On this day, in 1940, John Vincent Hurt was born in Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England. John was the son of a former actress turned engineer and a former mathematician turned vicar. At the age of eight, he began attending St. Michael's Preparatory, an Anglican school in Otford, Kent. It was here that he caught the acting bug after playing the role of a girl in The Blue Bird. John failed the entrance exam to the school his brother attended, was strongly discouraged from becoming an actor by his parents and enrolled in the Grimby Art School as art teacher was apparently an acceptable professional choice. In 1959, he won a scholarship to St. Martin's School of Art in London. In 1960, he won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where he would finally get to indulge his true passion for the next two years.
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Image copyright Columbia Pictures |
Upon graduation from RADA, John performed his first film role in 1962's
The Wild and the Willing. Four years later, he had his first major role as Richard Rich in
A Man For All Seasons, with Orson Welles. Over the next five and a half decades, John would amass a body of work that easily put him the running for greatest actor of his time. With many dozens of films to his credit, the bare minimum highlights are the stuff most actors of today can only dream of. They include:
Caligula in the BBC's
I, Claudius (1976)
Max in
Midnight Express (1978) - Golden Globe win, BAFTA win, Oscar nomination
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Image copyright Paramount Pictures |
Kane in
Alien (1979)
John Merrick in
The Elephant Man (1980) - BAFTA win, Golden Globe and Oscar nominations
The Narrator in Jim Henson's The StoryTeller (1988)
Bird O'Donnell in The Field (1990) - BAFTA nomination
Mr. Olivander in the Harry Potter films (2001-11)
The War Doctor in Doctor Who (2013)
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Image copyright Disney |
John became part of the Disney family in unfortunate way. He voiced the Horned King in the 1985 animated disaster
The Black Cauldron. From what I remember from the only time I've seen it, his performance created a superbly scary villain that was totally wasted in a decidedly sub par movie. Thankfully, John was also the narrator for the 2000 picture,
The Tigger Movie. Whether or not that actually elevated his standing in Disneyana is a matter of personal taste, I'll just say that
The Tigger Movie doesn't generally make people cringe like mentioning
Cauldron does.
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Image copyright BBC |
In 2004, John was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire and became a Knight Bachelor for services to drama in 2015. That same year, he went public with the fact that he had been diagnosed with early-stage pancreatic cancer. He underwent treatment, declared his cancer to be in remission and continued working practically non-stop. He was set to star as Don Quixote in a Terry Gilliam project and as Former Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain in the Gary Oldman film
The Darkest Hour, when his health would begin to go downhill again. Both projects had to happen without him when he died at his home in Cromer, Norfolk on January 25, 2017, just three days after his 77th birthday.
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