Kenneth Haigh
Kenneth Haigh | |
---|---|
Born | Kenneth Haigh 25 March 1931 Mexborough, West Riding of Yorkshire, England |
Died | 4 February 2018 | (aged 86)
Occupation | actor |
Years active | 1956-2004 |
Spouse | Myrna Haigh |
Kenneth Haigh (25 March 1931 – 4 February 2018) was an English actor.[1] He gained recognition for playing in the rebellious Look Back in Anger (1956) opposite Mary Ure. The cult of angry young men included stars such as Richard Burton, Alan Dobie, and Alec McCowen, who all acted in the play that symbolised the angst of teenage youth. Haigh's success as Jimmy Porter was critically acclaimed as a prototype for the modern anti-hero.
He played in the original Royal Court Theatre production alongside the renowned Shakespearean Alan Bates in May 1956 in what was a most demanding role that required anger, disgust and disdain and a host of other dramatic emotions. Among his achievements is the attributable usage of the term "Red brick", at first a mocking reference to Victorian university system because it evoked a classless society.[clarification needed][2]
Born in Mexborough, West Riding of Yorkshire, Haigh studied drama at the Central School of Speech and Drama, then based at the Royal Albert Hall, London.[3] He played the central role of Jimmy Porter in the premiere production of John Osborne's play Look Back in Anger in 1956 at the Royal Court Theatre. His performance in a 1958 Broadway theatre production of that play so moved one young woman in the audience that she mounted the stage and slapped him in mid-performance.[4] For the film version released in 1959, he was passed over in favour of Richard Burton. Coincidentally, he went on to portray the explorer and adventurer Richard Francis Burton in the BBC production of The Search for the Nile. He also briefly appeared in the Beatles' film A Hard Day's Night (1964).
Later he portrayed Joe Lampton, a character created by John Braine in the novel Room at the Top, in the television series Man at the Top (1970–72) and the spin-off film Man at the Top (1973).
Haigh made occasional appearances on American television, and his most recognisable appearance is that of time-travelling Flight Lieutenant William Terrance Decker in The Twilight Zone episode "The Last Flight" (1960).[5] He also portrayed Pat Casey in Lionel Bart's Maggie May.
Haigh married the West Indian model Myrna Stephens in 1974.[6] They divorced in 1985 but remained good friends; she nursed him through his final years of ill health.
Kenneth Haigh died on 4 February 2018, aged 86. He had spent his last years in a nursing home after oxygen deprivation led to brain damage in 2003, following his swallowing of a bone in a Soho restaurant.[7][8]
Filmography
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1954 | Companions in Crime | John Kendall | |
1956 | My Teenage Daughter | Tony Ward Black | |
1957 | Saint Joan | Brother Martin Ladvenu | |
High Flight | Anthony 'Tony' Winchester | ||
1963 | Cleopatra | Brutus | |
1964 | A Hard Day's Night | Simon Marshall | Uncredited |
Weekend at Dunkirk | Atkins | ||
1966 | The Deadly Affair | Bill Appleby | |
1968 | A Lovely Way to Die | Jonathan Fleming | |
1971 | Journey to Murder | Dirk Brogan | Example |
1972 | Eagle in a Cage | Napoleon Bonaparte | |
1973 | Man at the Top | Joe Lampton | |
1976 | 'Robin and Marian | Sir Ranulf | |
1978 | A Walk in the Sun | George | |
1979 | The Bitch | Arnold Rinstead | |
1983 | Night Train to Murder | Cousin Milton / Cousin Homer | |
1985 | Wild Geese II | Col. Reed-Henry | |
1986 | A State of Emergency | ||
1991 | Shuttlecock | Dr. Quinn | |
2004 | Mr Blue | Mr. Blue | Short film Final film role |
Theatre
- Othello (Drogheda, 1952)
- Dear Little Liz (Open Air Theatre, Regent's Park, 1955)
- Look Back in Anger (Royal Court Theatre, London, 1956) - Jimmy Porter
- The Mulberry Bush (1956) - Peter Lord
- The Crucible (1956) - Rev John Hale
- Cards of Identity (1956) - Beaufort
- Caligula (Broadway, 1960; Phoenix Theatre, London, 1964) - Caligula
- Zoo Story (Arts Theatre, London, 1961)
- Altona (Royal Court and Saville Theatres, 1961) - Franz von Gerlach
- The Collection (The Aldwych, 1962)
- Playing with Fire (The Aldwych, 1962)
- Julius Caesar (Stratford, RSC 1962) - Mark Antony
- Maggie May (Adelphi Theatre, London, 1964) - Patrick Casey
- Too Good To Be True (Edinburgh Festival, 1965) - Burglar
- Prometheus Unbound (Yale University Theatre, 1967) - Prometheus
- Henry IV (Yale, 1967)
- The Hotel in Amsterdam (Duke of York's Theatre, London, 1969) - Laurie
- Much Ado About Nothing (Manchester, 1969) - Benedick
- Equus (Citadel Theatre, Edmonton, Alberta, 1969-70) - Dysart
- Prometheus Unbound (Mermaid Theatre, 1971) - Prometheus
- Marching Song (Mermaid Theatre, London, 1974) - Rupert Foster
- The Father (Haymarket, Leicester, 1975) - Father
- The Aspern Papers (Chichester Festival, 1978)
- Twelfth Night (Stratford, CT, 1979) - Malvolio
- Julius Caesar (Stratford, CT, 1979) - Brutus
- The Tempest (Stratford, CT, 1979) - Prospero
- Clothes for a Summer Hotel (Broadway, 1980) - F Scott Fitzgerald
- Othello (Young Vic, London, 1982) - Othello
Television
- Alfred Hitchcock Presents - "Specialty of the House" (1959)- Mr. Costain
- Search for the Nile (1971)
- Man at the Top (Thames TV, 1971-73) - Joe Lampton
- Moll Flanders (ITV, 1975) - Jemmy Earle
- Hazlitt in Love (1977) - William Hazlitt
- Maybury (BBC, 1981)
- The Testament of John (1984)
References
- ^ "Kenneth Haigh". Retrieved 26 December 2016.
- ^ Obit., The Daily Telegraph, Thursday 15 February 2018, p.27.
- ^ V&A, Theatre and Performance Special Collections, Elsie Fogerty Archive, THM/324
- ^ "Woman Quits Audience to Slap Actor in Play". latimes.com. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
- ^ "Movies". Retrieved 26 December 2016.
- ^ "The Model Archives of Marlowe Press". London: Gavin L B Robinson. 1974. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
- ^ "Kenneth Haigh". The Times. 12 February 2018. Retrieved 12 February 2018. (subscription required)
- ^ "Kenneth Haigh Obituary". The Guardian Newspaper. 13 February 2018. Retrieved 16 February 2018.