Anthony Quayle

{{Short description|British actor (1913–1989)}}

{{Use British English|date=February 2021}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2021}}

{{Infobox person

| honorific_prefix = Sir

| name = Anthony Quayle

| honorific_suffix = {{postnominals|country=GBR|size=100%|CBE}}

| image = Anthony Quayle-publicity.jpg

| alt =

| caption = Quayle in The Story of David (1976)

| birth_name = John Anthony Quayle

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1913|9|7|df=yes}}

| birth_place = Ainsdale,Ainsdale became part of the County Borough of Southport in 1912 Southport, Lancashire,Before 1 April 1974 Southport was part of Lancashire England

| death_date = {{Death date and age|1989|10|20|1913|9|7|df=yes}}

| death_place = Chelsea, London, England

| education = Abberley Hall School
Rugby School

| occupation = {{hlist|Actor|director}}

| years_active = 1935–1989

| spouse = {{plainlist|

}}

| children = 3

| module = {{infobox military person

| embed = yes

| allegiance = {{flag|United Kingdom}}

| branch = {{army|United Kingdom}}
Special Operations Executive

| rank = Major

| service_years = 1940–1945

| unit = Royal Artillery

| awards = Mentioned in Despatches

| battles = {{tree list}}

{{tree list/end}}

}}

}}

Sir John Anthony Quayle (7 September 1913 – 20 October 1989) was a British actor. He was nominated for an Oscar and a Golden Globe for his supporting role as Thomas Wolsey in the film Anne of the Thousand Days (1969). He also played important roles in such major studio productions as The Guns of Navarone (1961), Lawrence of Arabia (1962), The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964), Operation Crossbow (1965), QB VII (1974) and The Eagle Has Landed (1976). Quayle was knighted in the 1985 New Years Honours List.

Early life

Quayle was born on 7 September 1913 at 2 Delamere Road, Ainsdale,Ainsdale became part of the County Borough of Southport in 1912 Southport, Lancashire, to solicitor Arthur Quayle, of a Manx family, and Esther Kate Quayle ({{née}} Overton).{{cite ODNB | url=https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-39947 | isbn=978-0-19-861412-8 | doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/39947 | title=The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography | year=2004 }}

He was educated at Abberley Hall School, a preparatory school in Abberley, Worcestershire, and at Rugby School, then an all-boys independent boarding school. He trained for one year at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London. His first professional stage appearance was in The Ghost Train at the Q Theatre, while on holiday from RADA. After appearing in music hall, he joined the Old Vic in 1932.

Second World War service

During the Second World War, he served in the Royal Artillery. Having joined as a gunner (i.e. private), he attended the 70th Coast Defence Training Regiment and was commissioned second lieutenant on 7 January 1940.{{London Gazette |issue=34768 |date=5 January 1940 |pages=146−148 |supp=y}} He was made one of the area commanders of the Auxiliary Units in Northumberland. The units were "stay-behind forces" in case of a German invasion.Auxiliary Units were the "stay-behind forces" put in place in UK in case of a German invasion{{cite news |title=Auxunits in Northumberland |url=http://www.auxunit.org.uk/chronicle240468.htm |newspaper=Evening Chronicle |location=Newcastle upon Tyne |date=24 April 1968 |access-date= 15 April 2013}}

Later Quayle joined the Special Operations Executive (SOE) and served as a liaison officer with the partisans in Albania. Reportedly, his service with the SOE seriously affected him and he never felt comfortable talking about it. He described his experiences in a fictional form in Eight Hours from England.{{cite book | first=Anthony | last=Quayle | title=Eight Hours from England | publisher=Heinemann | location=London | year=1945}}

He was an aide to the Governor of Gibraltar at the time of the air crash of General Władysław Sikorski's aircraft on 4 July 1943.{{cite news |title=Sir Anthony Quayle, British Actor And Theater Director, Dies at 76 |first=Glenn |last=Collins |date=21 October 1989 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/10/21/obituaries/sir-anthony-quayle-british-actor-and-theater-director-dies-at-76.html |newspaper=The New York Times |page=10 Sec. 1}} He wrote of his Gibraltar experience in his second novel On Such a Night, published by Heinemann.

By the end of the war, he held the rank of temporary major. In May 1946, it was published that he had been mentioned in despatches "in recognition of gallant and distinguished services in the Mediterranean Theatre".{{London Gazette |issue= 37575 |date= 21 May 1946 |pages= 2443–2447 |supp= y |city= |title= |quote=}}

Career

=Theatre=

From 1948 to 1956 Quayle directed at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, and laid the foundations for the creation of the Royal Shakespeare Company. His own Shakespearian roles included Falstaff, Othello, Benedick in Much Ado About Nothing, Henry VIII and Aaron in Titus Andronicus with Laurence Olivier; he played Mosca in Ben Jonson's Volpone; and he also appeared in contemporary plays. He played the role of Moses in Christopher Fry's play The Firstborn, in a production starring opposite Katharine Cornell.{{cite book |last=Mosel |first=Tad |title=Leading Lady: The World and Theatre of Katharine Cornell |publisher=Little, Brown |year=1978 |isbn=978-0316585378 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/leadingladyworld00mose }} He also made an LP with Cornell, in which he played the role of poet Robert Browning in The Barretts of Wimpole Street.Caedmon Publishers, TC-1071 (1957)

Quayle made his Broadway debut in The Country Wife in 1936. Thirty-four years later, he won critical acclaim for his starring role in the highly successful Anthony Shaffer play Sleuth, which earned him a Drama Desk Award.

Quayle played James Tyrone in the first UK production of Eugene O'Neill's Long Day's Journey Into Night (Globe Theatre, London, 1958).{{Cite web |title=Production of Long Day's Journey Into Night {{!}} Theatricalia |url=https://theatricalia.com/play/49d/long-days-journey-into-night/production/p5c |access-date=2024-05-09 |website=theatricalia.com}}

Quayle was artist-in-residence at the University of Tennessee in the mid-70s. He came to Knoxville in spring 1974, through a partnership with the Kennedy Center, starring in Henry Denker's The Headhunters, which rehearsed and opened at the Clarence Brown Theatre and then moved on to the Kennedy Center's Eisenhower Theatre. Quayle was appointed as professor in theatre in 1974. He taught classes as an artist in residence and served as artistic director of the Clarence Brown Company—a professional theatre company in residence at UT. He played in Everyman the same year.

In 1984, he founded Compass Theatre Company, that he inaugurated with a tour of The Clandestine Marriage, directing and playing the part of Lord Ogleby. This production had a run at the Albery Theatre, London. With the same company he subsequently toured with a number of other plays, including Saint Joan, Dandy Dick and King Lear with himself in the title role.

=Film and Television=

File:MINdsc02596.jpg barrel signed by Anthony Quayle]]

His first film role was an uncredited brief appearance as an Italian wigmaker in Pygmalion (1938) – later film roles included parts in Alfred Hitchcock's The Wrong Man, Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's The Battle of the River Plate (both 1956), Ice Cold in Alex (1958), Tarzan's Greatest Adventure (1959), The Guns of Navarone (1961), H.M.S. Defiant, David Lean's Lawrence of Arabia (both 1962) and The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964). He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his role as Cardinal Wolsey in Anne of the Thousand Days (1969).

Often cast as the decent British officer, Quayle drew upon his wartime experiences, bringing a degree of authenticity to the parts absent from the performances of some non-combatant stars. One of his best friends from his days at the Old Vic was fellow actor Alec Guinness, who appeared in several films with him. He was also a close friend of Jack Hawkins and Jack Gwillim; all four actors appeared in Lawrence of Arabia.

Television appearances include the Armchair Theatre episode "The Scent of Fear" (1959) for ITV, the title role in the drama series Strange Report (ITC, 1969) and as French General Villers in the television film adaptation of The Bourne Identity (1988). He starred in the miniseries Masada (1981) as Rubrius Gallius. Also he narrated the BBC drama serial The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1970), and the acclaimed aviation documentary series Reaching for the Skies (1988). Quayle also starred in the 'Last Bottle in The World' episode of Tales of the Unexpected (TV series)

Personal life

Quayle married twice. His first wife was the actress Hermione Hannen (1913–1983), to whom he was married from 1935 to 1941. In 1947, he married American-born actress Dorothy Hyson (1914–1996), known as "Dot" to family and friends. He and Dorothy had two daughters, Jenny and Rosanna, and a son, Christopher.

Quayle died at his home in Chelsea from liver cancer on 20 October 1989.[https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1301&dat=19891022&id=fbQnAAAAIBAJ&sjid=EugDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3747,8494075 "Quayle tough guy on and off screen"], The Sydney Morning Herald, 22 October 1989, p. 5.

Awards and honours

;Awards (nominations)

;Awards (won)

;Honours

Quayle was mentioned in despatches during the Second World War. He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1952 Birthday Honours.{{London Gazette |issue=39555 |date=5 June 1952 |page=3007 |supp=y}} He was appointed a Knight Bachelor in the 1985 New Year Honours for services to the Theatre,{{London Gazette |issue=49969 |date=31 December 1984 |page=2 |supp=y}} and knighted by Queen Elizabeth II during a ceremony at Buckingham Palace on 5 March 1985.{{London Gazette |issue=50078 |date=29 March 1985 |page=4500 |supp= }}

Filmography

=Film=

class="wikitable sortable"
Year

! Film

! Role

! Director

! class="unsortable" | Notes

1935

| Moscow Nights

| Soldier dictating letter

| Anthony Asquith

| rowspan="2" | Uncredited

1938

| Pygmalion

| Eliza's Hairdresser

| Leslie Howard

rowspan="2" | 1948

| Hamlet

| Marcellus

| Laurence Olivier

|

Saraband for Dead Lovers

| Durer

| rowspan="2" | Basil Dearden

|

1949

| Train of Events

| Violinist

| Uncredited

1955

| Oh... Rosalinda!!

| Gen. Orlovsky

| rowspan="2" | Emeric Pressburger

|

rowspan="2" | 1956

| The Battle of the River Plate

| Commodore Harwood

|

The Wrong Man

| Frank D. O'Connor

| Alfred Hitchcock

|

rowspan="2" | 1957

| Woman in a Dressing Gown

| Jim Preston

| J. Lee Thompson

|

No Time for Tears

| Dr. Graham Seagrave

| Cyril Frankel

|

rowspan="2" | 1958

| The Man Who Wouldn't Talk

| Dr. Frank Smith

| Herbert Wilcox

|

Ice Cold in Alex

| Captain van der Poel

| J. Lee Thompson

|

rowspan="2" | 1959

| Serious Charge

| Howard Phillips

| Terence Young

|

Tarzan's Greatest Adventure

| Slade

| John Guillermin

|

1960

| The Challenge

| Jim

| John Gilling

|

1961

| The Guns of Navarone

| Maj. Roy Franklin

| J. Lee Thompson

|

rowspan="2" | 1962

| H.M.S. Defiant

| Vizard

| Lewis Gilbert

|

Lawrence of Arabia

| Colonel Brighton

| David Lean

|

rowspan="2" | 1964

| The Fall of the Roman Empire

| Verulus

| Anthony Mann

|

East of Sudan

| Private Baker

| Nathan H. Juran

|

rowspan="2" | 1965

| Operation Crossbow

| Bamford

| Michael Anderson

|

A Study in Terror

| Doctor Murray

| James Hill

|

rowspan="2" | 1966

| The Poppy Is Also a Flower

| Captain Vanderbilt

| Terence Young

|

Misunderstood

| Sir John Edward Duncombe

| Luigi Comencini

|

rowspan="3" | 1969

| Mackenna's Gold

| Older Englishman

| rowspan="2" | J. Lee Thompson

|

Before Winter Comes

| Brigadier Bewley

|

Anne of the Thousand Days

| Thomas Wolsey

| Charles Jarrott

|

1972

| Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask)

| The King

| Woody Allen

|

1973

| Bequest to the Nation

| Lord Minto

| James Cellan Jones

|

1974

| The Tamarind Seed

| Jack Loder

| Blake Edwards

|

1976

| The Eagle Has Landed

| Admiral Canaris

| John Sturges

|

1977

| Holocaust 2000

| Griffith

| Alberto De Martino

|

1979

| Murder by Decree

| Sir Charles Warren

| Bob Clark

|

rowspan="2" | 1988

| The Legend of the Holy Drinker

| The Distinguished Gentleman

| Ermanno Olmi

|

Buster

| Sir James McDowell

| David Green

|

1989

| Magdalene

| Father Noessler

| {{ill|Monica Teuber|de|Monika Teuber}}

| rowspan="2" | Posthumous release

1990

| King of the Wind

| Lord Granville

| Peter Duffell

1993

| The Thief and the Cobbler

| King Nod

| Richard Williams

| Posthumous release, original version, voice

=Television=

class="wikitable sortable"
Year

! Film

! Role

! Director

! class="unsortable" | Notes

1954

| Sunday Night Theatre

| Othello

| {{N/A}}

| TV series, 1 episode: "We Live to Please"

1956

| Producers' Showcase

| Various

| Various

| TV series, 2 episodes

1958

| Suspicion

| Graham

| Jack Smight

| TV series, 1 episode: "The Man with the Gun"

1959–61

| Armchair Theatre

| Various

| Various

| TV series, 3 episodes

1961

| BBC Sunday-Night Play

| The General

| Leo Lehmann

| TV series, 1 episode: "A Reason for Staying"

1961–65

| ITV Play of the Week

| Various

| Various

| TV series, 3 episodes

1963

| Man of the World

| Dr. Moretti

| John Llewellyn Moxey

| TV series, 1 episode: "The Enemy"

rowspan="3" | 1964

| Drama 64

| Samurai

| James Ferman

| TV series, 1 episode: "Miss Hanago"

Espionage

| Philip

| Michael Powell

| TV series, 1 episode: "A Free Agent"

The Saint

| Lord Thornton Yearley

| Peter Yates

| TV series, 1 episode: "The Noble Sportsman"

rowspan="2" | 1966

| Court Martial

| Colonel Julian Rodney

| Peter Maxwell

| TV series, 1 episode: "The House Where He Lived"

Barefoot in Athens

| Pausanias

| George Schaefer

| TV movie

1967

| Playhouse

| Daniel Bloch

| John Gorrie

| TV series, 1 episode: "The Waste Spaces"

1968

| A Case of Libel

| Colonel Douglas

| Charles Jarrott

| rowspan="3" | TV movie

rowspan="2" | 1969

| Destiny of a Spy

| Colonel Malendin

| Boris Sagal

Red Peppers

| Mr. Edwards

| Michael Mills

1969–70

| Strange Report

| Adam Strange

| Various

| rowspan="2" | TV series

1970

| The Six Wives of Henry VIII

| Narrator

| Naomi Capon
John Glenister

1973

| Jarrett

| Cosmo Bastrop

| Barry Shear

| TV movie

rowspan="3" | 1974

| QB VII

| Tom Banniester

| Tom Gries

| rowspan="2" | Miniseries

Moses the Lawgiver

| Aaron

| Gianfranco De Bosio

Great Expectations

| Jaggers

| Joseph Hardy

| TV movie

1974–75

| The Lives of Benjamin Franklin

| Dartmouth

| Glenn Jordan

| Miniseries, 2 episodes

rowspan="2" | 1976

| The Story of David

| King Saul

| Alex Segal

| rowspan="2" | TV movie

21 Hours at Munich

| General Zvi Zamir

| William A. Graham

1978

| BBC2 Play of the Week

| The Old Man

| David Jones

| TV series, 1 episode: "Ice Age"

rowspan="2" | 1979

| The First Part of King Henry the Fourth

| rowspan="2" | Sir John Falstaff

| rowspan="2" | David Giles

| rowspan="2" | TV movie

The Second Part of King Henry the Fourth
rowspan="4" | 1981

| Manions of America

| Lord Montgomery

| Charles S. Dubin
Joseph Sargent

| rowspan="2" | Miniseries

Masada

| Rubrius Gallus

| Boris Sagal

Tales of the Unexpected

| Kyros Kassoulas

| John Gorrie

| TV series, 1 episode: "The Last Bottle in the World"

Dial M for Murder

| Insp. Hubbard

| Boris Sagal

| TV movie

rowspan="3" | 1984

| Lace

| Dr. Geneste

| William Hale

| rowspan="2" | Miniseries

The Last Days of Pompeii

| Quintus

| Peter R. Hunt

The Testament of John

| John Douglas

| Don Taylor

| rowspan="2" | TV movie

1985

| The Key to Rebecca

| Abdullah

| David Hemmings

1986

| The Theban plays, by Sophocles

| Oedipus

| Don Taylor

| Miniseries, 1 episode: "Oedipus at Colonus"

rowspan="2" | 1988

| The Bourne Identity

| Gen. François Villiers

| Roger Young

| TV movie

Reaching for the Skies

| Narrator

| {{N/A}}

| TV series, documentary

rowspan="2" | 1989

| The Endless Game

| Glanville

| Bryan Forbes

| Miniseries, 1 episode

Confessional

| The Pope

| Gordon Flemyng

| Posthumous release, miniseries, 2 episodes

Books

Quayle authored two novels and an autobiography.

  • Eight Hours from England (novel) (1945, Heinemann)
  • On Such a Night (novel) (1947, Heinemann)
  • [https://archive.org/details/quayleatimetospeak A Time to Speak] (autobiography) (1990, Barrie & Jenkins)

The first novel is a semi-fictional account of his war service with the S.O.E. in Albania.

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

  • Information on Quayle's war experience taken from {{cite book | first=Patrick |last=Howarth |title=Undercover| publisher=Routledge |location=London|year=1980|isbn=0-7100-0573-3}} Howarth was an early member of SOE's HQ.
  • The Wildest Province: SOE in the Land of the Eagle (2008), by Roderick Bailey, London: Cape.
  • His autobiography: Time to Speak (1990)