Peter Bowles

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Peter Bowles
Born Peter Bowles
16 October 1936 (1936-10-16) (age 71)
London, England
Occupation Actor

Peter Bowles (born 16 October 1936) is an English actor.

Bowles was born in London, England, the son of SarahJane (née Harrison) and Herbert Reginald Bowles.[1] He became famous in the late 1970s and 1980s for portraying upper class characters typically caught in hilarious situations. He starred in television comedies including Only When I Laugh, To the Manor Born, The Irish R.M., The Bounder, and Perfect Scoundrels. Bowles also appeared as a regular in the first few series of Rumpole of the Bailey as Guthrie Featherstone, QC, MP, Horace Rumpole's social-climbing head of chambers. In later seasons the character became a judge and left Rumpole's chambers, but a disgruntled Rumpole still found himself appearing occasionally before Mr Justice Featherstone, usually once per season. In 1966 he co-starred with Vivian Pickles in the BBC TV film Isadora Duncan, the Biggest Dancer in the World directed by Ken Russell. He later co-starred with Penelope Keith in the mid-80's BAFTA-award winning Executive Stress on ITV.

Bowles also played the smarmy Meres in the spin off movie of the Thames Television series Callan, the agent known as 'A' in The Prisoner episode "A. B. and C.", and the alien Balor in the Space: 1999 episode "End of Eternity". He also appeared as Carolyn Seymour's husband in the first episode of Survivors; and in four episodes of The Avengers.

He continues to work regularly in theatre, including London's West End. While appearing at the Chichester Festival Theatre in The Waltz of the Toreadors[2] in June 2007 he forgot his lines,[3] finally walking off stage mumbling "I'm going to put the cat out."

It was recently announced that he would have a role in Sweeney Todd (2007 film) as a ballad soloist and one of Todd's murder victims. However, when Tim Burton omitted the chorus numbers, his character, as well as the characters of 7 other actors, were dropped from the film.[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Peter Bowles Biography (1936-)
  2. ^ Sunday Telegraph 1 July, 2007, No. 2403, Arts section (Seven) p. 42: "Bowles gives what might be the greatest performance of his distinguished career"
  3. ^ The News (Portsmouth), Saturday 30th June, 2007: "Star fluffs his lines and turns his exit into a real show-stopper": Siôn Donovan
  4. ^ Queen makes Blair an offer that he can refuse - Telegraph

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