On this day, in 1946, Timothy James Curry was born in Grappenhall,
Warrington, Cheshire, England. When he was just 12, his father, a chaplain
with the Royal Navy, died from pneumonia. His family moved to South London and
Tim began attending a boarding school, where he became a noted boy soprano.
When he went to the University of Birmingham, he concentrated on his acting,
graduating in 1968 with a double degree in English and Drama. Later that year
he began his professional career as part of the original London cast of
Hair.
It was during this production that he met a young man named Richard O'Brien who
changed the course of his career.
One day, Tim saw Richard on the street near his apartment. Richard mentioned
he'd been to the gym looking for a bodybuilder that could sing. Tim asked why
in the world anyone would need that. Richard handed him a script with the title
The Rocky Horror Show on the front and the number of the guy who was
going to direct the show, Jim Sharman. Tim read the script and immediately gave
Jim a call.
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Image courtesy rockyhorror.fandom.com |
The Rocky Horror Show opened on June 19, 1973 on London's West End
with Tim leading the cast as Dr. Frank-N-Furter, a mad scientist who speaks the
Queen's English (and is a queen himself). The show was a hit and won the
Evening Standard Award for Best Musical. It would run for over 2,900
performances before closing in 1980. Tim didn’t do most of the run but only
because he followed the show when it came to the United States. He opened as
the good Doctor in Los Angeles in 1974 and on Broadway in 1975. Sadly, The Great
White Way wasn’t quite ready for
Rocky
Horror. Tim earned a Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Actor in a Musical,
but the show only lasted forty-five performances. It’s okay though as the
slightly retooled film version (called
The
Rocky Horror Picture Show for those who can’t tell the difference
between the stage and the screen) came out the same year and featured performers
from the Broadway show (including Tim, Richard and Meatloaf) as well as more
folks from the original London cast (Patricia Quinn, Nell Campbell and Jonathan
Adams).
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Image courtesy reddit.com |
Tim took
almost no time at all to return to Broadway, taking over the role of Tristan
Tzara in Tom Stoppard’s Tony award winning play Travesties in 1975. When that show ended in 1976, he spent a few
years taking supporting roles in films like the 1978 British horror film The Shout and starring on television as
the title character in a miniseries about William Shakespeare. He returned to
the stage in 1980 as part of the original Broadway cast of Amadeus, again playing the title role. Both Tim and co-star Ian
McKellen were nominated for Tony Awards (Ian edged Tim out for the win, but I
can think of a lot worse people to lose to).
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Image courtesy pinerest.com |
From 1981
on, Tim has remained a busy, in-demand actor. Whether he was hosting Saturday Night Live (with musical guest
Meatloaf, of course) or earning an Emmy nomination for an episode of Tales from the Crypt, Tim brings a level
of professionalism and, yes I’m going to say it, camp to everything he does.
Highlights from his career include Wadsworth in Clue (another cult classic and one of my personal favorites), Darkness
in Ridley Scott’s Legend and
Pennywise the Clown in the television adaptation of Stephen King’s It. But Tim shows up all over the place,
like as the hotel manager in Home Alone 2,
on an episode of Will and Grace or in
his own (albeit short lived) show, Over
the Top (see what I mean about camp; even his sitcom knows who he is).
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Image copyright Nickelodeon |
One of the
arenas that Tim has shined in the most has been the world of voice acting. He
spent five seasons playing intrepid documentarian Nigel Thornberry on Nickelodeon’s
The Wild Thornberrys. He spent
another three seasons playing Captain Hook on the Fox series Peter Pan and the Pirates, for which he
finally got some bling for his mantel in the form of a Daytime Emmy Award. Tim
has also done extensive work recording audio books. For anyone who needs a few
hour fix of his distinctive voice, they can search out his versions of A Series of Unfortunate Events, A Christmas
Carol and even the book about the original Transylvanian, Dracula.
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Image copyright Disney |
Tim is a robust
part of the Disney family. He first joined in 1993 as Cardinal Richelieu in The Three Musketeers. Three years later
he sunk his teeth into Long John Silver for Muppet
Treasure Island (he is arguably the best part of that film). The following
year he gave voice to Forte, the villain in Beauty
and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas (there is something awfully fitting
about Dr. Frank-N-Furter telling the Beast “don’t fall in love”). He’s also done
television roles on TaleSpin
(Thaddeos E. Klang), Darkwing Duck
(Taurus Bulba), Dinosaurs, Disney’s The
Little Mermaid (Evil Manta), Aladdin,
Gargoyles (Dr. Anton Sevarius), Mighty
Ducks, Quack Pack (Moltoc), Recess,
Teacher’s Pet, Higglytown Heroes, Phineas and Ferb and he took over the
role of Emperor Palpatine on Star Wars:
Clone Wars when the original actor passed away. He even has a somewhat
bizarre rendition of The Ballad of Davy
Crockett that was released on an album called Disney’s Music from the Park (as much as I like Tim, this recording
is just phenomenally bad; I’m really not sure how it made it onto the cd).
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Image courtesy playbill.com |
In 2007,
Tim experienced another triumphant return to Broadway as King Arthur in Spamalot, a stage adaptation of another
cult classic from 1975, Monty Python and
the Holy Grail. He was again nominated for a Tony award and, after moving
with the production to London’s West End, earned a Laurence Olivier Award
nomination back in his home town. Unfortunately, Spamalot would be something of a last hurrah for Tim. While I've very deliberately talked about Tim and his career in the present tense for this post, as many of his fans know, he's enjoyed better health than of late. In mid 2012, he dropped off the face of the earth, leaving many to wonder what was going on. Later it was revealed that he suffered a
massive stroke in July of that year, leaving him wheelchair bound, and for a time, speechless. Since then he's made remarkable progress. He still requires a motorized chair to get around, but was able to play the part of the Criminologist in the live production of Rocky Horror on Fox in 2016. He now frequently makes the rounds of conventions, greeting legions of fans and displaying his unconventional (if now a bit subdued) humor. Will he ever recover enough to return to the stage? Only time will tell. But I can tell you this:even if he had to spend the whole time on a souped up Hover-round, it would be so delightfully campy that you'd forget why he was in it in the first place. And that's why I wish Tim all the best and look forward to whatever comes next. Happy birthday to our favorite Transylvanian!
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