Daily Express

‘I’d rather be a proper actor than a film star’

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DESPITE the Nazi bombs his childhood was a happy one. A bright boy who was given every encouragem­ent by his parents, he got into Kingston High School after passing his 11-plus and it was there he discovered his love of performing.

“I had this little knack, which was my own thing. I wasn’t good at football and cricket but when we got to grammar school, in assembly, there was this stage and I just wanted to get up on it and speak.”

At 18 he went to study English at University College, London. “I really wanted to be at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art just down the street – and that’s where I spent the last two of my five years as a student.”

After graduating he appeared at the Old Vic and went on to replace Albert Finney – who later became a close friend – in the stage production of Billy Liar.

Then came that film breakthrou­gh. In The Loneliness Of The Long Distance Runner he played the rebellious Borstal boy Colin Smith. “Do you know what I’d do if I had the whip hand? I’d get all the coppers, governors, posh whores, army officers and Members of Parliament and I’d stick all of them up against this wall and let ’em ave ’it, ’cause that’s what they’d like to do to blokes like us,” Courtenay’s character says.

His performanc­e earned rave reviews but for Courtenay this early triumph was overshadow­ed by sadness as, just a week before the film was released, his mother died of breast cancer aged only 48.

In his next film Billy Liar he played an undertaker’s clerk escaping into fantasy – with Julie Christie as one of his girlfriend­s. Courtenay was now establishe­d as one of Britain’s most sought-after actors. Lean, handsome and unmistakab­ly HARD ACT TO FOLLOW: Courtenay today, with Julie Christie on the set of Dr Zhivago in 1965 and with his wife of 29 years Isabel Crossley Northern and working-class he embodied the zeitgeist of Britain in the egalitaria­n Swinging Sixties.

In 1965 his fame became internatio­nal when he starred as the idealistic Russian revolution­ary Pasha Antipov in Dr Zhivago. But despite his Oscar nomination he didn’t let his meteoric rise go to his head.

“A friend’s American wife said all the girls at her school had been in love with Pasha, the part I played,” he said. “I thought, ‘Gosh, I wish I’d known that!’ I had no idea.”

Courtenay felt uneasy about being compared to some of the greats of his profession while he was still in his 20s. “I remember there was a photograph from Zhivago with all of us sitting in our chairs with our names on the back. I was sitting between Alec Guinness and Ralph Richardson and I thought, ‘This isn’t right. I don’t deserve to be mentioned in the same breath as those two’. Think of all they’ve done. I felt it very strongly – that I hadn’t earned my spurs. I felt desperatel­y I had to return to the boards and learn how to do it.”

So, just at the time when he could have become an internatio­nal star earning millions, Courtenay headed back home to the theatre.

A year after the heady heights of Dr Zhivago, the 1960s heart-throb was appearing in Charley’s Aunt in Manchester. He not only rejected lucrative film roles but the chance of playing Jesus of Nazareth in a major TV production, believing the script was not strong enough. “I wondered if I ever did meet Jesus, whether He’d ask, ‘Well, what was that supposed explained.

He married actress Cheryl Kennedy in 1973 but the couple divorced nine years later. In 1988 Courtenay married his second wife Isabel Crossley, a stage manager at the Royal Exchange, and the pair remain together.

Ito be?’” he N RECENT years he has been seen more regularly on television, including in the comedy series The Royle Family and as a wheelchair-bound character in the crime drama Unforgotte­n. In 2016 he played Lance-Corporal Jones in the new Dad’s Army film.

For all the plaudits that have come his way Courtenay has always acknowledg­ed the debt he owes to his parents. In 2000, in the book Dear Tom: Letters From Home, he published the letters his mother wrote to him while he was at university in the 1950s. “After her death the cardboard box containing them became my most precious possession,” he admitted.

He also remembered how his father would send him the green Saturday evening newspaper, the Sports Mail. Courtenay’s passion for football has never left him – he is president of the Hull City supporters’ club to this day.

The unassuming acting great who turned his back on Hollywood has never forgotten his roots. How appropriat­e then that councillor­s this year granted Courtenay the freedom of his home city.

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