Dudley Moore


Actor
Dudley Moore

About

Also Known As
Dudley Stuart John Moore
Birth Place
Dagenham, Essex, England, GB
Born
April 19, 1935
Died
March 27, 2002
Cause of Death
Pneumonia As A Complication Of Progressive Supranuclear Palsy

Biography

A mischievous presence on British stage and television during the 1960s, Dudley Moore was one-half of an influential comedy team with Peter Cook before finding solo success in America as the giddy star of Hollywood comedies like "10" (1979) and "Arthur" (1980). With Cook, he was the eternally put-upon sidekick, the butt of his taller, more verbally vicious partner's taunts as well as his...

Family & Companions

Suzy Kendall
Wife
Actor, model. Married in 1968; divorced.
Tuesday Weld
Wife
Actor. Married on September 20, 1975; divorced in 1980.
Susan Anton
Companion
Actor, singer. Had long-term relationship from c. 1980 toc. 1987.
Brogan Lane
Wife
Former model. Born c. 1960; married on February 21, 1988, divorced in December 1991.

Bibliography

"Pete & Dud: An Illustrated Biography"
Alexander Games, Andre Deutsch (1999)
"The Authorized Biography of Dudley Moore"
Barbara Paskin, Sidgwick & Jackson (1997)
"Off Beat: A Musical Companion"
Dudley Moore, St. Martin's Press (1993)
"Musical Bumps"
Dudley Moore, Robson Books (1986)

Notes

He was born with a clubfoot and a shorter left leg.

Was part owner (with Tony Bill and Liza Minnelli) of 72 Sarket Street Club in Venice, California. Opened in 1984. Closed in November 2000.

Biography

A mischievous presence on British stage and television during the 1960s, Dudley Moore was one-half of an influential comedy team with Peter Cook before finding solo success in America as the giddy star of Hollywood comedies like "10" (1979) and "Arthur" (1980). With Cook, he was the eternally put-upon sidekick, the butt of his taller, more verbally vicious partner's taunts as well as his best sounding board, but after the duo split in the 1970s, Moore became an unlikely romantic hero - if one given to frequent pratfalls - in American comedies. A classically trained pianist, his tenure as a movie star was short-lived; in the 1980s, his health was jeopardized by a degenerative brain disease. His death in 2002 robbed the comedy and film world of one of their most joyous and charismatic figures.

The son of working class parents, John Moore, a railway electrician, and Ada Francis (Huges), a secretary, Dudley Stuart John Moore was born April 19, 1935 in Dagenham, an industrial suburb in east London, England. From the start, life proved enormously challenging and tragic for the boy. Not only was he short in stature, but was born with two clubfeet, one of which never responded to corrective treatment. Ada was less than sympathetic to her son's handicap, making a point of telling him she had wished he had never been born, such was her disgust with his deformity. Music became a refuge for Moore, who blossomed into a prodigy on piano and organ at a young age; at age 14, he was playing the pipe organ at church weddings. His musical talents won him a scholarship to Magdalen College, Oxford, where by day, he studied the organ and composition, and performed at jazz clubs and cabarets in the evening. Moore soon developed a following in nightclub circles and began performing with such seasoned players as musician John Dankworth and singer Cleo Lane. He also explored acting and comedy through a friend and fellow Oxford student, Alan Bennett, with whom he performed in the famed Oxford Revue Comedy Group.

Bennett also gave him his first brush with fame by referring him to producer John Bassett, who was assembling a comedy revue called "Beyond the Fringe." The satirical sketch show introduced Moore and Bennett to Peter Cook and Jonathan Miller, who had made a name for themselves as comic talents at Cambridge. "Beyond the Fringe" became a sensation in England for its surreal and often biting humor, which targeted political and military figures as absurd and often dangerous personalities. Moore soon had to abandon his music career to perform with "Fringe," which eventually made its way to New York, where he and his castmates won a special Tony Award in 1963. Its impact upon British and American comedy was far-reaching, and could be felt in such later efforts as "Monty Python's Flying Circus" (BBC, 1969-1974), "Mr. Show" (HBO, 1995-98) and "The Kids in the Hall" (CBC, 1988-1994/NBC, 1995-98).

After "Fringe's" spectacular run, Moore returned to England, where he was given his own television series, "Not Only. But Also" (BBC, 1964-1970). Moore invited Cook to join him as his guest on the series, but their comedic repartee proved so popular with audiences that it soon became the focus of the show. Their most popular sketches were a series of conversations, dubbed the "Dagenham Dialogues," with Moore and Cook playing working class men Pete and Dud, who discussed everything from high art and motion pictures to the life span of geckos without a single informed idea on the subject. Moore and Cook would frequently record an improvised version of the sketch prior to air time, and deviated wildly from the material while performing live on the air. The highlight of most "Dagenham Dialogues" was Cook's wholehearted attempts to make Moore break into gales of infectious laughter, much to the audience's delight. Sadly, most of the episodes of "Not Only. But Also" were destroyed during the BBC's frequent eliminations of what they considered outdated programs.

Moore and Cook's popularity soon translated into a film career, beginning in 1966 with "The Wrong Box," Bryan Forbes' broad all-star adaptation of a Robert Louis Stevenson novel about a group of eccentrics vying for a vast fortune. Cook and Moore played the villainous cousins of star Michael Caine, who thwarted their schemes at every turn. The duo were front and center for their next screen effort, "Bedazzled" (1967), a biting and frequently surreal black comedy about a lovelorn short order cook (Moore) who sells his soul to the Devil (Cook) in exchange for the heart of the woman (Eleanor Bron) he loves. Moore co-wrote the film's script with Cook, as well as its pop-psychedelic score. A misfire upon its release, the Stanley Donen fantasy-comedy eventually developed a devoted cult following.

Moore took a solo turn as star, co-writer and composer of "30 is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia" (1968), a harmless romantic comedy co-starring his first wife, actress Suzy Kendall, before reuniting with Cook for "The Bed-Sitting Room" (1969), comic Spike Milligan's bizarre and hauntingly surreal comedy about survivors in a post-apocalyptic London. The duo's movie fortunes faltered after a string of failed pictures, including the period comedy "Monte Carlo or Bust" (1969), so they took to the road with a stage show called "Behind the Fridge," which was built around their best "Not Only. But Also" sketches. The production won a Tony Award, but Cook's growing dependency on alcohol put a severe strain on their working and personal relationships. To ease tensions, Cook would frequently book a recording studio and improvise routines with Moore as Derek and Clive, who were a besotted variation on Pete and Dud. The rambling, frequently profane dialogues eventually made their way onto bootleg record releases, beginning with 1976's Derek and Clive (Live). The duo also reunited for a final comedy film, but the result was a dismal and crass comic take on "The Hound of the Baskervilles," with Cook as the master detective and Moore as Dr. Watson.

Meanwhile, across the pond, Moore had landed a supporting role in "Foul Play" (1978), a romantic comedy-mystery starring Chevy Chase and Goldie Hawn. Though his role was supporting, Moore made the most of his character, a diminutive lothario blissfully unaware of his lack of appeal. The performance earned him a Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actor, and launched his career as a solo performer in the United States. The following year, Moore's star ascended even further with "10" (1979), a smart and sexy comedy about a middle-aged composer who leaves his longtime girlfriend (Julie Andrews) for a fantasy woman (Bo Derek). Initially envisioned as a project for George Segal, Moore delivered a winning performance that perfectly balanced the romantic and dramatic aspects of his role with the more outrageous slapstick moments. A major hit with moviegoers, it established Moore as a leading man and made Bo Derek and overnight sex symbol. Around this time, he also developed a reputation as an unlikely ladies' man, enjoying lengthy relationships with such beauties as the towering actress-model Susan Anton and Tuesday Weld, whom he married in 1975 and divorced in 1980.

As Moore's star rose in Hollywood, he was mortified to discover that the Derek and Clive albums had developed a cult following among comedy listeners. Nevertheless, he relented to recording a final collection of routines with Cook, which was also filmed for a documentary. The resulting picture, "Derek and Clive Get the Horn" (1979), showed both the best and worst aspects of their relationship: Cook was still able to reduce Moore to peals of laughter, but also displayed a streak of angry jealously over his partner's solo success, and delivered a stinging personal attack that drove Moore from the studio and closed the door on their relationship for years.

Moore returned to features with "Wholly Moses!" (1980), a dismal Biblical comedy about a reluctant Old Testament prophet, but rebounded with "Arthur" (1981), a sparkling, old-fashioned romantic comedy about an alcoholic playboy who falls for a shoplifter (Liza Minnelli). A major hit in the summer of 1981, its success was due entirely to Moore's ebullient performance, which captured both the manic, childlike glee of his character and the long-simmering hurt of a man forgotten by a father who pawned him off on a frosty valet (John Gielgud). Moore received a Golden Globe for his iconic turn, as well as an Oscar nomination. Sadly, it would also serve as the beginning of the end of his film career.

Moore's next project, a melodramatic romantic comedy called "Six Weeks" (1982), was largely dismissed by critics and viewers, as were "Lovesick" (1983) and "Romantic Comedy" (1983). He rebounded briefly with "Micki + Maude" (1984), which reunited him with Blake Edwards for a giddy comedy about a reporter (Moore) who juggles relationships with his wife (Ann Reinking) and mistress (Amy Irving), both of whom are pregnant. The film earned Moore a Golden Globe award, and seemed to signal a comeback, but a 1984 remake of Preston Sturges' "Unfaithfully Yours" (1948) and "Best Defense" (1984), a military comedy with Eddie Murphy, were both failures. During this period, Moore was offered "Splash" (1984), but unwittingly launched Tom Hanks' movie career by turning it down.

By 1985, Moore's star was on the wane. The expensive, effects-laded fantasy "Santa Claus: The Movie" (1985) received a blockbuster publicity build-up, but failed at American box offices. Follow-ups, including "Like Father Like Son" (1987) and even "Arthur II: On the Rocks" (1988) met similar fates, but a even more troubling problem was developing for Moore. He found himself struggling to remember lines and even keep his balance on movie sets and in public, which the press interpreted as a drinking problem, a la Arthur. Frustrated, he poured his energies into playing the piano and composing, and developed a pair of television miniseries, 1991's "Orchestra!" and 1993's "Concerto for Showtime that introduced viewers to the sections of a classical orchestra and the concerto, respectively. But his physical ailments continued to haunt him, and eventually hampered his ability to perform live. He returned briefly to feature films, but the results, including 1990's "Crazy People," failed to revive his career. Moore then tried his hand at television with a pair of sitcoms, but neither "Dudley" (CBS, 1993) or "Daddy's Girls" (CBS, 1994) lasted a single season. He would make one final one-camera appearance, in the 1995 comedy-documentary "The Disappearance of Kevin Johnson," before the ailments that had been plaguing him took over his life.

Moore was devastated by the news of his old partner Peter Cook's death in 1995, and fellow mourners at his funeral noted that Moore himself seemed gravely ill. Most attributed it to drinking or the personal problems that had overwhelmed his life; his fourth marriage to Nicole Rothschild had been marred by a 1994 arrest for alleged domestic abuse. He struggled to get through a 1996 music tour of Australia, and made headlines for losing the lead role in "The Mirror Has Two Faces" (1996) because of his inability to remember his lines. The following year, Moore underwent quadruple bypass surgery, which preceded four minor strokes. He recorded his final performance as the legendary King Kong and his discoverer, Carl Denham, in the animated feature "The Mighty Kong" (1998) before announcing that he was suffering from progressive supranuclear palsy, a rare and terminal degenerative brain disease that had produced the symptoms that had plagued him for years.

Moore's condition quickly deteriorated, leaving him mute and wheelchair bound. Onlookers were shocked by his appearance at a 2001 ceremony at Buckingham Palace, where he was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire. The following year, Moore succumbed to pneumonia on March 27, 2002. His work with Cook received numerous tributes in the years that followed, most notably the 2004 television drama "Not Only But Always" (Channel 4) and the stage play "Pete and Dud: Come Again" (2005). When "Arthur" (2011) was remade with British comic Russell Brand in the quintessential Moore role, it sparked interest in the 1981 film, as well as defense of the late actor as the only actor to truly deliver the goods in that particular role.

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

The Mighty Kong (1998)
A Weekend in the Country (1996)
Simon Farrell
The Disappearance of Kevin Johnson (1996)
Himself
Really Wild Animals: Adventures in Asia (1994)
Voice Of Spin
Really Wild Animals: Deep Sea Dive (1994)
Voice Of Spin
Really Wild Animals: Wonders Down Under (1994)
Voice Of Spin
Really Wild Animals: Amazing North America (1994)
Voice Of Spin
Really Wild Animals: Totally Tropical Rain Forest (1994)
Voice Of Spin
Really Wild Animals: Swinging Safari (1994)
Voice Of Spin
Parallel Lives (1994)
This Joint Is Jumpin' (1993)
Blame It on the Bellboy (1992)
Melvyn Orton
Crazy People (1990)
The Adventures of Milo and Otis (1989)
Narration
Arthur 2: On The Rocks (1988)
Arthur Bach
Like Father, Like Son (1987)
Santa Claus: The Movie (1985)
Patch
Micki & Maude (1984)
Rob Salinger
Unfaithfully Yours (1984)
Best Defense (1984)
Lovesick (1983)
Romantic Comedy (1983)
Jason Carmichael
Six Weeks (1982)
Performer
Arthur (1981)
Wholly Moses! (1980)
Derek and Clive Get the Horn (1980)
10 (1979)
To Russia... With Elton (1979)
Narrator
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978)
Foul Play (1978)
Pleasure at Her Majesty's (1976)
Narrator
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1972)
Those Daring Young Men in Their Jaunty Jalopies (1969)
Lieut. Kit Barrington
The Bed Sitting Room (1969)
Police sergeant
30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia (1968)
Rupert Street
Bedazzled (1967)
Stanley Moon
The Wrong Box (1966)
John

Writer (Feature Film)

The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978)
Screenplay
30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia (1968)
Screenwriter
Bedazzled (1967)
Story

Producer (Feature Film)

Arthur 2: On The Rocks (1988)
Executive Producer
Derek and Clive Get the Horn (1980)
Executive Producer

Music (Feature Film)

Parallel Lives (1994)
Song Performer
Six Weeks (1982)
Music
Derek and Clive Get the Horn (1980)
Music
The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978)
Music
Staircase (1969)
Music
Inadmissible Evidence (1968)
Music comp & Conductor
30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia (1968)
Music comp & Conductor
Inadmissible Evidence (1968)
Composer
Bedazzled (1967)
Music

Cast (Special)

The 52nd Annual Golden Globe Awards (1995)
Presenter
Dudley Moore (1994)
A Salute to the Newport Jazz Festival (1993)
Disney's Young Musicians Symphony Orchestra (1993)
Host
What Is This Thing Called Love? (1993)
The Full Wax (1992)
The Movie Awards (1991)
Presenter
Voices That Care (1991)
The Meaning of Life (1991)
Life of Python (1990)
The Secret Policeman's Biggest Ball (1990)
Richard Lewis: "I'm Doomed" (1990)
The 4th Annual American Comedy Awards (1990)
Performer
Sinatra 75: The Best Is Yet to Come (1990)
Camera Magic: Images of Nature (1990)
Host
The Eighth Van Cliburn International Piano Competition: Here to Make Music (1989)
The 75th Anniversary of Beverly Hills (1989)
Christmas With the Stars: An International Earthquake Benefit (1989)
The 61st Annual Academy Awards Presentation (1989)
Performer
America's All-Star Tribute to Elizabeth Taylor (1989)
Performer
The 60th Annual Academy Awards Presentation (1988)
Performer
The 2nd Annual American Comedy Awards (1988)
Performer
The Comedy Club Special (1988)
Comic Relief II (1987)
Mancini and Friends (1987)
Santa Claus: The Making of the Movie (1987)
W.C. Fields Straight Up (1986)
Narrator
Bob Hope Special: Happy Birthday, Bob! (1983)
The American Film Institute Salute to John Huston (1983)
Performer
Bob Hope Special: Bob Hope's Pink Panther Thanksgiving Gala (1982)
The Muppets Go Hollywood (1981)

Music (Special)

Mancini and Friends (1987)
Song Performer

Life Events

1955

First stage appearance with Oxford University Drama Society

1958

Became resident composer for London's Royal Court Theater; composed first stage score for "Serjeant Musgrave's Dance"

1959

Joined the John Dankworth Band, featuring singer Cleo Laine, playing jazz piano

1959

Performed as jazz pianist at the Duplex in NYC

1959

Traveled to the USA as a sideman with the Vic Lewis Orchestra; toured US military camps

1960

Professional stage debut, "Beyond the Fringe" at the Edinburgh Festival, Scotland; worked with Jonathan Miller, Alan Bennett, and Peter Cook

1961

London stage debut, "Beyond the Fringe"

1961

Worked as a nightclub performer in London

1962

Broadway debut, "Beyond the Fringe"

1967

With Cook, co-wrote and co-starred the stylish updating of the Faust legend, "Bedazzled"; also scored

1967

Composed first film score and co-wrote first screen story for "30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia"

1969

Appeared in the black comedy "The Bed Sitting Room"

1970

Had lead role in the London production of Woody Allen's stage comedy "Play It Again, Sam"

1972

Starred in British TV series, "It's Lulu ... Not to Mention Dudley Moore"

1975

Settled in Los Angeles

1978

Co-starred with Chevy Chase and Goldie Hawn in "Foul Play"

1979

Starred as a married man intrigued by a woman he spots on the beach in "10"; replaced George Segal in role

1980

Debut as an executive producer, "Derek and Clive Get the Horn"; also starred

1981

Performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic in a Gershwin salute

1981

Received Best Actor Oscar nomination as the alcoholic title character, a spoiled wealthy man who finally finds love, in "Arthur"

1982

Cast as a politician romancing a widow with a sick child in "Six Weeks"; also composed the film's musical score

1983

Starred in "Lovesick" and "Romantic Comedy"

1984

Headlined the remake of "Unfaithfully Yours", playing a jealous orchestral conductor

1985

Played a wisecracking elf in "Santa Claus: The Movie"

1988

Reprised his signature role in the inferior sequel "Arthur II: On the Rocks"; also served as an executive producer

1991

With Sir Georg Solti, co-hosted the Showtime series "Orchestra!"; also served as an executive producer

1992

Last starring role in features "Blame It on the Bellboy"

1993

Starred in the short-lived American TV sitcom series, "Dudley" (CBS)

1994

Second attempt at US TV series, the short-lived CBS sitcom "Daddy's Girls"

1994

Voiced Spin in a series of National Geographic videos released under the umbrella title of "Really Wild Animals"

1995

Replaced by George Segal in "The Mirror Has Two Faces", directed by and starring Barbra Streisand

1996

Acted in "A Weekend in the Country"; aired on USA Network

1997

Sued for nine counts of assault, battery, domestic violence and defamation by Nicole Rothschild, estranged wife

1997

Underwent open heart surgery (September)

1999

In late September, announced he was suffering from progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), a rare, degenerative Parkinson's disease-like brain disorder

Videos

Movie Clip

10 -- (1979) -- (Movie Clip) I Forgot My Tutu Remarkable exchange, candid in the extreme but with language no longer socially acceptable, Dudley Moore as top Hollywood composer George, working in Malibu with his gay professional partner Hugh (Robert Webber), tangling over the latter’s lover (Walter George Alton), in writer-director Blake Edwards’ 10, 1979.
10 -- (1979) -- (Movie Clip) The Very Best Of Men Must Roam Headed home through Beverly Hills, top Hollywood composer George (Dudley Moore), listening his movie star girlfriend (Julie Andrews, wife of writer-director Blake Edwards, as Samantha) performing a song he presumably wrote (though it?s actually an original by Henry Mancini and Robert Wells), discovers the title character (Bo Derek), and a cop (Bill Lucking), in 10, 1979.
10 -- (1979) -- (Movie Clip) She's Always Busy Still trying to reconcile with movie and musical star girlfriend Sam (Julie Andrews) after a fight, and indulging in more fleshy Hollywood Hills telescope voyeurism (Don Calfa his show-off neighbor), even as he subtly pursues the title character (Bo Derek), famous composer George (Dudley Moore) dives into director Blake Edwards’ trademark physical comedy, in 10, 1979.
10 -- (1979) -- (Movie Clip) How Do You Feel About 42? Opening director Blake Edwards’ original screenplay, Dudley Moore in his breakthrough role, as illustrious Hollywood composer George, feted at the Malibu home of his professional partner Hugh (Robert Webber), with his long-term significant other, Julie Andrews as Samantha, in 10, 1979, co-starring Bo Derek.
10 -- (1979) -- (Movie Clip) You A English Fella? In Puerto Vallarta, after his drunk-drugged decision to pursue the title character (Bo Derek) who’s there on her honeymoon, hung-over big-time Hollywood composer George (Dudley Moore), battling the hot sand, meets attendant J. Victor Lopez, and fellow guests John Chappell and Art Kassul, in Blake Edwards’ hit 10, 1979.
Foul Play (1978) -- (Movie Clip) Open, Archbishop San Francisco appears, the Archbishop (Eugene Roche) gets killed, divorcee Marion (Goldie Hawn) makes eye contact with cop Tony (Chevy Chase) who bumbles, in the opening to Foul Play, 1978.
Foul Play (1978) -- (Movie Clip) My Place Or Yours? Still not knowing why she's being pursued, San Francisco librarian Gloria (Goldie Hawn) ducks into a bar fleeing her albino assailant (William Frankfather) where she turns to baffled Stanley (Dudley Moore, in his Hollywood breakthrough role) for protection, in writer-director Colin Higgins' Foul Play, 1978.
Arthur (1981) -- (Movie Clip) I'll Alert The Media Wise-cracking drunken zillionaire Dudley Moore (title character), who brought hooker Gloria (Anne DeSalvo) to dinner at the Plaza in the opening scene, is awakened by servant Hobson (John Gielgud, in his Academy Award-winning role), in writer-director Steve Gordon’s Arthur, 1981.
Arthur (1981) -- (Movie Clip) Tell Him, Alfred! Discouraged millionaire Dudley Moore (title character), shopping with servant Hobson (John Gielgud) at Bergdorf's after agreeing to marry in order to stay rich, is fascinated by fellow shopper Linda (Liza Minnelli), Irving Metzman on security, in writer-director Steve Gordon's Arthur, 1981.
Arthur (1981) -- (Movie Clip) Don't Die Anymore Childish Manhattan millionaire Dudley Moore (title character) calls to tell Queens waitress Linda (Liza Minnelli) he’s getting married, her father (Barney Martin) not taking it well, then conferring with driver Bitterman (Ted Ross) and ailing servant Hobson (John Gielgud), in Arthur, 1981.
30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthia -- (Movie Clip) The Real Stuff Composer and wanna-be husband Rupert (Dudley Moore) getting acquainted with new neighbor Louise (Moore's wife, Suzy Kendall), leading to a musical fantasy of Moore's own composition, in 30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthia, 1968.
30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthia -- (Movie Clip) There's No Bell First meeting between Rupert (co-screenwriter Dudley Moore), who's in a hurry to get married, and the new girl down the hall Louise (Suzy Kendall, Moore's then-wife), from 30 Is A Dangerous Age, Cynthia, 1968.

Trailer

Family

John Moore
Father
Electrician.
Ada Francis Moore
Mother
Patrick H Moore
Son
Born on February 26, 1976; mother, Tuesday Weld.
Nicholas Anthony Moore
Son
Born on June 28, 1995; mother, Nicole Rothschild.

Companions

Suzy Kendall
Wife
Actor, model. Married in 1968; divorced.
Tuesday Weld
Wife
Actor. Married on September 20, 1975; divorced in 1980.
Susan Anton
Companion
Actor, singer. Had long-term relationship from c. 1980 toc. 1987.
Brogan Lane
Wife
Former model. Born c. 1960; married on February 21, 1988, divorced in December 1991.
Nicole Rothschild
Wife
Born c. 1964; claimed that Moore struck her on March 21, 1994; investigation of domestic abuse followed; married on April 16, 1994; separated on May 27, 1996; filed for divorce in June 1996; reconciled briefly in 1997 before re-filing for divorce in August; divorced in November 1998.

Bibliography

"Pete & Dud: An Illustrated Biography"
Alexander Games, Andre Deutsch (1999)
"The Authorized Biography of Dudley Moore"
Barbara Paskin, Sidgwick & Jackson (1997)
"Off Beat: A Musical Companion"
Dudley Moore, St. Martin's Press (1993)
"Musical Bumps"
Dudley Moore, Robson Books (1986)
"Dud and Pete: The Dagenham Dialogues"
Dudley Moore (1971)

Notes

He was born with a clubfoot and a shorter left leg.

Was part owner (with Tony Bill and Liza Minnelli) of 72 Sarket Street Club in Venice, California. Opened in 1984. Closed in November 2000.

With Tony Bill, part owner of the restaurant Maple Drive in Beverly Hills, California.

Moore's fourth wife Nicole Rothschild filed suit in June 1997, suing Moore on nine counts of domestic violence, assault, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and other claims asking for $10 million in damages.

Moore was fired from his role in "The Mirror Has Two Faces" because he was having problems recalling his lines. Rumors swirled that it was because he had a substance abuse problem (fueled in part by his signature role of "Arthur"). In reality, he was suffering from the early stages of progressive supranuclear palsy which results in impaired balance and slurred speech. Commenting on his condition, Moore was quoted, "It's so frustrating. My thoughts aren't always able to be amplified - they disappear into a blank space, a blank connection. ..."

Made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in June 2001.