Martin Shaw
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Martin Shaw | |
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Born | January 21, 1945 Birmingham, England |
Martin Shaw (born January 21, 1945 in Birmingham, England) is an English actor.
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[edit] Background
Shaw is the son of an engineer and a champion ballroom dancer. At school, he enjoyed English literature and drama lessons. Before moving to London to attend LAMDA (The London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art), he worked in the sales office of a chemical company.
He made his first stage appearance, alongside his parents, at the age of three. Following education at Great Barr School (where musician Steve Winwood was a classmate), Shaw graduated from the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art. He served his apprenticeship in repertory at the Queen's Theatre, Hornchurch and the Bristol Old Vic, and began television work in 1967, making his TV debut as hippy student, Robert Croft, in Coronation Street.[1] Afterwards he took key roles in the first revival of Look Back in Anger (Royal Court/Criterion, 1968) and in A Streetcar Named Desire (Piccadilly Theatre, 1974).
Despite an extensive body of theatre and television work, he is best known for his role as undercover detective Ray Doyle in the British television series The Professionals alongside Lewis Collins and Gordon Jackson. Despite the fame it brought him, Shaw claimed a dislike for the violent police series and his role in it.
He appeared with Lewis Collins in an episode of The New Avengers before they were cast in The Professionals. They played a pair of terrorists.[2]
Shaw also appeared as a Welsh medical student, Huw Evans, in the television comedy series Doctor in the House — Martin Shaw's character of Huw Evans later returned in a subsequent "Doctor" series as a very nervous expectant father for the Doctor at Large episode Mother and Father Doing Well.
His best known film role of the 1970s was as Banquo in Roman Polanski's 1971 film of Shakespeare's Macbeth.
In the 1980s, Shaw spent most of his working time in the theatre. His roles include Elvis Presley in the critically-acclaimed Are You Lonesome Tonight? written by Alan Bleasdale. He also starred in a 1987 TV advert for the Vauxhall Cavalier. [1]
He returned to TV in the 1990s, taking leading roles in Rhodes and the police series The Chief. In 2001, he took on the title role of BBC drama Judge John Deed. He also played detective Adam Dalgliesh, starring in P.D. James' Death in Holy Orders in 2003 and The Murder Room in 2005. Another notable role was his portrayal of British South Pole explorer Robert Falcon Scott in The Last Place On Earth.
His first film role was as an Irish communist in Love on the Dole (1966). Operation Daybreak, Facelift, Cassidy and Ladder of Swords.
He has narrated many audiobooks including Tolkien's The Hobbit and The Silmarillion, Gulliver's Travels and Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights.
In 2006 he narrated and appeared in a DVD chronicling the 'Merlins over Malta' project, which featured the return of a World War Two Supermarine Spitfire and Hawker Hurricane from Britain to Malta for the first time in 50 years.
In December 2006, he presented and appeared in the Discovery Channel Real Time TV series Martin Shaw: Aviators, produced by Twofour which followed the two-year restoration of his Boeing Stearman bi-plane after it had crashed in front of his eyes at Old Buckenham airfield in Norfolk. He fulfilled his lifetime's ambition in the six-part series by getting to take the controls of a Spitfire owned by Maurice Bayliss; and he screamed down the runway at Cranfield in a English Electric Lightning owned by Russell Carpenter. It wasn't allowed to take off, but did reach 150mph in three seconds. Martin Shaw also compared notes with Wing Cdr Ken Wallis, the nonagenarian builder and developer of the modern autogyro.
[edit] Personal life
Shaw was the victim of a vicious mugging and his cheekbone had to be replaced by a plastic plate, around this time he gave up alcohol and became a strict vegetarian. He is a follower of Sant Mat.[3] He is currently the Patron for Hillside Animal Sanctuary in Norfolk, a charity organisation that provides a safe home for neglected and abused animals.[4] Shaw has a private pilot's license and owns a Boeing Stearman, a vintage bi-plane.
Shaw has been married three times and divorced twice. He has three children by his first wife, actress Jill Allen whom he married in 1968, including son Joe Shaw who played a younger version of Martin's eponymous character in Rhodes. His other children Luke and Sophie are also actors. His second wife was former nurse turned alternative therapist Maggie Mansfield. Shaw was married to TV presenter, Vicky Kimm, who shared his love of flying. Shaw lived in a Quaker House in Norfolk, once owned by an ancestor of Abraham Lincoln. He also owns a crofter's cottage in Scotland. Shaw has been linked with Karen Da Silva, a 44-year-old yoga teacher and neighbour in his Norfolk village.[5]
[edit] Awards and nominations
In 1996, Martin Shaw won two awards, as well as receiving a nomination, for his performance as Lord Goring in An Ideal Husband on Broadway. The awards and nomination are:
- Winner of the Drama Desk Critic's Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play.
- Winner of the Theatre World Special Award for Ensemble Performance.
- Nominated for a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play.
[edit] Television appearances
- Coronation Street (as Robert Croft)
- Helen: A Woman of Today (1973) (as Jack Tully)
- The Professionals (1977-1981) (as Ray Doyle)
- Cream in My Coffee by Denis Potter
- East Lynne
- The Last Place on Earth (1985) (as Robert Falcon Scott)
- The Chief
- Rhodes (1997) (as Cecil Rhodes)
- The Scarlet Pimpernel (as Chauvelin)
- A&E 1997-2002 (as Robert Kingsford)
- P.D. James's Death in Holy Orders (2003) (as Adam Dalgliesh)
- Judge John Deed (as Judge John Deed)
- Martin Shaw: Aviators (as himself)
- Doctor at Large - aka Doctor in the House (TV series) (eleven episodes as Huw Evans 1969-71)
- Cranford (2007) (Peter Jenkyns)
[edit] Theatre appearances
- Look Back in Anger (Royal Court transferring to the Criterion Theatre, 1968) as Cliff Lewis
- The Contractor (Royal Court, 1969; transferring to the Fortune Theatre, 1970) as Paul
- The Battle of Shrivings (Lyric Theatre, 1970) as David
- Cancer (Moon Children in the US), Royal Court , 1970) as Bob
- The Bacchae (National Theatre at the Old Vic, 1973) as Dionysus
- Saturday, Sunday, Monday (National Theatre at the Old Vic, 1973) as Attilio (opposite Sir Laurence Olivier)
- A Streetcar Named Desire (Piccadilly Theatre, 1974) as Stanley Kowalski
- Miss Julie (Greenwich Theatre, 1975) as Jean
- Teeth 'n' Smiles (Wyndham's Theatre, 1976) as Arthur
- They're Playing Our Song (Shaftesbury Theatre, 1981) as Vernon Gersch
- The Country Girl (Apollo Theatre, 1983) as the Director
- Are You Lonesome Tonight? (Phoenix Theatre, 1985) as 'The Older Elvis Presley'
- The Big Knife (Albery Theatre, 1987) as Charles Castle
- A Streetcar Named Desire (also Australia, 1988)
- Other People's Money (Lyric Theatre, 1990) as Garfinkel
- Betrayal (Almeida Theatre, 1991) as Robert
- Sienna Red, by Stephen Poliakoff, co-starring Francesca Annis (Richmond Theatre, May 1992)
- An Ideal Husband (Globe Theatre, 1992) as Lord Goring
- Rough Justice by Terence Frisby (Apollo Theatre, 1994) as James Highwood
- An Ideal Husband (Haymarket, transferring to the Old Vic, 1996; revived at the Haymarket, 1997, before transferring to the Gielgud Theatre)
- Vertigo, a Parisian drama, co-starring Jenny Seagrove (Theatre Royal Windsor, October 1998) as Roger Flaviares
- A Man For All Seasons (Haymarket, 2005/6) as Sir Thomas More
[edit] Film appearances
- The Golden Voyage of Sinbad (1974) as Rachid, Sinbad's second-in-command
- Macbeth (1974) (as Banquo)
- Operation Daybreak (1975) (about the assassination of Heydrich)
- Facelift (1984) as Zax
- Ladder of Swords (1989)
[edit] References
- ^ Martin Shaw BBC, accessed 13/11/07
- ^ Martin Shaw BBC, accessed 13/11/07
- ^ BBC Interview
- ^ Hillside Animal Sanctuary accessed, 12/11/07
- ^ Daily Mail Article