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Idols of the Odeons
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20 April 2020

PERFORMING ARTS / Film / History & Criticism, Film history, theory or criticism, HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / 20th Century, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Entertainment & Performing Arts, Individual actors and performers, Films, cinema
Introduction
Senior leads: meet the chaps
Jack Hawkins: ‘stand by, number one’
John Mills: ‘do push off, there’s a good chap’
Kenneth More: hawling like a brooligan
Younger leading men
Stanley Baker: the British Brando?
Laurence Harvey: the talented Mr. Skikne
Leading ladies
Sylvia Syms: never your typical ‘nice blonde’
Britain’s bad blonde: the one and only Diana Dors
The comics
Norman Wisdom: ‘Mr. Grimsdale!’
Terry-Thomas and Leslie Phillips: a tale of two cads
Ladies and gentlemen of character
Sidney James: Jo’burg’s favourite cockney
James Robertson Justice: ‘what’s the bleeding time?’
Not to be crossed: Margaret Rutherford
Hattie Jacques: matron and mistress of misrule
The art of screen acting
Peter Finch: the ‘actor’s actor?’
Peter Sellers: ‘there used to be a me but I had him surgically removed’
Conclusion
Index