Ian Holm

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Biography

Sir Ian Holm is an Academy Award-nominated British film and stage actor who was a star of the Royal Shakespeare Company, and played more than 100 roles in films and on television. He was born Ian Holm Cuthbert on September 12, 1931, in Goodmayes, Essex, UK, to Scottish parents who worked at the Essex mental asylum. His mother, Jean Wilson , and in 1998 he was knighted for his services to drama.

  • Primary profession
  • Actor·soundtrack·animation_department
  • Country
  • United Kingdom
  • Nationality
  • British
  • Gender
  • Male
  • Birth date
  • 12 September 1931
  • Place of birth
  • Goodmayes
  • Death age
  • 89
  • Spouses
  • Penelope Wilton
  • Education
  • Royal Academy of Dramatic Art

Music

Movies

TV

Books

Awards

Trivia

His children - with Lynn Mary Shaw: daughters Jessica Holm and Sarah-Jane Holm ; with Sophie Baker : son Harry Holm ; also had son Barnaby Holm and daughter Melissa Holm (who is now a casting director under the name of Lissy Holm) with professional photographer Bee Gilbert , with whom Holm had a relationship after his first marriage (1965-1976) but never married.

He was awarded the CBE in the 1989 Queens Birthday Honours List and was appointed Knight Bachelor in the 1998 Queens Birthday Honours List for his services to drama.

He developed a severe case of stage fright in 1976 while performing "The Iceman Cometh" and left the theatre. He has only returned three times since then.

He clearly has no objections to being buried up to his neck in the pursuit of his craft, as this has happened to him in no less than three films: Alien , Brazil and Simon Magus .

He was awarded the 1998 Laurence Olivier Theatre Award for Best Actor of the 1997 season for his performance in "King Lear" at the Royal National Theatre: Cottesloe stage.

He was awarded the 1993 London Evening Standard Theatre Award for Best Actor for his performance in "Moonlight".

He was awarded the 1997 London Critics Circle Theatre Award (Drama) for Best Actor for his performance in "King Lear" at the Royal National Theatre.

He was awarded the 1993 London Critics Circle Theatre Award (Drama Theatre Award) for Best Actor in "Moonlight". His wife, Penelope Wilton , was awarded Best Actress for "The Deep Blue Sea" at the same awards ceremony.

He was awarded the 1997 London Evening Standard Theatre Award for Best Actor for his performance in "King Lear".

He has two roles in common with Orson Bean. Bean was the voice of Bilbo Baggins in The Hobbit , while Holm played in the Peter Jackson trilogy. Bean also played Frodo in The Return of the King ; Holm played Frodo on BBC radio.

He is an Associate Member of Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA).

He has played Napoleon Bonaparte three times in "Napoleon and Love" , Time Bandits and The Emperors New Clothes - and was a front-runner for the role in Stanley Kubrick s unproduced biography.

He won Broadways 1967 Tony Award as Best Supporting or Featured Actor for Harold Pinter s "The Homecoming", a role he recreated in the film version with the same title, The Homecoming .

He has played a meteorologist in The Day After Tomorrow (as Professor Terry Rapson) and The Aviator (as Professor Fitz).

Though he has only appeared in two productions of "The Lord of the Rings", he has worked with three Aragorns. He appeared with Viggo Mortensen in the Lord of the Rings films, Robert Stephens in the radio adaptation, and worked with John Hurt in Alien . Mortensen and Hurt were also both last-minute replacements for other actors.

He was treated for prostate cancer in 2001.

He was slated to play Pope John Paul II in a CBS miniseries, but had to drop out because of undisclosed "personal reasons". Jon Voight took his place.

In a return to the Royal Shakespeare Company, where he first received acclaim in the mid-1960s for his contemporary stylings of "Richard III" and "Henry V", he developed a confidence-shattering case of "stage fright" during a 1976 performance of "The Iceman Cometh" and quickly withdrew from the production. His only stage appearance for almost two decades was as Astrov in "Uncle Vanya" in 1979. He finally returned to the theatre to create the role of Andy in Harold Pinter s short play "Moonlight" in 1993 for which he received the Evening Standard Award. His "King Lear" several years later earned him the Olivier Award as well as the Evening Standard and London Critics Circle Theatre awards.

He has worked with two Frodos - Christopher Guard in Les Miserables and Elijah Wood in Peter Jackson s Lord of the Rings trilogy. Holm also played Frodo in the BBC Radio production. He has also worked with three other Bilbos: Norman Bird (from Ralph Bakshi s film) in Oh! What a Lovely War and Young Winston ; Martin Freeman in The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey and The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug ; and John Le Mesurier in the BBC Radio production.

He shares two roles with Christian Clavier. They have both played Thenardier from "Les Miserables". Thenardier calls himself "The Sergeant of Napoleon", and even gives his tavern that name. Appropriately, Holm and Clavier have both played Napoleon himself.

He has appeared with David Warner in six films: The Bofors Gun , The Fixer , A Midsummer Nights Dream , "Holocaust" , S.O.S. Titanic and Time Bandits .

He has supplied voice for radio announcements by New York-Presbyterian Medical Center (New York City, USA), where he had been treated for prostate cancer.

His parents were Scottish.

As of 2014, has appeared in five films that were nominated for the Best Picture Oscar: Nicholas and Alexandra , Chariots of Fire , The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring , The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King and The Aviator . Of those, Chariots of Fire and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King are winners in the category.

He hates milk. Much to his discomfort, he had to repeatedly gargle and spit it out during his final scene in Alien .

He shares two roles with two other Bilbos. He and Orson Bean have both played Frodo Baggins, while he and Martin Freeman have both played King Richard III.

Along with Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller , he has played both Doctor Frankenstein and his Monster.

He replaced Donald Sutherland at the last minute in the lead role of The Sweet Hereafter .

He has appeared in two adaptations of the 1819 novel "Frankenstein" by Mary Shelley : he played both Victor Frankenstein and his Monster in "Mystery and Imagination" {Frankenstein (#4.2)} and Frankensteins father Baron Frankenstein in Mary Shelleys Frankenstein .

Along with Ronald Lacey , he was one of the first choices to play Morgus in Peter Davison s final serial as the Doctor, "Doctor Who" {The Caves of Androzani: Part One (#21.17)} , which instead went to John Normington.

When he played Frodo in the BBC radio dramatization of "The Lord of the Rings", he was 50 years old, the same age Frodo is when he begins his quest to destroy the One Ring.

Quotes

[on his Hobbit feet in the Lord of the Rings films] These things are,like boats with toes.

While shooting in Mexico, all conversation was dominated by bowels.

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