John Neville (actor)
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- For other people with the same name, see John Neville
John Neville, C.M., OBE (born May 2, 1925) is an English theatre and film actor who moved to Canada in 1972. He enjoyed a resurgence of international attention in the 1980s as a result of his starring role in Terry Gilliam's The Adventures of Baron Munchausen.
Neville was born on May 2, 1925 in London, educated at Chiswick County School for Boys, and after war service in the Royal Navy trained as an actor at RADA, the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, before starting his professional career as a member of Trent Players.
During the 1950s he was a leading member of London's Old Vic Company, playing many classical leading roles including Romeo in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, and an acclaimed Richard in Richard II, with Virginia McKenna as Queen Anne. He also alternated with Richard Burton the parts of Othello and Iago in Othello. He was a frequent visiting player at the Bristol Old Vic. He gave one memorable performance in a musical: in 1971, he received good reviews in an otherwise disastrous adaptation of Lolita, called Lolita, My Love, which closed in Boston en route to Broadway.
In the 1960s he was artistic director at the Nottingham Playhouse, another of Britain's leading provincial repertory theatres, before leaving for Canada in 1972, taking up the post of artistic director at the Citadel Theatre in Edmonton Alberta. He has since taken similar positions with other Canadian theatre companies (including as artistic director of the Stratford Festival of Canada from 1985-1989) as well as continuing his acting career.
Noted for his classical good looks and distinctive voice, the young John Neville was frequently described as the young John Gielgud's natural successor—though his acting style was in fact quite different and certainly more natural than that of the early-to-mid period Gielgud—and was consequently often cast in romantic leads, though he always regarded himself primarily as a character actor. He was, however, not averse to the occasional foray into other areas and for a while took over the leading role of Nestor Le Fripé from Keith Michel in the original West End production of the musical Irma La Douce, playing opposite Elizabeth Seal as Irma.
From 1995-1998, Neville had a prominent recurring role in The X-Files television series as the Well-Manicured Man, and in 1998, he reprised his role in the feature film The X-Files:Fight The Future. Although he has had numerous other television appearances and occasional film roles, the main focus of Neville's career has always been the theatre.
John Neville was cast as Baron Munchausen by Gilliam when in his mid-sixties, as Gilliam thought he brought the necessary ambience to the role and could be aged or made younger with clever make-up. In the film, Neville plays the character at three different stages of his life; in his thirties, his fifties, and his seventies.
He also had a small but effective role as "Terrence" in David Cronenberg's 2002 Spider.
He has also had in recent years, numerous cameo and small-part appearances in a wide variety of films, ranging from The Man Who Sued God as Primate of the Angilcan Church in Australia, through to The Fifth Element making a brief appearance as the Admiral in command of the Earth Space Navy.
He was appointed to the Order of Canada, that nation's highest civilian honour, in 2006 [1]
[edit] External link
- John Neville at the Internet Movie Database
- Neville, John at The Canadian Encyclopedia