Richard Attenborough

by Rovi film biography
One of England's most respected actors and directors, Sir Richard Attenborough has made numerous contributions to world cinema both in front of and behind the camera. The son of a Cambridge school administrator, Attenborough began dabbling in theatricals at the age of 12. While attending London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in 1941, he turned professional, making his first stage appearance in a production of Eugene O'Neill's Ah, Wilderness! He made his screen debut as the Young Sailor in Noel Coward and David Lean's In Which We Serve (1943), before achieving his first significant West End success as the punkish, cowardly, petty criminal Pinkie Brown in Brighton Rock.
After three years of service with the Royal Air Force, Attenborough rose to film stardom in the 1947 film version of Brighton Rock -- a role that caused him to be typecast as a working-class misfit over the next few years. One of the best of his characterizations in this vein can be found in The Guinea Pig (1948), in which the 26-year-old Attenborough was wholly credible as a 13-year-old schoolboy. As the '50s progressed, he was permitted a wider range of characters in such films as The Magic Box (1951), The Ship That Died of Shame (1955), and Private's Progress (1956). In 1959, he teamed up with director Bryan Forbes to form Beaver Films. Before the partnership dissolved in 1964, Attenborough had played such sharply etched personalities as Tom Curtis in The Angry Silence (1960) and Bill Savage in Séance on a Wet Afternoon (1964); he also served as producer for the Forbes-directed Whistle Down the Wind (1962) and The L-Shaped Room (1962).
During the '60s, Attenborough exhibited a fondness for military roles: POW mastermind Bartlett in The Great Escape (1963); hotheaded ship's engineer Frenchy Burgoyne in The Sand Pebbles (1966); and Sgt. Major Lauderdale in Guns at Batasi (1964), the performance that won him a British Academy Award. He also played an extended cameo in Doctor Dolittle (1967), and sang "I've Never Seen Anything Like It in My Life," a paean to the amazing Pushmi-Pullyu. This boisterous musical performance may well have been a warm-up for Attenborough's film directorial debut, the satirical anti-war revue Oh, What a Lovely War (1969). He subsequently helmed the historical epics Young Winston (1972) and A Bridge Too Far (1977), then scaled down his technique for the psychological thriller Magic (1978), which starred his favorite leading man, Anthony Hopkins. With more and more of his time consumed by his directing activities, Attenborough found fewer opportunities to act. One of his best performances in the '70s was as the eerily "normal" real-life serial killer Christie in 10 Rillington Place (1971).
In 1982, Attenborough brought a 20-year dream to fruition when he directed the spectacular biopic Gandhi. The film won a raft of Oscars, including a Best Director statuette for Attenborough; he was also honored with Golden Globe and Director's Guild awards, and, that same year, published his book In Search of Gandhi, another product of his fascination with the Indian leader. All of Attenborough's post-Gandhi projects have been laudably ambitious, though none have reached the same pinnacle of success. Some of the best of his latter-day directorial efforts have been Cry Freedom, a 1987 depiction of the horrors of apartheid; 1992's Chaplin, an epic biopic of the great comedian; and Shadowlands (1993), starring Anthony Hopkins as spiritually motivated author C.S. Lewis.
Attenborough returned to the screen during the '90s, acting in avuncular character roles, the most popular of which was the affable but woefully misguided billionaire entrepreneur John Hammond in Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park (1993), a role he reprised for the film's 1997 sequel. Other notable performances included the jovial Kriss Kringle in Miracle on 34th Street (1994) and Sir William Cecil in Elizabeth (1998). The brother of naturalist David Attenborough and husband of actress Sheila Sim, he was knighted in 1976 and became a life peer in 1993. Attenborough has chaired dozens of professional organizations and worked tirelessly on behalf of Britain's Muscular Dystrophy Campaign.

filmography snapshot

1945
1950
1955
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
Year Title Rating    
1942 In Which We Serve

Actor

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1943 Schweik's New Adventures

Actor

1943 The Hundred Pound Window

Actor

1946 A Matter of Life and Death

Actor

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1946 Journey Together

Actor

1946 School for Secrets

Actor

1947 Brighton Rock

Actor

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1947 Dancing with Crime

Actor

1947 The Man Within

Actor

1948 Dulcimer Street

Actor

1948 The Guinea Pig

Actor

1949 Boys in Brown

Actor

1949 The Lost People

Actor

1950 Morning Departure

Actor

1950 The Lost People

Actor

1951 Hell Is Sold Out

Actor

1951 Operation Disaster - Morning Departure

Actor

1951 The Magic Box

Actor

1952 Father's Doing Fine

Actor

1952 The Gift Horse

Actor

1954 Eight O'clock Walk

Actor

1955 The Ship That Died of Shame

Actor

1956 A Private's Progress

Actor

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1956 The Baby and the Battleship

Actor

1957 The Brothers in Law

Actor

1957 The Scamp

Actor

1958 Desert Patrol

Actor

1958 Dunkirk

Actor

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1958 The Man Upstairs

Actor

1959 Breakout

Actor

1959 I'm All Right Jack

Actor

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1959 Jet Storm

Actor

1959 Strange Affection

Actor

1960 S.O.S. Pacific

Actor

1960 The Angry Silence

Producer, Actor

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1960 The League of Gentlemen

Actor

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1961 All Night Long

Actor

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1962 Only Two Can Play

Actor

1962 The Dock Brief

Actor

1962 The L-Shaped Room

Producer

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1962 Whistle Down the Wind

Producer

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1963 The Great Escape

Actor

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1964 Guns at Batasi

Actor

1964 Séance on a Wet Afternoon

Producer, Actor

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1964 The Third Secret

Actor

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1965 The Flight of the Phoenix

Actor

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1966 The Sand Pebbles

Actor

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1967 Doctor Dolittle

Actor

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1968 Only When I Larf

Actor

1968 The Bliss of Mrs. Blossom

Actor

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1969 Oh! What a Lovely War

Producer, Director

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1969 The Magic Christian

Actor

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1970 David Copperfield

Actor

1970 Loot

Actor

1970 The Last Grenade

Actor

1971 10 Rillington Place

Actor

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1971 A Severed Head

Actor

1972 Young Winston

Director, Producer

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1975 And Then There Were None

Actor

1975 Brannigan

Actor

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1975 Conduct Unbecoming

Actor

1975 Rosebud

Actor

1977 A Bridge Too Far

Director

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1977 The Chess Players

Actor

1978 Magic

Director

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1979 The Human Factor

Actor

1982 Gandhi

Producer, Director

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1985 A Chorus Line

Director

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1986 Mother Teresa

Voice

1987 Cry Freedom

Producer, Director

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1992 Chaplin

Director, Producer

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1993 Jurassic Park

Actor

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1993 Shadowlands

Producer, Director

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1994 Miracle on 34th Street

Actor

1995 Down Came a Blackbird

Producer

1995 Nature: Jaguar - Year of the Cat

Voice

1996 Hamlet

Actor

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1996 In Love and War

Director, Producer

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1997 The Lost World: Jurassic Park

Actor

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1998 Diana: Queen of Hearts

Voice, Presented by

1998 Elizabeth

Actor

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1999 Grey Owl

Director, Producer

1999 Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat

Performance

2000 Humphrey Jennings: The Man Who Listened to Britain

Interviewee

2000 Light Keeps Me Company

Interviewee

2000 The Railway Children

Actor

2002 Puckoon

Actor

2003 Charlie: The Life and Art of Charles Chaplin

Participant

2007 Closing the Ring

Director, Producer

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