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| Rex Harrison Biography and Filmography |
Rex Harrison
Birthday: March 5, 1908
Birth Place: Huyton, Lancashire, England, UK (now Huyton, Knowsley, Merseyside, England, UK)
Height: 6' 1"
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Below
is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in)
for Rex Harrison.
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| Biography |
Debonair and distinguished British star of stage and screen for more than 50 years, Sir Rex Harrison is best remembered for playing charming, slyly mischievous characters. Born Reginald Carey in 1908, he made his theatrical debut at age 16 with the Liverpool Repertory Theater, remaining with that group for three years. Making his British stage and film debut in 1930, Harrison made the first of many appearances on Broadway in Sweet Aloes in 1936. He became a bona fide British star that same year when he appeared in the theatrical production French Without Tears, in which he showed himself to be very skilled in black-tie comedy. He served as a flight lieutenant in the RAF during World War II, although this interruption in his career was quickly followed by several British films. Harrison moved to Hollywood in 1945, where his career continued to prosper. Among his many roles was that of the king in the 1946 production of Anna and the King of Siam. Harrison was perhaps best known for his performance as Professor Henry Higgins in the musical My Fair Lady, a character he played on Broadway from 1956-1958 (winning a Tony award in 1957) and again in its 1981 revival, as well as for a year in London in the late '50s; in 1964, he won an Oscar for his onscreen version of the role. He had previously received a Best Actor Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Julius Caesar in Cleopatra (1963). Harrison continued to act on both the stage and screen in the 1970s and into the '80s. He published his autobiography, Rex, in 1975, and, four years later, edited and published an anthology of poetry If Love Be Love. Knighted in 1989, he was starring in the Broadway revival of Somerset Maugham's The Circle (with Stewart Granger and Glynis Johns) until one month before he died of pancreatic cancer in 1990. Three of Harrison's six marriages were to actressesLilli Palmer, Kay Kendall, and Rachel Roberts. |
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| Filmography |
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| Trivia |
- Winner of 2 Tony Awards for Best actor. "Anne of the Thousand Days" and "My Fair Lady".
- Favorite beverage was Guinness Stout.
- Hated the nickname given to him by the press, "Sexy Rexy".
- Turned down the role of The King in "The King and I". The role went to Yul Brynner' .
- Died three weeks after his final stage appearance as Lord Porteous in "The Circle" (1990).
- Was so fanatical about wine that he often sent the bottles back if it was not to his liking... sometimes even to his own wine cellar.
- Frequently wore a specific ring with a dark square-cut stone, on his pinky finger of his left hand. It appears in almost all of his films.
- Father of Carey Harrison.
- Blind in one eye as the result of a childhood illness.
- Has a style of hat named after him.
- Father, with Lilli Palmer of Carey Harrison.
- Father, with Collette Thomas, of actor Noel Harrison.
- Grandfather of Cathryn Harrison and Simon Harrison.
- Was cremated and part of his ashes were scattered in Italy in Portofino and on the grave of his second wife, Lilli Palmer.
- His son, Carey Harrison, was born in 1944.
- Won three Tony Awards: in 1949, as Best Actor (Dramatic) for "Anne of the Thousand Days;" in 1957, as Best Actor (Musical) for "My Fair Lady," which he recreated in an Oscar-winning performance in the film version of the same title, My Fair Lady (1964); and a Special Tony Award in 1969. He was also nominated in 1984 as Best Actor (Play) for his role as Capt. Shotover in George Bernard Shaw's "Heartbreak House".
- Despite extensive vocal training after landing the part of Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady, he was unable to sing a note. In the end the director gave up and told him to quasi-speak the whole thing.
- Member of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival in 1965
- Knighted by Queen Elizabeth II of England at the age of 81. This was unusual since historically knighthood was not bestowed on anyone who had lived abroad or married more than once, both of which Harrison had done. [1989]
- Turned down the role of the Prince in the Broadway production of Noel Coward's "The Girl Who Came To Supper" in order to do My Fair Lady (1964). The role went to José Ferrer.
- Once punched Frank Sinatra in the jaw, thinking the singer was hitting on his wife, Lilli Palmer. Afterwards the two men became good friends.
- Turned down the lead role in 13 Rue Madeleine (1947). It then went to James Cagney.
- When he accepted his Academy Award for My Fair Lady (1964), he dedicated it to his "two fair ladies", Audrey Hepburn and Julie Andrews. Andrews had played Eliza Doolittle in the Broadway production, but was passed over for the film version in favor of Hepburn.
- Is the basis for the voice of Stewie Griffin on "Family Guy" (1999).
- One of only eight actors to have won both a Tony and an Oscar for having portrayed the same role on stage and screen ("My Fair Lady"). The others are Joel Grey ("Cabaret"), Shirley Booth ("Come Back, Little Sheba"), Yul Brynner ("The King and I"), Anne Bancroft ("The Miracle Worker"), Paul Scofield ("A Man For All Seasons"), Jack Albertson ("The Subject Was Roses") and José Ferrer ("Cyrano de Bergerac").
- Despite extensive vocal training after landing the part of Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady (1964), he was unable to sing a note. In the end the director gave up and told him to quasi-speak the whole thing.
- He had a reputation for being very abrupt with his fans. One night after a stage performance of "My Fair Lady", it was late, cold and pouring with rain and there was an old woman standing alone outside the Stage Door. When she saw Rex, she asked him for his autograph. Rex told her to "Sod off", and the old woman was so enraged at this that she rolled up her program and hit him with it. Stanley Holloway, who had followed Rex out in time to see this, congratulated him on not only making theater history, but, for the first time in world history, "the fan has hit the shit."
- Discovered Carole Landis' body the day she committed suicide. He had dined with her the previous night.
- He was the brother-in-law of Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe, one of the prosecutors at the Nuremberg Trials, the British Home Secretary from 1951 to 1954 and the Lord Chancellor from 1954 to 1962.
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