- James Booth
Infobox actor
name = James Booth
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birthname = David Geeves
birthdate = Birth date|1927|12|19
birthplace =Croydon ,England
deathdate = Death date and age|2005|08|11|1927|12|19
deathplace =Hadleigh, Essex ,England
othername =
yearsactive = 1958-2005
spouse = Paula Delaney
homepage =
academyawards =
emmyawards =
tonyawards =James Booth (born David Geeves;
19 December ,1927 -11 August ,2005 ) was an Englishfilm , stage andtelevision actor andscreenwriter . Though handsome enough to play leading roles, and versatile enough to play a wide variety of character parts, Booth naturally projected a shifty, wolfish, or unpredictable quality that led inevitably to villainous roles and comedy, usually with a cockney flavour.Biography
He was born in
Croydon ,England on19 December 1927 , the son of a probation officer. He was educated at Southend Grammar School, which he left aged 17 to join the army. He rose to the rank of captain. He was trained atRADA and he made his first professional appearance as a member of theOld Vic company, before joiningJoan Littlewood 'sTheatre Workshop at theTheatre Royal, Stratford East in 1958. The Workshop's musical "Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be " became a hit and Booth, who played its most pungent character, looked poised for stardom. Producer Irving Allen signed Booth to an exclusive contract withWarwick Films . The sixties, and especially the early sixties, represented the most active period of Booth's movie career, with "Zulu" being the film for which he is best remembered. He will also be remembered for playing the part of Kenny Ames, a pornography baron living in enforced exile in Spain, in series 2 of "Auf Wiedersehen, Pet " in 1985.Though many observers expected Booth to become a major star, Booth's acting career stalled and nearly died. In interviews, Booth was surprisingly forthcoming about the reasons for his professional difficulties. These included his appearance in the flop "
Twang! ", his alcoholism, his unaggressive approach to selling himself, his lack of connections, and his own failure to work hard because everything came so easily to him at first. Booth also turned down the lead role of "Alfie".When no one would offer Booth an acting job,he tried his hand at screenwriting and found a market for his services in Hollywood. From the mid-seventies to sometime in the nineties, Booth lived in southern California and worked primarily as a screenwriter, with occasional film or TV appearances.
In late life Booth moved back to England. He never retired.
He married
Paula Delaney in 1960 and they had two sons and two daughters. He died inHadleigh, Essex on11 August 2005 aged 77. His last film -Keeping Mum - was dedicated to his memory.Filmography
* "
Jazzboat " (1959)... asSpider Kelly
* "Let's Get Married " (1960)... asPhotographer
* "The Trials of Oscar Wilde " (1960)... asAlfred Wood
* "French Dressing " (1963)...as Jim
* "Sparrows Can't Sing " (1963)... asCharlie Gooding
* "Zulu" (1964)... as Private Henry Hook VC
* "The Secret of My Success " (1965)... asArthur Tate
* "Robbery" (1967)... asInspector George Langdon
* "The Bliss of Mrs. Blossom " (1968)... asAmbrose Tuttle
* "Fräulein Doktor " (1969)... as Meyer
* "Revenge " (1971)... asJim Radford
* "Rentadick " (1972)
* "That'll Be The Day" (1973)... asMr MacLaine
* "Percy's Progress " (1974)... asJeffcott
* "Brannigan" (1975)... asCharlie the Handle
* "Airport '77 " (1977)... asRalph Crawford
* "Bad Guys" (1986)... asLord Percy
* "Avenging Force " (1986)... asAdmiral Brown
* "Twin Peaks " (1990) (TV series )... asErnie Niles
* "Keeping Mum " (2005)... asMr. Brown elected stage work
* "The Hostage" (1958)... as an
IRA officer atJoan Littlewood 'sTheatre Workshop
* "A Christmas Carol " asBob Cratchit for theTheatre Workshop
* "Fings Ain't Wot They Used T'Be "... asTosher
* "The Hostage" (1959)... as anIRA officer atWyndham's Theatre
* "The Fire-Raisers ... for theRoyal Court Theatre
* "The Caretaker (1962)... asMick
* "The Comedy of Errors " (1962)... for the RSC atStratford-on-Avon
* "King Lear " (1962)... as Edmund for the RSC atStratford-on-Avon
* "A Thousand Clowns "
* "Twang! " (Shaftesbury (1965)... asRobin Hood
* "The Entertainer"... asArchie Rice
* "Travesties " (1975)... asJames Joyce Further reading
*Noble, Peter. "British Film and Television Yearbook: 1960/61". British and American Film Press, 1961.
*Walker, John. "The Once and Future Film: British Cinema in the Seventies and Eighties". London: Methuen, 1985.External links
*imdb name|0095718|James Booth
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/film/4155876.stm BBC News - Zulu actor James Booth dies at 77]
* [http://news.scotsman.com/obituaries.cfm?id=1783392005 The Scotsman - Obituaries: James Booth]
* [http://www.thestage.co.uk/news/newsstory.php/9149 The Stage: Actor James Booth dies]
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