam War.

He played a role in the creation of the current form of the well-known folksong "Carrickfergus" which he related to Dominic Behan, who put it in print and made a recording in the mid-1960s.

He was offered a knighthood in 1987, but turned it down for personal and political reasons.

In an interview with National Public Radio in December 2006, O'Toole revealed that he knew all 154 of Shakespeare's sonnets. A self-described romantic, O'Toole regarded the sonnets as among the finest collection of English poems, reading them daily. In the film Venus, he recites Sonnet 18, "Shall I Compare Thee To A Summer's Day." O'Toole wrote two memoirs. Loitering With Intent: The Child chronicles his childhood in the years leading up to World War II and was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year in 1992. His second, Loitering With Intent: The Apprentice, is about his years spent training with a cadre of friends at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. The books have been praised by critics such as Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times, who wrote: "A cascade of language, a rumbling tumbling riot of words, a pub soliloquy to an invisible but imaginable audience, and the more captivating for it. O'Toole as raconteur is grand company." O'Toole spent parts of 2007 writing the third installment. This book will have (as he described it) "the meat," meaning highlights from his stage and filmmaking career.

O'Toole was a noted fan of rugby union, and attended Five Nations matches with friends and fellow rugby fans Richard Harris, Kenneth Griffith,Peter Finch and Richard Burton. (O'Toole, Harris and Burton have a combined 17 Oscar nominations.) He was also a lifelong player, coach and enthusiast of cricket, licensed to teach and coach cricket to children as young as ten.

O'Toole was interviewed at least three times by Charlie Rose on The Charlie Rose Show. In the 17 January 2007 interview, O'Toole said that Eric Porter was the actor who had most influenced him. He also said that the difference between actors of yesterday and today is that actors of his generation were trained for "theatre, theatre, theatre." He also believes that the challenge for the actor is "to use his imagination to link to his emotion" and that "good parts make good actors." However, in other venues (including the DVD commentary for Becket), O'Toole also credited Donald Wolfit as being his most important mentor. In an appearance on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart on 11 January 2007, O'Toole said that the actor he most enjoyed working with was Katharine Hepburn, his close friend; he played Henry II to her Eleanor of Aquitaine in The Lion in Winter.

O'Toole maintained a close friendship with his Lawrence of Arabia co-star Omar Sharif and his RADA classmate Albert Finney.

O'Toole was a fan of Sunderland A.F.C., as he told Chris Evans on an episode of TFI Friday, dated Friday, 11 October 1996. The allegiance lapsed, according to an article at the Salut! Sunderland website.[20]

Although he lost faith in organised religion as a teenager, O'Toole expressed positive sentiments regarding the life of Jesus Christ. In an interview for The New York Times,[21] he said 'No one can take Jesus away from me...there’s no doubt there was a historical figure of tremendous importance, with enormous notions. Such as peace.' Earlier in the interview, he announced 'I am a retired Christian'.[21] Nevertheless, O'Toole played Samuel in One Night with the King, about Esther, in 2006 and the minor role of Father Christopher in For Greater Glory: the True Story of Cristiada in 2012.
Death

O'Toole died on 15 December 2013 at the Wellington Hospital in London, aged 81, following a long illness.[22]
Academy Award nominations

O'Toole was nominated eight times for the Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role, making him the most-nominated actor never to win the award.
Year Film Winner Also Nominated
1962 Lawrence of Arabia Gregory Peck – To Kill a Mockingbird Burt Lancaster – Birdman of Alcatraz
Jack Lemmon – Days of Wine and Roses
Marcello Mastroianni – Divorce, Italian Style
1964 Becket Rex Harrison – My Fair Lady Richard Burton – Becket
Anthony Quinn – Zorba the Greek
Peter Sellers – Dr. Strangelove
1968 The Lion in Winter Cliff Robertson – Charly Alan Arkin – The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter
Alan Bates – The Fixer
Ron Moody – Oliver!
1969 Goodbye, Mr. Chips John Wayne – True Grit Richard Burton – Anne of the Thousand Days
Dustin Hoffman – Midnight Cowboy
Jon Voight – Midnight Cowboy
1972 The Ruling Class Marlon Brando – The Godfather (declined) Michael Caine – Sleuth
Laurence Olivier – Sleuth
Paul Winfield – Sounder
1980 The Stunt Man Robert De Niro – Raging Bull Robert Duvall – The Great Santini
John Hurt – The Elephant Man
Jack Lemmon – Tribute
1982 My Favorite Year Ben Kingsley – Gandhi Dustin Hoffman – Tootsie
Jack Lemmon – Missing
Paul Newman – The Verdict
2006 Venus Forest Whitaker – The Last King of Scotland Leonardo DiCaprio – Blood Diamond
Ryan Gosling – Half Nelson
Will Smith – The Pursuit of Happyness

In 2003, the Academy honoured him with an Academy Honorary Award for his entire body of work and his lifelong contribution to film.[23] O'Toole initially balked about accepting, and wrote the Academy a letter saying that he was "still in the game" and would like more time to "win the lovely bugger outright." The Academy informed him that they would bestow the award whether he wanted it or not. He told The Charlie Rose Show in January 2007 his children admonished him, saying that it was the highest honour one could receive in the filmmaking industry. O'Toole agreed to appear at the ceremony and receive his Honorary Oscar. It was presented to him by Meryl Streep, who has the most Oscar nominations of any actress (17).
Filmography
Main article: Peter O'Toole filmography
Stage appearances
1955–1958 Bristol Old Vic

King Lear (1956) (Cornwall)
The Recruiting Officer (1956) (Bullock)
Major Barbara (1956) (Peter Shirley)
Othello (1956) (Lodovico)
Pygmalion (1957) (Henry Higgins)
A Midsummer Night's Dream (1957) (Lysander)
Look Back in Anger (1957) (Jimmy Porter)
Man and Superman (1958) (Tanner)
Hamlet (1958) (Hamlet)
Amphitryon '38 (1958) (Jupiter)
Waiting for Godot (1957) (Vladimir)

1959 Royal Court Theatre

The Long and the Short and the Tall (Bamforth)

1960 Royal Shakespeare Company, Stratford

The Taming of the Shrew (Petruchio)
The Merchant of Venice (Shylock)
Troilus and Cressida (Thersites)

1963 National Theatre

Hamlet (title role) directed by Laurence Olivier

1963–1965

Baal (Phoenix Theatre, 1963) (Baal)
Ride a Cock Horse (Piccadilly Theatre, 1965)

1966 Gaiety Theatre, Dublin

Juno and the Paycock (Jack Boyle)
Man and Superman (Tanner)

1969 Abbey Theatre, Dublin

Waiting for Godot (Vladimir)

1973–1974 Bristol Old Vic

Uncle Vanya (Vanya)
Plunder
The Apple Cart (King Magnus)
Judgement (monologue)

1978 Toronto, Washington and Chicago

Uncle Vanya (Vanya)

Present Laughter (Gary Essendine)

Caligula (Tiberius)

1980–1999

Macbeth (1980) (Macbeth) (Old Vic Theatre)
Man and Superman (Theatre Royal, Haymarket)
Pygmalion (Professor Higgins) (Shaftesbury Theatre, 1984, Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford, and Plymouth Theatre, New York, 1987)
The Apple Cart (Theatre Royal Haymarket, 1986)
Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell (Apollo Theatre, 1989, Shaftesbury Theatre, 1991 and Old Vic, 1999)
Our Song (Apollo Theatre, 1992).

April 1981. Stared in ABC series Masada one of the lead roles.
References

Peter O'Toole, Esq Debrett's Limited. 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013
^ Jump up to: a b O'Toole, Peter, Loitering With Intent, London: Macmillan London Ltd., 1992, p. 10
"Peter O'Toole (Irish actor) – Britannica Online Encyclopedia". Britannica.com. 2 August 1932. Retrieved 12 June 2012.
O'Toole, Peter, Loitering with Intent: Child (Large print edition), Macmillan London Ltd., London, 1992. ISBN 1-85695-051-4; p. 10, "My mother, Constance Jane, had led a troubled and a harsh life. Orphaned early, she had been reared in Scotland and shunted between relatives;..."
"Peter O'Toole Biography". filmreference. 2008. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
Frank Murphy (31 January 2007). "Peter O'Toole, A winner in waiting". The Irish World. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
"Loitering with Intent Summary – Peter O’Toole – Magill Book Reviews". Enotes.com. Retrieved 12 June 2012.
Tweedie, Neil (24 January 2007). "Too late for an Oscar? No, no, no...". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 11 September 2010.
Adams, Cindy (21 March 2008). "Veteran says todays's actors aren't trained". New York Post. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
Alan Waldman. "Tribute to Peter O'Toole". films42.com. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
Guy Flatley (24 July 2007). "The Rule of O'Toole". MovieCrazed. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
Glaister, Dan (29 October 2004). "After 42 years, Sharif and O'Toole decide the time is right to get their epic act together again". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 May 2012.
"Peter O’Toole". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2008. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
"The 100 Greatest Movie Performances of All Time". Premiere magazine. April 2006.
Internet Movie Database: Soundtracks for ‘Man of La Mancha’(1972)
Gibbons, Fiachra. "National upsets the form book at awards". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 December 2013.
"Peter O'Toole announces retirement from show biz". CBC.ca. 10 July 2012. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
Nathan Southern (2008). "Peter O'Toole: Overview". Allrovi. MSN Movies. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
Leading Men: The 50 Most Unforgettable Actors of the Studio Era. Chronicle Books (Turner Classic Movies Film Guide). 2006. p. 165.
Salut! Sunderland (6 December 2011): Peter O’Toole, a hell-raising dad and a lost Sunderland passion
^ Jump up to: a b "Papal Robes, and Deference, Fit O’Toole Snugly". New York Times. 26 July 2007.
Booth, Robert (2013) "Peter O'Toole, star of Lawrence of Arabia, dies aged 81", theguardian.com, 15 December 2013. Retrieved 15 December 2013
"Peter O'Toole Biography". Yahoo Movies. 2007. Retrieved 4 April 2008.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Peter O'Toole.

Peter O'Toole at the Internet Broadway Database
Peter O'Toole at the Internet Movie Database
Peter O'Toole at the TCM Movie Database
Peter O'Toole at the British Film Institute's Screenonline
"Peter O'Toole as Casanova"
University of Bristol Theatre Collection, University of Bristol
The Making of Lawrence of Arabia, Digitised BAFTA Journal, Winter 1962-3. With additional notes by Bryan Hewitt

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