The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)
Tributes to stage and screen star Sir Antony Sher
Theatre star Sir Antony Sher has died of cancer at the age of 72, the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) has announced.
A statement from the organisation said he had been diagnosed with terminal cancer earlier this year.
His husband, RSC artistic director Gregory Doran, announced in September he was taking a period of compassionate leave to care for Sir Antony.
The South African-born actor tied the knot with Doran on December 21 2005, the first day samesex couples could legally form a civil partnership in the UK.
RSC executive director Catherine Mallyon and acting artistic director Erica Whyman said: “We are deeply saddened by this news and our thoughts and sincere condolences are with Greg and with Antony’s family and their friends at this devastating time.
“Antony had a long association with the RSC and a hugely celebrated career on stage and screen.
“Antony’s last production with the company was in the two-hander Kunene And The King, written by his friend and fellow South African actor, writer and activist, John Kani.”
The statement added: “Antony was deeply loved and hugely admired by so many colleagues.
“He was a groundbreaking role model for many young actors and it is impossible to comprehend that he is no longer with us.”
Sir Antony starred in a number of RSC productions, including a role in 2016 in King Lear, as well as playing Falstaff in the Henry IV plays and Willy Loman in Arthur Miller’s Death Of A Salesman.
Earlier landmark performances included Leontes in The Winter’s Tale, Iago in Othello, Prospero in The Tempest and the title roles in Macbeth and Tamburlaine The Great, as well as his career-defining Richard III.
He moved to Britain to study drama in the late 1960s and joined the RSC in 1982.
His breakthrough role came two years later in Richard III, a part which earned him the best actor accolade at the Olivier Theatre Awards.
His theatrical skills were not limited to the West End and his adaptation of If This Is A Man, by Primo Levi, into a one-man show titled Primo, ran on Broadway. Off stage he had roles in films including Shakespeare In Love and Mrs Brown and played Adolf Hitler in 2004’s Churchill: The Hollywood Years.
His final production with the RSC was Kani’s Kunene And The King, which saw him star opposite Kani as Jack, an actor acclaimed for his roles in Shakespeare who is diagnosed with liver cancer.
Kani said in a tribute: “We travelled together as compatriots, comrades in the struggle for a better South Africa, as fellow artists and we both had the honour of celebrating together 25 years of South Africa’s democracy in my latest play, Kunene And The King.
“I am at peace with you my friend and myself. Exit my King. Your Brother.”