- Murray Melvin
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Murray Melvin
Murray Melvin talks to actress Georgina Hale at the Young Vic Theatre 31 October 2007Born 1932 (age 78–79)
London, EnglandOccupation Actor Murray Melvin (born 1932, London) is an English stage and film actor.
The son of Hugh Victor Melvin and Maisie Winifred Driscoll, he is best known for having created the role of Geoffrey in the Shelagh Delaney play, A Taste of Honey, a role which he recreated opposite Rita Tushingham in the 1961 film of the same name. In 1962 he won Best Actor at the Cannes Film Festival for his performance, and was also nominated for the BAFTA "Most Promising Newcomer" award.
Melvin joined Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop company at the Theatre Royal Stratford East while still a student.[1] In 1958, he appeared in productions of Brendan Behan's The Hostage. In 1963, he was in the original cast of Oh, What a Lovely War!.
He appeared in the very first episode of the cult television series The Avengers in 1960. Melvin's other film appearances have included roles in Alfie, and since 1964, regular appearances in the films of director Ken Russell, beginning with Diary of a Nobody and continuing withThe Devils (as the scheming, but ultimately deceived, Father Mignon), The Boy Friend and cameos in Lisztomania and Prisoner of Honor. He had an important role as Reverend Samuel Runt in Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon (1975). He was reunited with Oliver Reed, his The Devils co-star, in Crossed Swords (1977) and the Italian mini-series Christopher Columbus (1985).
In 1998 he appeared in a Christmas Special episode of the BBC's Jonathan Creek called "The Black Canary" alongside Alan Davies, Rik Mayall, Hannah Gordon, Francis Matthews and Caroline Quentin.
In 2004 he appeared as Monsieur Reyer, the musical director and conductor of the Opera Populaire, in the film adaptation of the musical The Phantom of the Opera.
More recently, Melvin has returned to the Theatre Royal as trustee and archivist and it is partly in this role that he is becoming widely known as a learned and popular film historian — he can be seen and heard, for example, on the BFI DVD release of the Bill Douglas Trilogy.
In 2007 he appeared as the sinister Bilis Manger in the Doctor Who spinoff, Torchwood.
In July 2011 Murray Melvin played The Professor in a short comedy/drama called The Grey Mile, a story about two ex master criminals who are now confined to a care home. The film, written by Jonathan Parramint and Simon Janes, co-stars Paul Shane as Terry 'The Taxman' Tempest and Maggie Tulip as Miss Match. The film was shot on location at Wolterton Hall in Norfolk.
Contents
Selected filmography
- Suspect (1960)
- The Criminal (1960)
- A Taste of Honey (1961)
- Petticoat Pirates (1961)
- Solo for Sparrow (1962)
- H.M.S. Defiant (1962)
- The Ceremony (1963)
- Sparrows Can't Sing (1963)
- Alfie (1966)
- Kaleidoscope (1966)
- Smashing Time (1967)
- The Fixer (1968)
- Start the Revolution Without Me (1970)
- The Devils (1971)
- The Boy Friend (1971)
- A Day in the Death of Joe Egg (1972)
- Ghost in the Noonday Sun (1973)
- Gawain and the Green Knight (1973)
- Ghost Story (1974)
- Lisztomania (1975)
- Barry Lyndon (1975)
- Shout at the Devil (1976)
- The Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones (1976)
- The Ballad of Salomon Pavey (1977)
- Joseph Andrews (1977)
- Stories from a Flying Trunk (1979)
- Nutcracker (1982)
- Sacred Hearts (1985)
- Comrades (1986)
- Funny Boy (1987)
- Little Dorrit (1988)
- Let Him Have It (1991)
Bibliography
- The Art of the Theatre Workshop - compiled and introduced by Murray Melvin (2006)
References
External links
Festival de Cannes (Cannes Film Festival) Prix d'interprétation masculine (Best Actor) 1960–1979 Anthony Perkins (1961) · Dean Stockwell/Jason Robards/Ralph Richardson/Murray Melvin (1962) · Richard Harris (1963) · Antal Páger/Saro Urzì (1964) · Terence Stamp (1965) · Per Oscarsson (1966) · Oded Kotler (1967) · Jean-Louis Trintignant (1969) · Marcello Mastroianni (1970) · Riccardo Cucciolla (1971) · Jean Yanne (1972) · Giancarlo Giannini (1973) · Jack Nicholson (1974) · Vittorio Gassman (1975) · José Luis Gómez (1976) · Fernando Rey (1977) · Jon Voight (1978) · Jack Lemmon (1979) ·
Categories:- 1932 births
- English film actors
- English stage actors
- Living people
- People from London
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