Michael Gambon, British actor who played Dumbledore, dies aged 82
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[September 28, 2023]
LONDON (Reuters) -British-Irish actor Michael Gambon, best known
to global audiences for playing the wise professor Albus Dumbledore in
the "Harry Potter" movie franchise and whose career was launched by his
mentor Laurence Olivier, died aged 82 on Thursday.
He died peacefully in hospital, PA Media reported citing a family
statement.
Gambon began his acting on the stage in the early 1960s and later moved
into TV and film. Notable film roles include a psychotic mob leader in
Peter Greenaway's "The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover" in 1989
and the elderly King George V in Tom Hooper's "The King's Speech" in
2010.
But his best-known role was as Dumbledore in the "Harry Potter"
franchise, a role he took over from the third installment in the
eight-movie series after he replaced the late Richard Harris in 2004.
Gambon played down the praise for his performance and said he simply
played himself "with a stuck-on beard and a long robe".
Michael John Gambon was born on Oct. 19, 1940, in Dublin to a seamstress
mother and an engineer father. The family moved to Camden Town in London
when Gambon was six as his father sought work in the city's post-war
rebuilding.
Gambon left school aged 15 to begin an engineering apprenticeship and by
21 he was fully qualified. However, he was also a member of an amateur
theatre group and always knew he would act, he told The Herald newspaper
in 2004. He was inspired by American actors Marlon Brando and James
Dean, who he believed reflected the angst of teenage boys.
In 1962 he auditioned for the great Shakespearean actor Olivier who made
him one of the founding members of the National Theatre at the Old Vic,
alongside other young emerging greats that included Derek Jacobi and
Maggie Smith.
Gambon built his reputation on the stage over the following years,
making his name in particular with his 1980 portrayal of Galileo in John
Dexter's "Life of Galileo".
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Actor Michael Gambon attends a Service of Thanksgiving for Sir Peter
Hall at Westminster Abbey in London, Britain, September 11, 2018.
REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File photo
The 1980s brought wider attention
with the lead role in 1986 TV show "The Singing Detective", in which
he played a writer suffering from a debilitating skin condition
whose imagination provided the only escape from his pain. The
performance won him one of his four BAFTAs.
He also won three Olivier Awards and two ensemble cast Screen Actors
Guild Awards - for 2001's "Gosford Park" and "The King's Speech".
Gambon was made a Commander of the British Empire in 1992 and
knighted for services to drama in 1998, something he called "a nice
little present", although he did not use the title.
A mischievous personality, he often made up stories. For years he
showed fellow actors a signed photograph of Robert De Niro which he
had in fact inscribed himself before ever meeting the American
actor.
He revealed in an episode of "The Late Late Show" in Ireland that he
convinced his mother he was friends with the pope.
Gambon retired from the stage in 2015 after suffering long-term
memory problems but continued to act onscreen until 2019. He told an
interviewer in 2002 that his work made him feel "the luckiest man in
the world".
Gambon married Anne Miller in 1962, and the couple had a son. While
they never divorced, in later years he also had another partner, set
designer Philippa Hart, 25 years his junior, with whom he had two
children.
(Reporting by Sarah Young; Editing by William Schomberg and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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