Miami Herald (Sunday)

Actor Bernard Hill, 79, starred in ‘Lord of the Rings’ and ‘Titanic’

-

Bernard Hill, the British actor best known for his portrayal of embattled King Théoden in two of the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy films and the stoic Capt. Edward Smith in “Titanic,” has died. He was 79.

Hill died early Sunday, his agent Lou Coulson confirmed to the BBC. No cause was given.

The actor’s breakout role was in the 1982 BBC series “Boys From the Blackstuff,” playing Yosser Hughes, a workingcla­ss man dealing with unemployme­nt in Liverpool. The series aired during a time of high unemployme­nt in England, and his character’s catchphras­e “gizza job” (“give us a job”) became a popular buzzword across the country.

Hill had a long and prolific career, appearing in both critically acclaimed television, including the 1976 BBC series “I, Claudius,” and films, among them Richard Attenborou­gh’s 1982 picture “Gandhi,” as well as the 2002 movie “The Scorpion King” and 2008’s “Valkyrie,” starring Tom Cruise.

In 2015, Hill played the Duke of Norfolk in “Wolf Hall,” an adaptation of Hilary Mantel’s book about the court of Henry VIII.

Most recently, Hill starred in the BBC police drama “The Responder.”

Its second season started airing Sunday.

Hill was born Dec. 17, 1944, in Manchester to a strict Catholic mining family. He expressed surprise that he had become a successful actor, telling Oxford University’s student paper: “From my social life, my peers, my family, there was no indication that this is where I should go.”

He attended Xaverian College in Manchester and the Manchester Polytechni­c School of Drama. At drama school, he became entranced by David Warner’s performanc­e of “Hamlet.” “I just wanted to do what he was doing,” he said.

Hill later worked with Warner, who played Billy

Zane’s villainous henchman Spicer Lovejoy in the blockbuste­r 1997 film “Titanic”

Alan Bleasdale, who wrote “Boys From the Blackstuff,” told the BBC that Hill’s death was “a great loss and also a great surprise.”

“I was desperate to work with him. Everything he did — his whole procedure for working, the manner in which he worked and his performanc­e was everything that you could ever wish for,” said Bleasdale. “You always felt that Bernard would live forever. He had a great strength, physically and of personalit­y.”

Hill is survived by his wife, Marianna Hill, and their son, Gabriel.

 ?? GARETH CATTERMOLE Getty Images/TNS ?? Actor Bernard Hill attends the ‘Titanic 3D’ world premiere at the Royal Albert Hall in London on March 27, 2012.
GARETH CATTERMOLE Getty Images/TNS Actor Bernard Hill attends the ‘Titanic 3D’ world premiere at the Royal Albert Hall in London on March 27, 2012.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States