Posted on Sun, May 9 1999 by
David T.
<david@Morrissey-solo.com>
|
From elsberry:
Just read this at
Yahoo News (I remember Morrissey talking of Dirk Bogarde
sitting in his kitchen and having tea and Morrissey being
delighted about it):
British Film Legend Dirk
Bogarde Dies At 78
By Paul Majendie
LONDON (Reuters) - Dirk Bogarde, the British matinee idol
who went on to win international acclaim with classic roles
in films like ``Death in Venice,'' died of a heart attack
Saturday at the age of 78, his family said.
Bogarde was also a prolific writer with seven volumes of
autobiography and seven novels all becoming best-sellers.
He suffered the heart attack at his London home. ``He was
extremely happy and looking forward to events like his 80th
birthday and many plans for the future,'' said his nephew,
Brock van den Bogaerde.
Queen Elizabeth, who knighted Bogarde in 1992, said she was
saddened by the news of his death.
Dual Oscar winner Glenda Jackson called Bogarde ``our first
home-grown film star.'' Director Michael Winner called him
``the Leonardo DiCaprio of his day.''
Bogarde had 60 films to his credit -- but still only joined
the profession by chance and was never enamoured of
Hollywood.
Going to the wrong room for a British Broadcasting
Corporation audition, the young Bogarde accidentally got a
part in a stage play that proved so successful he was hailed
as a star overnight.
He became one of the few British actors to achieve truly
international standing with notable films such as ``The
Victim,'' ``The Servant'' and ``Death in Venice.''
But he once confessed he did not like acting very much --
''I never have. It made me money.''
He moved to Europe in the late 1960s, when he saw his career
path lay in the sort of films being produced in Italy,
France and Germany, rather than England or America. He lived
in France some 20 years, thus fulfilling a childhood
ambition.
Only when his close friend and manager Tony Forwood became
seriously ill in 1986 and had to be near a hospital did
Bogarde give up his French domicile.
Bogarde also forged a successful second career as an author.
``That's because of my name and all the blue-haired
ladies,'' he said in 1992, alluding to the female fans of
his matinee idol days in the 50s.
Born Derek van den Bogaerde in the north London suburb of
Hampstead to an actress mother and an artist father, he went
to university in London and Scotland. He made his stage
debut in 1939.
Returning from his wartime military service, mainly in army
intelligence in the Far East, several smaller stage and
television roles earned him a contract with the Rank
Organization, the British film production firm, which was
grooming promising actors.
With the help of his Latin lover looks and boyish charm,
Bogarde quickly became a reliable box office attraction.
Starring in more than 30 films between 1947 and 1961, he
spanned the whole range from comedy to war and crime movies.
Then followed a brief and unhappy spell at Hollywood in the
60s, the basis for his novel ``West of Sunset,'' a biting
satire on the society he hated so much. He shot a couple of
movies there, including a biopic of composer Franz Liszt,
practicing the piano until his fingers bled to perform the
part.
His talent and ambition began to extend beyond solid routine
craftsmanship as he performed more demanding roles,
claiming: ''I'm art house, not box office.''
He played a homosexual barrister in ``The Victim,'' the
first British movie to deal with the problems of homosexual
men in public life and alienated the fans of his matinee
idol days.
Internationally, Bogarde established his reputation as a
leading interpretative actor after starting to work
independently in the early 1960s, in a long-standing
cooperation with director Joseph Losey.
He won the British Academy's prestigious Best British Actor
Award for his Mephistophelean rendition of the title role in
Losey's screening of Harold Pinter's play ``The Servant.''
After a busy life of almost uninterrupted filming he took up
residence in a 15th century farmhouse in Southern France,
turning to farming and writing.
Receiving no more attractive film offers from Britain, he
occasionally starred under top European directors such as
Luchino Visconti, Alain Resnais and Rainer Werner Fassbinder.
In Visconti's 1973 adaptation of ``Death in Venice,'' a
Thomas Mann short story, Bogarde superbly displayed his
particular acting style with a searingly honest portrayal of
loneliness.
``I didn't think I could do any better,'' he said later, of
his all but silent interpretation of a dying elderly
composer enchanted by a handsome teenage boy.
Despite admitting to growing fatigue, he came out of
semi-retirement in 1990 to film ``Daddy Nostalgie,'' the
tragic story of a girl watching her father die, for French
director Bertrand Tavernier.
Bogarde, who moved to London in his later years, said he
would like his ashes scattered in France.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Comments / Notes
Morrissey actually nicks a line from "Victim": "nature played this trick on me" (I think)
Chris
(206.138.77.3)
- Mon, May 10, 1999 at 09:46:23 (PDT)
If anyone cares: Bogarde was quite popular in the British Mod scene through 1966, as he starred as "Gabriel" in the extremely stylish 007-rip-off "Modesty Blaise", a live action adaptation of a popular comic-strip-series about a female secret agent (played by beautiful Monica Vitti).
Even today, there's a British Mod fan-circle called "Modesty Blaise".
Mat <mathias_loesel@kirchgruppe.de>
- Mon, May 17, 1999 at 04:39:09 (PDT)
|
* return to Morrissey-solo |