Los Angeles Times

Versatile actor Albert Finney dies at age 82

ALBERT FINNEY, 1936 - 2019

- By Gregory Katz Katz writes for the Associated Press.

The Oscar-nominated British actor burst to global fame in 1963 in the title role of “Tom Jones.” He was known for his charismati­c work on both stage and screen.

Albert Finney, one of the most respected and versatile actors of his generation and the star of films as diverse as “Tom Jones” and “Skyfall,” has died. He was 82.

From his early days as a magnetic screen presence to his closing acts as a brilliant character actor, Finney was a British treasure known for charismati­c work on both stage and screen.

Finney’s family said Friday that he “passed away peacefully after a short illness with those closest to him by his side.” He died Thursday from a chest infection at the Royal Marsden Hospital in London, a cancer treatment center.

Finney burst to internatio­nal fame in 1963 in the title role of “Tom Jones,” playing a lusty, humorous rogue who captivated audiences with his charming, devil-maycare antics.

He excelled in many other roles, including “Saturday Night and Sunday Morning,” a 1960 drama that was part of the “angry young man” film trend.

Finney was a rare star who managed to avoid the Hollywood limelight despite more than five decades of worldwide fame. He was known for skipping awards ceremonies, even when he was nominated for an Oscar.

“Tom Jones” gained him the first of five Academy Award nomination­s. Other nomination­s followed for “Murder on the Orient Express,” “The Dresser,” “Under the Volcano” and “Erin Brockovich.” Each time he fell short.

In later years he brought authority to big-budget and high-grossing action movies, including the James Bond thriller “Skyfall” and two of the Jason Bourne films. He also won hearts as Daddy Warbucks in “Annie.”

Although Finney rarely discussed his personal life, he told the Manchester Evening News in 2012 that he had been treated for kidney cancer for five years, undergoing surgery and chemothera­py.

He also explained why he had not attended the Academy Awards in Los Angeles even when he was nominated for the film world’s top prize.

“It seems silly to go over there and beg for an award,” he told the paper.

The son of a bookmaker, Finney was born May 9, 1936, and grew up in northweste­rn England on the outskirts of Manchester. He took to the stage at an early age, doing a number of school plays and — despite his lack of connection­s and his working-class roots — earning a place at London’s prestigiou­s Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts.

He credited a school headmaster, Eric Simms, for recommendi­ng that he attend the renowned drama school.

“He’s the reason I am an actor,” Finney said in 2012.

Finney made his first profession­al turn at 19 and appeared in several TV movies, including “She Stoops to Conquer” in 1956 and “The Claverdon Road Job” the following year.

Soon some critics were hailing him as “the next Laurence Olivier,” a commanding presence who would light up the British stage.

Still, the young man seemed determined not to pursue convention­al Hollywood stardom. After an extensive screen test, he turned down the chance to play the title role in director David Lean’s epic “Lawrence of Arabia,” clearing the way for fellow Royal Academy graduate Peter O’Toole to take what became a career-defining role.

But stardom came to Finney in “Tom Jones,” in which he won over audiences worldwide with his goodnature­d, funny and sensual portrayal of an 18th century English rogue.

That was the role that introduced Finney to American audiences, and few would forget the lusty, blueeyed leading man who helped the film win a best picture Oscar. Finney also earned his first lead actor nomination for his performanc­e, and the smash hit turned him into a Hollywood leading man.

Instead of cashing in by taking lucrative film roles after “Tom Jones,” Finney took a long sabbatical, traveling slowly through the United States, Mexico and the Pacific islands, then returned to the London stage to act in Shakespear­e production­s and other plays. He won wide acclaim and many awards before returning to film in 1967 to costar with Audrey Hepburn in “Two for the Road.”

This was to be a familiar pattern, with Finney alternatin­g between film work and stage production­s in London and New York.

Finney tackled Charles Dickens in “Scrooge” in 1970, then played Agatha Christie’s super-sleuth Hercule Poirot in “Murder on the Orient Express” — earning his second lead actor Oscar nomination.

He earned more Oscar nomination­s for his roles in the searing marital drama “Shoot the Moon” in 1982, costarring with Diane Keaton, and “The Dresser” in 1983. He was nominated again in 1984 for his role as a self-destructiv­e alcoholic in director John Huston’s “Under the Volcano.”

He played in a series of smaller, independen­t films for a number of years before returning to prominence in 2000 as a Southern California lawyer in the film “Erin Brockovich,” which starred Julia Roberts.

The film helped introduce Finney to a new generation of moviegoers, and the chemistry between the aging lawyer and his young, aggressive assistant earned him yet another Oscar nomination, this time for supporting actor.

His work also helped propel Roberts to a lead actress Oscar. Still, Finney declined to attend the ceremony.

He went on to star in director Tim Burton’s “Big Fish” and portrayed Britain’s wartime leader Winston Churchill in “The Gathering Storm.”

Finney also tried his hand at directing and producing, and played a vital role in sustaining British theater.

The Old Vic theater in London said his “performanc­es in plays by Shakespear­e, Chekhov and other iconic playwright­s throughout the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s stand apart as some of the greatest in our 200-year history.”

Finney is survived by his third wife, Pene Delmage; a son, Simon; and two grandchild­ren.

 ?? Graham Barclay For The Times ??
Graham Barclay For The Times
 ?? Bob Marshak Universal Studios ?? AN ACCLAIMED ROLE Albert Finney in “Erin Brockovich,” one of five films for which he received an Oscar nomination.
Bob Marshak Universal Studios AN ACCLAIMED ROLE Albert Finney in “Erin Brockovich,” one of five films for which he received an Oscar nomination.

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