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Richard Todd - 1919 - 2009


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#1 danslittlefinger

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Posted 05 December 2009 - 01:57 AM

This man acted in some of my favourite films of all time. This is one man I am happy he didn't play Bond TBH. Look at what we could have missed.

True hero on and off screen.

http://thescotsman.s...-war.5886775.jp

Farewell to a real-life war hero, movie Dam Buster and the man who should have been James Bond

ACTOR Richard Todd, best known for his roles in war films The Dam Busters and The Longest Day, has died at the age of 90.
In his heyday, Todd was one of British cinema's biggest box-office draws.

He also became a war hero in his own right and was one of the first British officers to land in Normandy on D-Day.
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The actor died at his home in Lincolnshire on Thursday.
His family said in a statement:
"He had been suffering from cancer, an illness that he bore with his habitual courage and dignity."

Born in Dublin, Richard Andrew Palethorpe-Todd at first hoped to become a playwright, but discovered a love for acting after helping to found the Dundee Repertory Company in 1939.

Todd had to master a Scottish accent for his Oscar-nominated performance in the 1949 film The Hasty Heart – which also starred Ronald Reagan and Patricia Neal – and the accent proved a useful skill in his later film career.

In A Man Called Peter, based on the true story of Scottish priest Peter Marshall, Todd played the man who left for the United States and eventually became chaplain to the Senate.

Mr Marshall's widow, Catherine, later said of Todd's performance: "He was just about the only film actor whose Scottish syllables would have met (her husband's] standards."

However, Todd was probably best known for playing RAF pilot Guy Gibson in the 1955 film The Dam Busters.

Merv Hallam, curator of the museum at RAF Scampton in Lincolnshire where the Dam Busters were stationed, said the last time Todd visited the base was in 1993 for the 50th anniversary of the squadron's raids.

He said: "He was one of the old-fashioned film stars in the 1950s and 1960s, when British actors were at the forefront of the movie business."

Todd just missed out on becoming the first big-screen 007, with writer Ian Fleming preferring him to play James Bond in Dr No in 1962. However, a schedule clash opened the way for Sean Connery to play the superspy.
(Daily Mail: He was handsome, had plenty of sex appeal - and was even Ian Fleming's first choice to play James Bond (although producer Harry Saltzman considered him too short and vetoed him)

Instead, Todd took the role of Inspector Harry Sanders in Death Drums Along the River, which was released in 1963.

During the Second World War, Todd volunteered for the British Army, and was among the first paratroopers dropped into Normandy in the D-Day invasion. He was also one of the first paratroopers to meet the glider force commanded by Major John Howard at Pegasus Bridge.

He later played Howard in the film The Longest Day in 1962.

His role as male lead in Claudia led to romance and then marriage to his leading lady, Catherine Grant-Bogle. His other film roles included the lead in The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men, and he continued to act well into his eighties.

Todd had a son and a daughter from his first marriage and two sons from his later marriage to Virginia Mailer. Both marriages ended in divorce.

His son Seamus took his own life in 1997, as did his eldest son, Peter, who killed himself in 2005 following the breakdown of his marriage.

Todd said dealing with those tragedies was like his experience of war.

Michael Winner, who directed Todd in the 1978 film The Big Sleep, described him as "the best example of classic British screen acting", adding: "Richard Todd was the most wonderful type of British stiff-upper-lip acting."

another great link:
http://www.dailymail...icide-sons.html

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Richard Todd as Wing Commander Guy Gibson (left) and MIchael Redgrave as Dr Barnes Wallis, who came up with the idea for the bouncing bomb in a scene from The Dam Busters.

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Todd in his Parachute Regiment uniform. He was one of the first British soldiers to drop into France on D-Day. Right, the actor at home three years ago.

He was explaining why he had never complained when his co- stars, both strapping six-footers, made fun of his diminutive stature. Once, during the lunch break, they scooped out a hole where Todd was to stand opposite them in the next scene, making him appear even smaller than his 5ft 8in.

When I reminded him that he had been one of the first paratroopers to drop into Nazi-occupied France on D-Day - his assignment as a captain in the Parachute Regiment was to prevent a German counter-attack by seizing and holding the Pegasus Bridge over the River Orne - he said: 'That was wartime. You behave quite differently in war. You don't have much time to dwell on what you're doing when the bullets are zipping around.

'I put all that stuff behind me once the war ended. Anyway, how can you take seriously a bunch of actors playing silly buggers? If the prank amused them, it was fine with me. Elstree studios isn't exactly war-torn France, is it?'

Always a gentleman, he never mentioned that neither of his tormentors had ever fought in a real war.
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Thanks for the great memories and your courage sir. B)

#2 PrinceKamalKhan

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Posted 05 December 2009 - 05:12 AM

RIP to A Man Called Peter, Rob Roy and Robin Hood. A fine actor and a true WW2 hero.

#3 DamnCoffee

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Posted 05 December 2009 - 11:14 AM

Sad news indeed.

Just found out last night that this guy was Flemings choice to play Bond. It would've been interesting to see.

RIP.

#4 Major Tallon

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Posted 05 December 2009 - 11:27 AM

I always enjoyed seeing him on screen. Thanks, danslittlefinger, for putting together such a nice tribute to this very fine man.

#5 danslittlefinger

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Posted 05 December 2009 - 05:39 PM

I always enjoyed seeing him on screen. Thanks, danslittlefinger, for putting together such a nice tribute to this very fine man.



NP, a great man deserves mentioning. B)
I just wish it was more befitting but something is better than nought.