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Richard harris films
Richard harris films










richard harris films
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He played a rebel, and when the film was released in the United States, some moviegoers thought they could see a bit of Marlon Brando in Mr. In the late 1950's he appeared in ''Shake Hands With the Devil,'' about the Irish rebellion.

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That same year, he appeared in a television play in Britain called ''The Iron Harp'' and was so impressive that he was signed to a contract with Associated British Pictures Corporation, which gave him a small part in a movie, ''Alive and Kicking.'' It was not what filmgoers would eventually expect to see Richard Harris in, since it focused primarily on three elderly women who free themselves from a home for the aged. His face notwithstanding, he was asked to appear in more London stage productions, including Arthur Miller's ''View From the Bridge'' in 1956 and Luigi Pirandello's ''Man, Beast and Virtue'' in 1958. Harris had a face that looked like ''five miles of bad Irish country road.'' He was seen there by Lee Strasberg, then the director of the Actors Studio, who found him impressive, although one critic said Mr. In 1956 he joined Joan Littlewood's Theater Workshop and appeared in a production of ''The Quare Fellow'' at the Theater Royal in Stratford. The academy finally arranged for him to have a rent-free room. In later years, he referred to his student days as his ''period of starvation.'' For six weeks he slept in a coal cellar. But he could not find a course that would prepare him for directing, so he entered the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, where he studied acting. After overcoming the disease, he went to London with a desire to be a director. Harris was always interested in sports, especially rugby, but he had to curtail his activities in late adolescence when he contracted tuberculosis. Harris as ''an unforgettable figure'' in The New York Herald Tribune. Archer Winsten, writing in The New York Post, called it ''a great, indelibly memorable performance'' and Judith Crist described Mr. Harris won the best actor award at the Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for an Academy Award, both for his work in ''This Sporting Life'' (1963). Although the critics generally had high praise for his acting, both onstage and onscreen, some seemed to suggest that Richard Harris the man - noted for his interest in pub crawling, strong spirits and strong, spirited women - was far more intriguing than most of the scripts he got.

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Harris always said he loved to act but hated to do it in films because of his disdain for movie stars. He learned he had lymphatic cancer earlier this year, and when his doctors told him, he said it was quite remarkable that he had lived long enough to develop the disease and still be working, given the nature of the life he had led. Richard Harris, the voluble Irishman who starred as King Arthur in the film version of ''Camelot'' and more recently played Albus Dumbledore, the wise, magical and benign headmaster in the first Harry Potter movie and its forthcoming sequel, died yesterday in London.












Richard harris films