John Reginald Neville, CM OBE (2 May 1925 – 19 November 2011)[1] was an English actor and theatre director whose career spanned more than sixty years, he was renowned for his roles on both stage and screen in genres ranging from classical theatre to fantasy and science fiction.

John Neville
Neville as Hamlet in a 1959 TV production of 'Hamlet'
Born
John Reginald Neville

(1925-05-02)2 May 1925
Willesden, London, England
Died19 November 2011(2011-11-19) (aged 86)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
CitizenshipUnited Kingdom
Canada
EducationChiswick County School for Boys
Alma materRoyal Academy of Dramatic Art
Occupation(s)Actor, Director
Years active1949–2006
Spouse
Caroline Hooper
(m. 1949)
Children6

Neville was one of the young leading lights of the British theatre in the early 1950s, with he and contemporary and friend Richard Burton honing their crafts at The Old Vic, where over the course of five years they worked their way through the Shakespearean canon. Based on their performance styles and physicality, it was commented at the time that Burton was seen as the successor to Laurence Olivier, whereas Neville was seen as the natural successor to John Gielgud. Neville was a great champion of young talent throughout his career, as was evident when a 23 year old Judi Dench made her professional debut as Ophelia opposite his Hamlet in 1957.[2]

Alongside the classical repertoire, Neville also worked on contemporary productions. He originated the titular role of Alfie in Bill Naughton's 1963 play Alfie. It was in that same year that he, along with Frank Dunlop and Peter Ustinov, became artistic directors of the Nottingham Playhouse, with Neville later assuming sole charge.[3] It was under his leadership that he played the leading part in Coriolanus, directed by Tyrone Guthrie, playing opposite a young Ian McKellen in the role of Tullus Aufidius. After leaving Nottingham in 1972, Neville emigrated to Canada, where he enjoyed further theatrical success in Stratford, Ontario at the Stratford Festival Theatre.

He enjoyed a resurgence of international attention in the 1980s as a result of his starring role in Terry Gilliam's cult classic The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988) and latterly in the hit sci-fi series The X-Files where he featured in the sinister role of The Well-Manicured Man.

Early life and education

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John Neville was born on 2 May 1925 in 197 Church Road, in the north London suburb of Willesden, London, the son of Mabel Lillian (née Fry) and Reginald Daniel Neville, who worked as a mechanic for the local council, Neville also had a younger sister called Joan.[4] He was educated at Willesden and Chiswick County School for Boys.[5] It was here at the age of eleven, that he directed his first play, 'The Lamentable Comedy of Pyramus and Thisby' from Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, with the play being performed at the end of term.[6]

Outside of school, he was being taken to the Old Vic and Stratford upon Avon by Frank Aubrey Dawson, the churchwarden at, St Michael and All Angels Stonebridge Park, the local parish church where Neville sang in the choir. Towards the end of July 1937 the pair went on a holiday for two weeks to Stratford upon Avon. For three years in a row, he was taken along with Dawson’s 5 nieces, one of which included future historian Lorna Arnold, who recalled that “in time he became one of our extended family”.[7] With The Blitz raining down on London, Neville and his family moved to Beaconsfield for six months, with his school being evacuated to nearby High Wycombe, it was here that Neville played, his first significant part as, Brutus in Julius Caesar.

Returning for his final terms at school near Wembley, Neville left before he was just 17. With him taking a small time job as a stores clerk in a nearby garage in Neasden. Persuaded to join the St. Michael's youth club from his church, Neville was asked to establish a youth drama group, something he later recalled when interviewed by Richard Ouzounian later in life. It proved tricky to get the local children to get as passionately involved with his drama club as he was, so had to barter with the boxing and table tennis clubs for members. The National Federation of Boys' Clubs was affiliated to the British Drama League, with Neville beginning to attend courses. A female director from the London County Council directed his club in Act I of Hamlet. With St. Michael's winning the first drama festival in Willeden. Audiences were impressed by his voice and the potential it held.[8]

Thanks to Dawson's introduction to the classics, Neville had, by now, seen all of Shakespeare's plays and it was at those trips to the theatre that Neville’s passion for acting, and Shakespeare in particular, began to develop. As a result of the interest in his recent performance, he decided that he wished to become an actor. However, with little money, his parents were unable to pay for such a venture. The local Willesden Borough Council suitably impressed informed Neville that they would provide him with a scholarship grant on the proviso that he got in, as would Middlesex County Council who would provide a grant for his living expenses. In 1943, after a successful audition, Neville gained his place at the prestigious drama school, the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.[9]

However, shortly afterwards, aged nearly 18, he was called up and drafted to serve as a signalman in the Royal Navy during World War II, where he stayed for 3 years, serving on HMS Scotia, HMS Relentless, HMS Malaya and the RFA Arndale travelling between Australia, the Philippines and Hong Kong. It was only upon being demobbed and being able to claim his Ex-Serviceman’s Grant and still being able to live at home in London that he was able to begin studying at RADA in Gower Street and train as an actor in 1946. It was whilst studying at the school, that any remnants of his East End accent were replaced by the Received Pronunciation, which was the fashion at that time within the profession. Fellow students at the time included Barbara Jefford, Robert Shaw, Paul Daneman and Peter Sallis.

In late Spring of 1947, and still a student, he made his West End stage debut with the Old Vic company, as a walk on in 'Richard II' with Alec Guinness as the King at the New Theatre, due to the Old Vic Theatre being severely bomb damaged.

Early Career in Repertory

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One of Neville’s’ first jobs upon leaving drama school was in the Regent's Park Open Air Theatre, where he had been engaged for a summer season by Robert Atkins, lord of Regent's Park. The season included The Ambassador in King John, the first lord in As You Like It and Lysander in The Merchant of Venice.

In 1948, his agent found him work at the Lowestoft Playhouse working in weekly rep where he stayed for three months. However, it was in January 1949 that he soon moved to the prestigious Birmingham Repertory Company, then located in Station Street, under the pioneering leadership of Sir Barry Jackson. During his time in the city, Neville lived in the leafy town of Sutton Coldfield. Amongst the company of actors were Douglas Campbell, Eric Porter, Donald Pleasence and Caroline Hooper. A holiday to France with Hooper soon developed into a relationship, with Neville proposing to Caroline at the end of September and getting married before Christmas at St Mary's Church, Moseley with Eric Porter as best man. The couple left in 1950, returning to London and buying a home in the Wood Green area.

Neville was then offered the chance by Denis Carey to work at the Bristol Old Vic in their repertory company, where he won acclaim for playing Marlow in She Stoops to Conquer, the Duke in Measure for Measure, the title role in Henry V, Slim in Of Mice and Men, and PC Tom Blenkinsop in the actor's first stage musical, Christmas in King Street. He left the Bristol Old Vic in 1952.

Career

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The Old Vic

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Neville and Claire Bloom in Romeo and Juliet (1957)

Fortuitously, soon after Neville arrived in 1953, the Old Vic under the directorship of Michael Benthall, decided to stage all of Shakespeare's plays in five years. In his first official season, Neville was cast as King Henry V and then not long after, as Fortinbras opposite Richard Burton who was playing Hamlet for the first time. This was soon followed up with Bertram in All's Well That Ends Well and then the Dauphin in King John.

By 1954, having now played Macduff opposite Paul Rogers's Macbeth and Berowne in Love's Labour's Lost, Neville took the lead role of King Richard II in an acclaimed production of Richard II where, on the first night, he received a record of 23 curtain calls, with Virginia McKenna as his Queen Anne. By now, Neville had established himself as a matinee idol and a West End star of the 1950s, later hailed as "one of the most potent classical actors of the Richard Burton–Peter O'Toole generation".[10]

 
A young Gielgud (L) whom Neville was often compared to vocally and physically

In a Pre-Beatles age, he, according to The Times had, "Alongside Richard Burton, achieved a kind of romantic superstardom in Shakespeare unfamiliar since the prewar times of Olivier and (in America) John Barrymore)".[11] In 1956, he and Burton famously alternated the parts of Othello and Iago in Othello.[12] Further parts that season included Troilus (and later Thersites) in Troilus and Cressida directed by Tyrone Guthrie and as Romeo in Romeo and Juliet, directed by Robert Helpmann, with his Juliet being played by Claire Bloom. He later reprised the role of Romeo on American television for the anthology series Producers' Showcase).

In the final season of the five year plan at the Old Vic, Neville played the part of Hamlet, with Judi Dench as his Ophelia, in what was her first professional performance after leaving drama school. This was followed up by Angelo in Measure for Measure and Sir Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night. The productions of Hamlet and Twelfth Night toured Paris, Belgrade, Zagreb, Ljubljana, the United States and Canada. The visit to Canada would be Neville's first introduction to the country he would later call home years later.

During his time at the Old Vic, the young Neville was known for his classical good looks and mellifluous voice, and regularly described as John Gielgud's natural successor; this was a comparison Neville later revealed he hated to Gielgud's biographer Jonathan Croall.[13]

In 1959, for a while, he took over the leading role of Nestor Le Fripé from Keith Michell in the original West End production of the musical Irma La Douce, with Elizabeth Seal as Irma. He later played the title role in Macbeth at the Nottingham Playhouse, directed by Peter Dews. He returned to the London stage for a brief period in 1963, playing the title role in Alfie by Bill Naughton, but by then his theatrical commitment lay outside London.[14]

Nottingham Playhouse

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In 1961, his weekly pay declining from £200 to £50, he joined the Nottingham Playhouse, becoming joint artistic director with Frank Dunlop and Peter Ustinov when the current Playhouse opened in 1963.[14] It became one of Britain's leading regional repertory theatres.[10] Though Dunlop and Ustinov soon left, Neville remained at the theatre until 1967, when he resigned over funding disputes with the local authority and the Arts Council.[14][12][15]

Acclaimed director Richard Eyre once recalled that:[16]

Peter Brook opened my eyes to the possibilities of the theatre as an art, but John Neville made me see the attractions of a life in the theatre. When I did my first production (at the Phoenix theatre, Leicester) he was there (with Judi Dench). The next day he offered me a job directing a schools' production at Nottingham Playhouse. It was there that I saw him play Richard II, and it still remains one of the best Shakespearean performances I've ever seen – beautifully orchestrated, exquisitely spoken, wholly authoritative.

Neville starred as the Duke of Marlborough in the BBC2 serial The First Churchills (1969), a major television role which also maintained his international profile when the show was broadcast as the very first Masterpiece Theatre series in the United States in 1971.[17][18][19] He received good reviews in the musical adaptation of Lolita, called Lolita, My Love, which closed in Boston.

Move to Canada

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With his family, he left Britain for Canada in 1972, becoming a citizen there.[20] He devoted his later career to the Canadian theatre. He took up the post of artistic director at the Citadel Theatre in Edmonton, Alberta (1973–78), and later took similar positions with the Neptune Theatre in Halifax, Nova Scotia (1978–83) and other Canadian theatre companies, including as artistic director of the Stratford Festival of Canada from 1985 to 1989, while continuing his acting career.[15] On top of his artistic decisions, Neville helped eliminate the Neptune's deficit with canny promotions, such as giving free tickets to the local taxi drivers and their families, correctly anticipating that recipients would enthusiastically discuss the theatre with passengers and tourists.[21]

Director Terry Gilliam cast him as the lead in The Adventures of Baron Munchausen (1988). In the film, Neville plays the character at three different stages of his life; in his 30s, his 50s and his 70s. From 1995 to 1998, Neville had a prominent recurring role in The X-Files television series as The Well Manicured Man, and in 1998, he reprised the role in the feature film The X-Files. Although he made numerous other television appearances and occasional film roles, the main focus of Neville's career was always on the theatre.

In his later years, Neville had numerous cameo appearances in films, including primate of the Anglican Church in Australia in The Man Who Sued God and an admiral in the Earth Space Navy in The Fifth Element. He had a small role as Terrence in David Cronenberg's Spider (2002). Around the same time, he appeared with Vanessa Redgrave in the film adaptation of Crime and Punishment (also 2002).

In 2003, Neville performed a stage reading of John Milton's Samson Agonistes, with Claire Bloom at Bryn Mawr College at the behest of poet Karl Kirchwey.[22] He appeared in an episode of the soap opera Train 48 (2005) as the grandfather of Zach Eisler, who was played by his grandson Joe Dinicol.

He was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada in 2006.[23]

Personal Life

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The Nevilles' first child, Sarah, was born in October 1950 and their son Stephen in February 1952. In December 1952 they adopted an 8 month old child called Matthew. It was whilst playing Othello in 1956 that his daughter Emma was born, with Richard Burton announcing the news to the audience at the curtain call. Ten days later the adoption agency called informing them that there was another child up for adoption, Rachel.[24] The Nevilles' youngest child was Thomas.

Eyre later recalled in an obituary that "John was tall, aquiline, a natural aristocrat with feline grace who disguised well the roaring boy underneath.…John was infectiously anarchic – wild, larky and raffish as well as supremely skillful as an actor and inspiring as the leader of a company. He took me under his wing and, for a time, I was his drinking and theatre-going companion. I was with him when I saw the Berliner Ensemble in Coriolanus, Arturo Ui and The Days of the Commune. I was overwhelmed by the productions, even more so when John took me backstage at the Old Vic to meet Helene Weigel (Brecht's widow) and Ekkehard Schall (Coriolanus). I felt I was in the company of gods. John was part of my luck and I've missed him for years."[25]

His grandson is the actor Joe Dinicol.


Death

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According to publicists at Canada's Stratford Shakespeare Festival, Neville died "peacefully surrounded by family" on 19 November 2011, aged 86.[26] Neville suffered from Alzheimer's disease in his later years.[15] He was survived by his wife Caroline (née Hooper) and their six children.[27]

Theatre credits

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Year Play title Role Theatre Notes
1948 Jun As You Like It First Lord Regent's Park Open Air Theatre Professional Stage Debut
1948 Jul King John Châtillon
1948 Jul A Midsummer Night's Dream Lysander
1948 Aug Justice Hector Frome - RADA tour in Norway
1948 Nov Truant in Park Lane The Earl of Lyndon Lowestoft Playhouse First Season with the Lowestoft Repertory Company
1948 Nov London Wall Hec Hammond
1948 Nov Jane Eyre St John Rivers
1948 Dec Present Laughter Roland Maule
1948 Dec Power Without Glory Eddie Lord
1948 Dec The Magic Cupboard Bill Summertop
1948 Dec Christmas Shot Revue Various Parts
1949 Jan Eden End Geoffrey Farrant
1949 Jan Is Life Worth Living Eddie Twohig
1949 Jan The Eagle Has Two Heads Stanislas

Select filmography

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Television credits

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References

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  1. ^ "Actor John Neville dies at 86". CBC News. The Canadian Press. 21 November 2011.
  2. ^ McGreevy, Hannah (29 June 2022). "Dame Judi Dench says she fell in love with Hamlet co-star John Neville". Express.co.uk. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  3. ^ Michael Coveney Obituary: John Neville, The Guardian, 21 November 2011
  4. ^ "Neville profile at Film Reference.com". Filmreference.com. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  5. ^ "John Neville obituary". the Guardian. 21 November 2011. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  6. ^ Trewin, J.C. (1961). John Neville: An illustrated study of his work, with a list of his appearances on stage and screen. Barrie and Rockliff. p. 13.
  7. ^ Arnold, Lorna (2011). My Short Century. Cumnor Hill Books. p. 28. ISBN 9780983702900.
  8. ^ Trewin, J.C. (1961). John Neville: An illustrated study of his work, with a list of his appearances on stage and screen. Barrie and Rockliff. p. 17.
  9. ^ Trewin, J.C. (1961). John Neville: An illustrated study of his work, with a list of his appearances on stage and screen. Barrie and Rockliff. p. 18.
  10. ^ a b Jeremy Lewis, "A Real Class Act", Nottingham Post, 5 March 1999
  11. ^ "John Neville". The Times. 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  12. ^ a b "Obituaries: John Neville". The Daily Telegraph. London. 21 November 2011.
  13. ^ Croall, Jonathan (2014). In Search of Gielgud: A Biographer's Tale. Herbert Adler. p. 73. ISBN 9781842890226.
  14. ^ a b c Hayward, Anthony "John Neville: Shakespearean actor and director who became a theatrical force in Canada ", The Independent, 26 November 2011
  15. ^ a b c Coveney, Michael (21 November 2011). "John Neville Obituary". The Guardian.
  16. ^ Eyre, Richard (21 November 2011). "Richard Eyre on John Neville: 'He was wild, larky and raffish as well as supremely skilful as an actor'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  17. ^ McMillan, Nancy Pomerene (21 September 1980). "A 10th Birthday for Masterpiece Theatre of John Neville and Susan Hampshire in 'The First Churchills'". The New York Times. p. 35.
  18. ^ King, Susan (13 January 1991). "British exports now a staple on U.S. TV". Austin American-Statesman. p. 37.
  19. ^ King, Susan (8 October 1995). "'Buccaneers' Kicks Off 'Masterpiece' Anniversary". Chicago Sun-Times. p. 11. Archived from the original on 5 May 2016.
  20. ^ Nestruck, J. Kelly (23 November 2011). "John Neville was at home on the stage and on screens large and small". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  21. ^ O'Reilly, Terry (20 April 2013). "Loss Leaders: How Companies Profit By Losing Money". Under the Influence. CBC Radio One. Retrieved 20 April 2013.
  22. ^ Heller, Karen (1 May 2003). "Bryn Mawr shows creative side as it makes way for arts". The Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 15 October 2010.
  23. ^ "Governor General to Invest 41 Recipients into the Order of Canada" (Press release). Governor General of Canada. 2 May 2007. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  24. ^ "DONATION OF THE MONTH - OCT". Bristol Old Vic. 4 June 2024. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  25. ^ Eyre, Richard (21 November 2011). "Richard Eyre on John Neville: 'He was wild, larky and raffish as well as supremely skilful as an actor'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  26. ^ "Actor John Neville dies at 86". Variety. Associated Press. 21 November 2011. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  27. ^ "John Neville obituary". the Guardian. 21 November 2011. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
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