
Clive Revill obituary
But his career did not gather momentum once he moved to Los Angeles in the late 1970s, and his last major Broadway appearance, as a 'weirdly colourful' (according to one critic) nemesis to Donald Sutherland's professor in an Edward Albee adaptation of Nabokov's Lolita in 1980, was commercially disastrous.
The pilot show he went to make in Hollywood did not generate the hoped-for television series, and he thereafter made a string of guest appearances in episodes of Columbo (starring Peter Falk), Hart to Hart (with Robert Wagner and Stefanie Powers), Murder She Wrote (with Angela Lansbury) and Star Trek: The Next Generation.
After leading roles with the Royal Shakespeare Company, at the Chichester Festival theatre and on Broadway, he lent his great power as a leading character actor to such original British television writing as Nigel Kneale's Bam! Pow! Zap! (1969), a bleak satire on cinematic violence, Alun Owen's The Piano Player (1972) and David Hare's first film as both writer and director, Licking Hitler (1978), about the black propaganda unit broadcasting to Germany during the second world war. This period marked his career pinnacle.
Revill was stocky and pugnacious, with a Mr Punch-style nose, piercing blue eyes and red hair, physical attributes that were disguised on stage as he usually played much older than his years.
He was born in Wellington, New Zealand, the son of Eleanor (nee Neel) and Malet Revill, and was educated at Rongotai College and Victoria University in Wellington. He trained as an accountant but took a career swerve into theatre when he played Sebastian in a 1950 production of Twelfth Night in Auckland. He came to Britain, training at the Old Vic school before, remarkably, making a Broadway debut as Sam Weller in The Pickwick Papers in 1952.
He then returned to Britain and played for two years at the Ipswich Rep and made a London debut in 1955 at the Arts Theatre in Peter Hall's production of a Vivian Ellis children's musical, Listen to the Wind. He played a wicked butler, spiriting away three children from their East Anglian nurse to the gypsies; Ronnie Barker was the Gypsy Man.
His first television role, a leading one, was in a family business saga, The Makepeace Story (1955), directed by Tony Richardson for the BBC (John Osborne and Maggie Smith, also making TV debuts, had walk-on parts). The big break came with an invitation to play two seasons, from 1956 to 1958, at the Shakespeare Memorial theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon, where his roles included the First Player to Alan Badel's Hamlet, Barnardine (the prisoner who refuses to wake up for his own execution) in Measure for Measure, Cloten in Cymbeline, and Trinculo in Brook's production of The Tempest with John Gielgud as Prospero; this spectacularly designed show also played a season at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.
In the following year, Brook cast him as third lead in a delightful musical, Irma La Douce (1958), starring Elizabeth Seal and Keith Michell, with a score by the French composer Marguerite Monnot and book and lyrics by the British trio of David Heneker, Monty Norman and Julian More. Revill was a jack-in-the-box barman and played the role for two years at the Lyric before going to New York in 1960 and winning a Tony nomination for his performance. His second Tony nomination came three seasons later when he played Fagin in Lionel Bart's hit musical Oliver! (Ron Moody had introduced the role in London).
In 1964, he joined the RSC at the Aldwych theatre to play Jean Paul-Marat in Brook's sensational production of Marat/Sade (with Patrick Magee, Glenda Jackson and Ian Richardson) and, his greatest performance, Barabas in Clifford Williams's white-walled Mediterranean revival of Marlowe's The Jew of Malta ('As for myself, I walk abroad a-nights, and kill sick people groaning under walls. Sometimes I go about and poison wells …'). He never returned to Stratford, though.
Over the next 10 years, Revill made a string of interesting, enjoyable movies: supporting Laurence Olivier and Noël Coward in Otto Preminger's Bunny Lake is Missing (1965); Warren Beatty and Susannah York in Kaleidoscope (1966); as a Scots orderly and a fake sheikh in Joseph Losey's Modesty Blaise (1966), with Monica Vitti and Dirk Bogarde; and as one of Oliver Reed's 'moral' gang of killers, infiltrated by a journalist (Diana Rigg), in Basil Dearden's The Assassination Bureau (1969).
Back on stage in Chichester in 1968, he played Caliban in The Tempest, the general in Peter Ustinov's The Unknown Soldier and His Wife, and Mr Antrobus in Thornton Wilder's The Skin of Our Teeth. For Wilder, he supported Robert Stephens and Colin Blakely in The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970), now a cult classic, and won a Golden Globe nomination as a flustered hotel manager, Carlo Carlucci, in Avanti! (1972), a black comedy of hidden corpses and seduction in the sunshine, starring Jack Lemmon and Juliet Mills.
He returned to the RSC, and Broadway, in 1975 when he took over as Moriarty in William Gillette's Sherlock Holmes starring John Wood, and he succeeded George Rose on a US national tour of the musical The Mystery of Edwin Drood.
He voiced the Emperor Palpatine in the Star Wars film The Empire Strikes Back in 1980, and his later film work consisted mainly of voiceovers in animated series, cartoons and video games. His great passion was golf, and he also held a pilot's licence.
Two marriages ended in divorce. Revill is survived by a daughter, Kate, from his second marriage, in 1978, to Suzi Schor.
Clive Selsby Revill, actor, born 18 April 1930; died 11 March 2025
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
17 hours ago
- Daily Mail
TV star Billy Porter blasted over 'replaced the Jews' line while promoting new musical
Award-winning actor Billy Porter has sparked controversy during a recent appearance on CBS Mornings, where he remarked that 'black people have replaced the Jews' while discussing his new leading role on Broadway. The 55-year-old actor and singer appeared on the network's morning segment on Monday to promote his role as the Emcee in the Broadway revival of the 1966 musical Cabaret. Cabaret is a dark, provocative classic set in 1930s Berlin that explores the fate of a seedy nightclub and its patrons as the shadow of Nazism begins to fall over the city. However, for the first time, this new revival will feature three Black actors in its leading roles - a historic casting choice Porter confirmed on Monday. 'This is the first time in the 60-year history that all three of those characters have been African-American in a commercial production,' he said. 'And with what's going on in the world right now, black people have replaced the Jews in this sort of configuration of what we're going through.' His comment quickly sparked a wave of backlash across the internet, including from Broadway influencer Ben Lebofsky, who has a significant following on TikTok. Lebofsky, who has 23.2K followers under the handle @broadwayben, posted a video on Tuesday accusing Porter of downplaying antisemitism. Specifically, the influencer argued that Porter's remark implied that 'Jews no longer face discrimination,' a statement that ignited significant concern and debate among viewers who felt it overlooked the persistence of anti-Jewish prejudice. 'As we all know, antisemitism is alive and well, and to me, it feels like Billy's comments here is dismissing,' Lebofsky said in the video. 'Which becomes even more problematic when you consider that he is about to step into a musical that is first and foremost about Jewish trauma,' he added. Though Lebofsky took issue with Porter's wording, he also recognized that the parallels drawn between the experiences of Jewish and black Americans are not without merit - reflecting complex and shared histories of oppression. 'I think what he is trying to say is that, in today's day and age, black people face a lot of discrimination, and you can draw a lot of parallels to the discrimination that black people face and the discrimination that Jewish people face, which I think is a true statement,' Lebofsky added. The comments beneath Lebofsky's video largely echoed his concerns, with many viewers expressing anger and frustration over Porter's remarks. 'Not to mention the huge population of black Jews he is just ignoring. Jewish doesn't equal white,' one comment read. A second added: 'Genuinely what would possess him to say that while playing the Emcee.' Often seen as the symbolic heart of Cabaret, the Emcee (right) embodies the seductive excess and creeping decay of Weimar-era Berlin - ultimately offering a haunting mirror to an unraveling society as the Nazi regime rises to power 'It's like you can hear the exact moment that the Cabaret PR team started to have a panic attack,' another viewer wrote. A fourth concurred, accompanied by a sad-face emoji: 'Clearly Billy Porter doesn't know the plot of Cabaret.' 'Billy has always played the Oppression Olympics. The only pain he's interested in discussing is his own,' wrote another. The latest revival of Cabaret debuted last year with Oscar winner Eddie Redmayne captivating audiences as the Emcee. Now, Billy Porter will step into the spotlight, bringing his own bold interpretation to the iconic role as the production heads toward its final curtain this October. Porter's role as the Emcee - the flamboyant, enigmatic master of ceremonies at the Kit Kat Club, where much of the story unfolds - places him at the center of the musical's unsettling world. Often seen as the symbolic heart of Cabaret, the Emcee embodies the seductive excess and creeping decay of Weimar-era Berlin - ultimately offering a haunting mirror to an unraveling society as the Nazi regime rises to power. Back in April, Porter participated in a photo project titled Borrowed Spotlight, which paired Holocaust survivors with prominent celebrities to amplify their stories and ensure their experiences continue to be seen and heard. 'I was honored to meet fellow New Yorker Bella Rosenberg for a photoshoot with @brycethompson and the @borrowedspotlight project,' Porter wrote in an Instagram post regarding his experience.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Rachel Zegler sparks fan fury with mysterious Evita exit halfway through London show
Rachel Zegler left fans furious as she abruptly left the stage midway through her Evita performance on Thursday. The 24-year-old star of the 'woke' Snow White remake fell ill during the show at London's Palladium theatre - with her departure announced at intermission, per People. Following a brief pause, her understudy Bella Brown, who played Perón's Mistress in the musical, took on the Evita role for act 2 - which begins with Don't Cry for Me Argentina. Zegler, who has won rave reviews for her Evita portrayal, will return to the stage tonight, Friday 25th July for the evening performance, her representative confirmed to One fan wrote on social media: 'Rachel zegler ruining everything she's a part of still.' Others penned: 'Give her a job at McDonalds. It's clear this woman isnt cut out for entertainment. Stop giving her charity. 'The understudy is better. No shock. I'd give her a standing ovation if she would just leave. Always one bus stop away from knocking it out of the park with this one. On Broadway they would be demanding their $ back. So apparently woke Snow White is creating box office disasters on two continents. Shame, despite her many missteps and foibles, she seemed to doing a good job by all accounts at this at least. Others sent well wishes for the star, writing: 'Hope she's okay.' Most probably a health issue. I have watched the show and her performance is excellent, both vocals and acting. Actually, she saves a show that lacks narrative coherence and direction generally fails to make the audience emotionally attached. Rachel is playing former First Lady of Argentina Eva Peron in the show, which debuted in 1978 and was written by Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber. Fans were left furious with the star over her abrupt exit The play follows her rise from a poor background to becoming a powerful political figure and cultural icon in Argentina. Following the announcement earlier this year, Rachel gushed: 'Evita has been such an important musical to me since I was a little girl, when my dad and I would sing Don't Cry for Me Argentina together on my back patio. 'The opportunity to bring Jamie Lloyd's singular, visionary ideas to life onstage is an honour unlike any other. The stage has always felt like home to me, and I can't wait to make my West End debut in such great company.' So far, Zegler is best known for the box office flop Snow White. Prior to its release, Snow White was mired in controversy due to comments from Zegler and the absence of the iconic song 'Someday My Prince Will Come.' In an effort to be more progressive, Disney also changed the dwarves to be called 'magical creatures.' Critics of the remake first jumped on Disney for the decision to cast Zegler in the role due to her Colombian ancestry. The original fairytale revealed that the princess is given her name because her skin is 'as white as snow.' At the time, Zegler said that the origin story had changed, and in Disney's new version the princess earns the name due to a snowstorm she survived as a child. She then came under fire for criticizing original animation when she called it 'dated' during a red carpet interview with Extra TV in 2022. She eventually walked back her comments and assured fans that the love story would be 'integral' to the remake's plot. Disney fans then expressed discontent at Zegler when she said she was 'scared' of the original version as a child and only watched it one time. Although the Disney remake has been widely considered a flop, Rachel has already lined up next role. She will be starring opposite Marisa Tomei, 60, of My Cousin Vinny fame, in her next movie role. In the upcoming comedy-drama She Gets It From Me, Zegler will play the daughter of the Tomei's wild, unruly and free-spirited character, according to the synopsis reported by Variety.


Daily Mail
a day ago
- Daily Mail
Oprah Winfrey slammed over 'obnoxious' and 'rude' act while watching Gayle King's Broadway debut
Oprah Winfrey has ignited criticism for watching Gayle King 's Broadway debut via FaceTime, with many furious that she flouted theater etiquette. CBS Mornings presenter Gayle, 70, lit up the stage as a bird lady in the beloved musical The Lion King's opening number on Thursday night. She was also joined by her colleague Adam Glassman, who played the back end of a rhino as part of their Oprah Daily series, The Adventures of Adam and Gayle. Oprah, 71, watched the spectacular sequence via FaceTime thanks to a member of the team filming in the audience, a move which irked social media users. In an upload shared by multiple accounts, including CBS Morning and Oprah Daily, Oprah could be seen on the screen as someone held the phone up to show Gayle in the middle of the performance. Although the social media post did stress that special permission to record had been granted, social media users were frustrated all the same. 'No phones are allowed during a performance,' one barked. 'It's rude, obnoxious and very narcissistic.' Another asked: 'So using a phone during a performance is fine because it's @oprah? Listen, I love Oprah but it's disrespectful theatre etiquette. 'They literally make announcements before the show that using your phone during a performance is prohibited.' A third continued: 'Love how they disclosed with "special permission" as if Oprah has "special privileges." Where did courtesy go?' 'I don't care who you are, stop using your phone in the theatre,' added another. Many were also irritated that Gayle and Adam were able to participate in the performance in the first place. 'Money can just buy anything,' one snapped. 'I can't wait until I'm a celebrity so I don't have to audition for CATS the musical like a normal person who studied musical theatre at university,' another said. Referring to Gayle's controversial space trip on Blue Origin, a third wrote: 'So, let me get this straight. Gayle became an "astronaut" and a Broadway performer in the same year? WTH?' Despite the swell of criticism, others were simply glad to see Gayle thriving on stage. Taking to Instagram, one noted: 'Gayle just living her best life... Always finding her in unexpected places she reminds me of Waldo, you never know where she may pop up next.' Regardless of the commentary from social media users, Gayle was delighted that she was able to join the cast of The Lion King on stage. Unpacking the bucket list moment on Friday's episode of CBS Mornings, she described the experience as 'so fun.' Gayle added: 'No one's going to be asking us back, but we are so thankful.' She then shared: 'During rehearsal I actually fell, full face plant going up the steps.' In a video uploaded days ahead of her big break, Gayle revealed: 'I've seen it nine times but never in a gazillion years did I think I would ever have the opportunity to be in The Lion King in any way, shape or form. But that is changing this week!' Gayle's foray onto Broadway comes after she and Oprah attended the controversial wedding of Lauren Sanchez and Jeff Bezos last month. She also spent 11 minutes in space along with Lauren, singer Katy Perry, and others, in an all-woman mission in May.