Ronald Radd

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Ronald Radd (22 January 1929, Ryhope County, Durham, England - 23 April 1976, Toronto, Canada) was a British television actor.

Radd starred in some 60 different TV shows between 1955 and 1976 including The Avengers and Z-Cars. He alss played the role of the villain Pargit in Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) in 1969 in the sixth episode, "Just for the Record".

Radd began as a stage actor in the Alexandra Theatre in Birmingham in the early 1950s, along with the likes of Leslie Sands and Edward Mulhare. By 1954, Radd had graduated to the West End, where he was a most unlikely co-star with Kenneth Williams in two different productions in the Apollo Theatre in February 1956, The Buccaneer and The Boy Friend. Several months later, Radd was again with Ken in a revival (at the Winter Garden) of Feydeau's Hotel Paradiso, but the billing went to Alec Guinness, who made a film of it years later, but not with Radd or Williams.

Radd gradually lost interest in theatre and broke into television in Ordeal By Fire in 1957 as a dastardly Frenchman, a single play costume piece involving Joan of Arc (played by Elizabeth Sellars) with Peter Wyngarde and Patrick Troughton whom he later starred in with in 1958 in the BBC producation of A Tale Of Two Cities.

Radd's next few TV credits actually took place across the Atlantic; this was less unusual then than now, with many of the American networks' studios still being located in New York, where many British actors were working in the theatre. Radd made a number of appearances in the CBC production The Shari Lewis Show between 1960 and 1963, an din 1960 appeared in the production of Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh directed by Sidney Lumet. Radd worked alongside actors such as a very young Robert Redford and Jason Robards. A busy year Radd also appeared in the NBC production of The Tempest playing the role of the drunkard Stefano, alongside acclaimed actors such as Richard Burton who portrayed Caliban and Maurice Evans, star of many Hallmark productions later.

In 1971 he was nominated for Broadway's Tony Award as Best Supporting or Featured actor.

He died in Toronto of a brain hemorrhage aged 47 in 1976.

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