TCM REMEMBERS LEO MCKERN, 1920-2002
The recent death of Leo McKern, 82, marked the passing of one of Britain's finest and most respected character actors. He was suffering from ill health in recent years and was moved to a nursing home a few weeks before his death on July 23 2002 in Bath, England. An actor of commanding presence with a deep-throated voice, the portly, bulbous-nosed McKern had a long, distinguished career spanning more than half a century, earning numerous plaudits along the way in all major mediums: theatre, film and television.
Born Reginald McKern on March 16, 1920 in Sydney, Australia; he served with the Australian Army during World War II and worked in regional theatre in his native Sydney before immigrating to England in 1946. It was a slow start, but after a three-year apprenticeship of painting scenery, stage-managing and acting, McKern eventually joined the celebrated Old Vic theatrical company in 1949 and proved one of the more versatile actors in the troupe tackling diverse roles in comedy, the classics and serious contemporary parts.
His film debut came in Murder in the Cathedral (1952) but it took a few years before he made his mark in cinema. Some of his best film work included roles as Peter Sellers' comic henchman in the classic satire The Mouse That Roared (1959); a bungling train robber in the charming Disney film The Horse Without a Head (1963); a nefarious professor who kills off his colleagues for amusement in the brilliant black comedy A Jolly Bad Fellow (1964); Clang, a cartoonish villain in the Beatles' pop film Help! (1965); Cromwell, the persecutor of Sir Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons (1966) and as Thomas Ryan in the David Lean drama, Ryan's Daughter (1970).
Yet despite all the accolades McKern earned in theatre and films, it was television where he foundinternational fame as the wily, irascible barrister Horace P. Rumpole in John Mortimer's Rumpole of the Bailey in 1975. Infusing the character with beguiling skill and energy, McKern made the acerbic, wine swilling, Tennyson-quoting Rumpole a much loved figure that was adored by critics, audiences and even its creator Mortimer. Perhaps Mortimer offered the most fitting tribute when he once referred to McKern - "His acting exists where I always hope my writing will be: about two feet above the ground, a little larger than life, but always taking off from reality." Enough said.
By Michael T. Toole
KATY JURADO, 1924 - 2002
Katy Jurado, an Oscar nominee and major actress in Westerns, died July 5th at the age of 78. She was born in Guadalajara, Mexico on January 16th 1924 as Maria Cristina Estella Marcela Jurado Garcia, daughter of a cattle rancher and an opera singer. Jurado started to appear in Mexican films in 1943. After 15 films in her native country, director Budd Boetticher saw Jurado attending a bullfight (Jurado wrote about the subject for Mexican newspapers) and cast her in his Bullfighter and the Lady (1952), her Hollywood debut. For much of her career Jurado alternated between the two film industries. In the US, she was memorable for the sensual energy she brought to roles in High Noon (1952), One-Eyed Jacks (1961) which was directed by Marlon Brando, Sam Peckinpah's Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1973) and John Huston's Under the Volcano (1984). She was nominated for an Oscar as Best Supporting Actress for Broken Lance (1954). Jurado's Mexican films were in a broader range of genres and included Luis Bunuel's El Bruto (1952), Ismael Rodriguez's We the Poor and Miguel Littin's The Widow Montiel (1979). She won three Ariel Awards (Mexican equivalent to the Oscars) and one special award. She was married to Ernest Borgnine from the end of 1959 to summer 1963. One of her final films was The Hi-Lo Country (1998), a contemporary Western directed by Stephen Frears and co-starring Woody Harrelson, Billy Crudup and Penelope Cruz.
by Lang Thompson
DOLORES GRAY, 1924 - 2002
Broadway and nightclub star Dolores Gray died June 26th at the age of 78. Her movie career was brief but consisted of high-profile MGM musicals which guaranteed her a place in film history. Gray was born in Chicago on June 7th, 1924 (and where, according to a common story, she was accidentally shot by a gangster as a child and had a bullet in her lung her entire life). As a teenager she began singing in California until Rudy Vallee featured her on his radio show. Gray moved to Broadway in 1944 and then to the London stage in 1947, solidifying her reputation as a singer/actress while constantly giving the gossip columnists plenty to write about. She had two small singing roles in Lady for a Night (1941) and Mr. Skeffington (1944) but didn't really light up the big screen until It's Always Fair Weather (1955) even though Gray reportedly didn't much care for the role. Her rendition of "Thanks a Lot, But No Thanks," which has her gunning down a slew of male dancers on-stage and kicking them through trap doors, is a genuine showstopper. Three more unforgettable musical roles quickly followed: Kismet (1955), The Opposite Sex (1956, which Gray turned down Funny Face to do) and Designing Women (1957). That was it for Gray's film career. She kept busy with TV appearances (mostly singing though she did one 1988 episode of the cult show Dr. Who) and a busy recording and nightclub schedule. In 1987, she appeared in a British production of Follies at Stephen Sondheim's request.
by Lang Thompson
They All Died Laughing
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Don Chaffey
Leo Mckern
Janet Munro
Maxine Audley
Duncan Macrae
Dennis Price
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Professor Bowles-Ottery, a brilliant but high-living chemist married to an actress and teaching at St. Simeon's University, discovers a poison that leaves no trace but which induces a state of hilarity in the victim shortly before death. He keeps his discovery a secret, thinking of ways it can be used in man's best interest; but when the university's senior proctor annoys him over regulations, he gets a dose of the poison and winds up dancing on the campus in his underwear and singing dirty songs before he dies. Delia Brooks, research assistant to Bowles-Ottery, decides to advance her career by compromising the professor. Mrs. Pugh-Smith, the town gossip, sees the professor lunching with Delia, tells Clarinda, his wife, and it is not long before Mrs. Pugh-Smith dies after making a public fool of herself. Hughes, his competitor for an important professorship, receives a dose when it seems likely that he will get the appointment, and he dies after disgracing himself. Delia uncovers the solution to the deaths and threatens to expose the professor unless he marries her. Ostensibly he agrees, but he gives her a poisoned cigarette from his laboratory before leaving her apartment. As Delia becomes exhilarated she realizes what he has done and telephones the police before she dies. Meanwhile, Clarinda has filled the cigarette boxes from a supply found in her husband's laboratory. The police come to arrest him, and the professor, amused because proof of the crimes is impossible, jauntily lights a cigarette. Too late he realizes the cigarette box should have been empty, and after Clarinda reveals the source of the supply, he races from the house, jumps into his car, and drives head on into a steamroller, laughing wildly all the time.
Director
Don Chaffey
Cast
Leo Mckern
Janet Munro
Maxine Audley
Duncan Macrae
Dennis Price
Miles Malleson
Leonard Rossiter
Alan Wheatley
Geoffrey Bayldon
Patricia Jessel
Dinsdale Landen
George Benson
Mark Dignam
Jerome Willis
Ralph Michael
Mervyn Johns
Raymond Ray
Joyce Carey
Cliff Michelmore
Wally Patch
Crew
Michael Balcon
John Barry
Dennis Bertera
H. L. Bird
Robert Ellis
Gerald Gibbs
Robert Hamer
Alan Haven
Steven Pallos
George Provis
Philip Shipway
Peter Tanner
Donald Taylor
Donald Taylor
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
TCM Remembers - Leo McKern
TCM Remembers - Leo McKern
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
Opened in London in May 1964 as A Jolly Bad Fellow; running time: 96 min. Also shown in the United States under the British release title. The working title of this film is For He's a Jolly Bad Fellow. Sources conflict in crediting the role of Epicene.