Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Laurence Harvey
Film actor Laurence Harvey (1928-1973) was married three times, but he was actually a gay man who was trying to get the public off the scent of his true nature. His career stalled, and he did not become what anyone could call a major star. In spite of that, he got a lot of work, especially during the 1960s. Neither the public, critics nor friends said anything positive about his acting ability. He was in only one film that can be called a classic – "The Manchurian Candidate" (1962), with Frank Sinatra – but Harvey had little to do with its success.
George Jacobs, Frank Sinatra’s valet, wrote “Mr. S: My Life With Frank Sinatra,” a memoir in which he relates that Harvey often made passes at him while visiting Sinatra. Jacobs says that Sinatra was aware of Harvey's sexuality but did not mind, passing it off as a joke: “He has the handicaps of being a homo, a Jew, and a Polock*, so people should go easy on him.”
*Harvey was actually born to a Jewish family in Lithuania.
British actor John Fraser , author of “Close Up,” also wrote that Harvey was gay, pointing out that Harvey’s long-term partner was James Wolfe, his manager who "discovered" Harvey in the 1950s. Harvey’s marriages to and dalliances with women were usually with females about twice his age.
Laurence Harvey (photographed in 1954, at right) was a master of deception. While he maintained his entire life that his birth name was Laruschka Mischa Skikne, it was actually Zvi Mosheh Skikne. His Jewish family moved from Lithuania to South Africa when he was five years old, and while living in Johannesburg he took the name of Harry Skikne. While in his teens he served with the entertainment unit of the South African Army during WW II. After moving to London, he enrolled in the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art where he became known as "Larry." Dropping out of the academy, he began to perform on stage and in films, simultaneously adopting the stage name "Laurence Harvey." At last a name he liked.
Dame Judi Dench (currently appearing in Skyfall in yet another terrific turn as M) appeared on stage with Harvey in Shakespeare’s Henry V in 1959. She later talked of being bewildered at how Harvey never actually looked at her during his speeches. At the time, Joss Ackland was quoted as saying, “Americans seemed to think Harvey was some sort of great actor, which his colleagues certainly did not.” * Harvey was regularly dismissed by critics. In his posthumously published autobiography, “Knight Errant,” actor Robert Stephens described Harvey as "an appalling man and, even more unforgivably, an appalling actor.” He was often accused of being unprofessional, as many commented on the frustration that resulted from his chronic late arrival on the set. Harvey played out his career largely in undistinguished films, TV work and the occasional supporting role in a major production.
*Incredibly, Harvey received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor for his leading role in "Room at the Top" (1959), a British film. Although he did not win, he was more or less type cast; he played a conniving, ruthless, heartless social-climber.
David Shipman wrote of Harvey in 1972: “Laurence Harvey's career should be an inspiration to all budding actors: he has demonstrated conclusively that it is possible to succeed without managing to evoke the least audience interest or sympathy - and to go on succeeding despite unanimous critical antipathy and overwhelming public apathy. His twenty year career of mainly unprofitable films is a curiosity of film history.”
Although the British-made film "Darling" (1965) was one of the earliest films to depict gay characters in a sympathetic light, the closets were bursting on the set. There was Harvey, of course, but also Dirk Bogarde, who although deeply closeted, was having an affair with director John Schlesinger. Bogarde, who carried on a 40-year relationship with his agent, Tony Forwood, invested considerable energy in trying to portray himself publicly as a heterosexual. John Schlesinger hoped that his friend, Roland Curram, might be inspired enough by his role in "Darling" to come out of the closet. Curram always insisted he was heterosexual and went on to marry and later sire two children. In 1985, on the occasion of his divorce and ultimate coming out to his family and friends, Curram stated, “Of course, John was right.”
Well, there you have it.
Update from your blogger: I am aghast at some of the comments from my blog readers. This is not a personal attack. I am not "very young" (in fact, I'm close to retirement). I am certainly not antisemitic (I have been employed by a synagogue for 26 years). Before I wrote this entry for my blog about influential gay and bisexual men, I had known Laurence Harvey only as a second-tier movie actor, and his name was on a list of gay and bisexual actors. There are many gay and bisexual film and stage actors on this blog. But when I started to do research on Harvey, I was astonished at how much negative information had been written about him by those who worked with him during his film career. If you re-read this entry, notice how those comments are referenced and credited to those who wrote or commented about Harvey's less than charming traits. I have never met the man, and I have seen only four of his films. I have no grudge against him. I just related what I found out in my research on the man and cited those who wrote or spoke about him.
A scene from "The Magic Christian" (1969) in which Harvey recites Hamlet's soliloquy while stripping before an astonished audience (I'm not making this up):
Oh, I nearly forgot. Scottish-born actor John Fraser called Harvey "a whore" in his 2006 memoir, mentioned above. A very heavy drinker (for good reason, it would appear), Harvey died from stomach cancer at the age of just forty-five. He is buried in Santa Barbara, California, next to his daughter (by his third wife), who died at the age of thirty-five.
Trivia: In 1963, Laurence Harvey built a house in Beverly Hills (designed by Buff & Hensman) that came to have an incredible “gay” pedigree. Musical comedy composer Jerry Herman went on to own it, followed by Max Mutchnick, the co-creator of the TV hit Will & Grace. The 9,200 sq. ft. house was next sold to Ellen Degeneres, for $29 million in 2007. It was purchased six months ago from Ms. Degeneres by Ryan Seacrest (no comment, and nothing implied, naturally, but I do hear some choking noises off in the distance).
First of all, Happy Holidays, blog bud !!!
ReplyDeleteI might be a minority of one, but I thought "Larry" was mesmerizing in 'Butterfield 8' as well as one of the all time handsomest men of any persuasion. His boyish good looks and slim build made me giddy.
The fact that he shares my heritage totally seals the deal for me. I'd have been happy for him to read to me from the London phone book any time ! ;>)
Agreed!!!
DeleteI thought he wa an amazing actor. Summer and Smoke, Walk on the Wild Side, room at the Top....fantastic
DeleteOh God, ME TOO! I've been crushing on Laurence Harvey since I was a little girl of 10 and saw him break his sword across his knee before he died as the chilly-mannered William Barrett Travis in The Alamo (1960), John Wayne's own PERSONAL choice for that role. Laurence Harvey was a movie star. A gorgeous one. A talented one. The above "piece" infuriates me. What kind of hatred makes someone say "which he most certainly did not win" instead of just "which he did not win"? Slimy.
DeleteTotally agree! This reads like a "Hit Piece", hard to understand. Laurence Harvey may have been a horror in his personal life (I also "share his heritage" along w/ O!Daddie above) and many people of that heritage (I'm not identifying w/ it so much anymore) are MUY DIFICIL to work with. But please consider: Romeo&Juliet (1954); Room at the Top (1959); Summer&Smoke (1963); Of Human Bondage (1964); Darling (1965) and his best role: Manchurian Candidate (1964) ~ not a bad legacy! And yes, easy to crush on but I'm glad I didn't know him (personally)!
DeleteI knew Roy Everson who was First Laurence Harvey’s PersonL Assistant and Stand In, and then became Sean Connery’s PA and Stand In and latterly Peter O’ Toole’s PA and Stand In. Roy died recently aged 95. I’ve got a long black leather coat that belonged to Laurence Harvey. It was given to me by Roy Everson about sixteen years ago
DeleteAgreed..wonderful actor.
DeleteHarvey was actually very successful in the late 50s and early 60s - he did 4 films in 1962. His career though peaked and was over before he died quite young. True that none of his co-stars had a kind word for him: Stanwyck, Jane Fonda, Lee Remick, Capucine etc. but 3 of them won best actress opppsite him: Simone Signoret, Elizabeth Taylor and Julie Christie, where he really only has a small part in Darling. He was on stage a few times too, in Camelot, and I saw him in a production of Shakespeare's The Winters Tale about 1967 when I was a teenager. So he certainly got work for a while, but it was all over by the mid 60s really. His career is similar to that other actor whom I suspect was gay too - Stephen Boyd, who also died in his 40s and whose career had also peaked by then.
ReplyDeleteSo sorry to disagree...I thought Harvey was amazing as Col. Travis in Wayne's "The Alamo". I found him unbelievably good looking and gifted. I simply adored him and everything in which he acted. BTW, I am a straight woman. But if he was gay, I would stand in line to convert him!
ReplyDeleteI agree whole-heartedly!! I adored him in everything he did. I am watching Two Loves as I type. Lol
DeleteThank you, anonymous straight woman, I so agree, would stand in that line with you. I especially love seeing you love him for that great portrayal of Travis in the Alamo.
DeleteOK, can’t wait!
DeleteI'm not a bit sorry to disagree.. he was a fine actor, should have won an award for his performance in 'The Long & The Short & The Tall...
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ReplyDeleteI will continue to delete anonymous comments that disrespect the information contained in my posts, which are supported by the sources I cite. This often happens in posts about actors who are favorites of readers of this blog, and they cannot abide any information that chips away at the reputation of their idol. The fact that those who leave such comments do so anonymously speaks volumes.
ReplyDeleteErm... I´m pretty sure Dirk Bogarde didn´t have an affair with John Schlesinger. Wonder where you got that from... Don´t know what other people wrote here, but I´m anonymous because I can´t bother to sign up, btw.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteFrom your blogger: Details of the relationship between Bogarde and Schlesinger are revealed by William J. Mann, Schlesinger's official biographer, in Edge of Midnight: The Life of John Schlesinger.
ReplyDeleteMann is a writer whose claim to fame is that he buttonholes nearly every actor and actress who ever worked in film as "gay". I'm gay, but I'm rational enough to know that not every talented person in the world shares my same-sex sexual orientation.
DeleteHi Terry:
ReplyDeleteUnless I missed their names, I don't see Stephen Boyd or John Schlesinger listed in the blog
Harvey may be dislikeable on screen but he is weirdly intense & mesmerising so nobody should call him a rubbish actor.
ReplyDeleteThat's how I see him too, Molly. How he might have been in person had nothing to do with the actor I loved on screen.
DeleteAgree. I saw him as almost entirely responsible for the success of The Manchurian Candidate. Not responsible for any of it? What gives? I'm flummoxed at all this!
DeleteDespite the unkind personal attacks from the blogger's sources,clearly,there are many of us, myself included, who found Mr. Harvey charming, and got great enjoyment from his acting roles,looks,voice, and accent. I just watched him in an old t.v. episode of "Columbo".
DeleteI totally disagree with this spiteful and completely unwarranted demolition job done on Laurence Harvey. He turned in many notable performances in classic 50's films such as `Room at the Top` for which he was nominated for an Oscar and no, his northern accent didn't sound Johannesburg/Bradford as some catty critics would have it. `The Good Die Young` and `Expresso Bongo` are entertaining films. `Walk on the Wild Side` and `Summer and Smoke` and `The Running Man` are good stuff from the 60's. Hands off Larry!
ReplyDeleteFrom your blogger_
ReplyDeleteMy, we have touched a nerve! Believe what you will, but my comments are sourced. This is not a personal attack. If you think Harvey was a great actor or fine person, 99% of the people who knew him or worked with him disagree with you. I will continue to chip away at anonymous comments that disrespect the information contained in my posts, which are supported by the sources I cite. This often happens in posts about actors who are favorites of readers of this blog, and they cannot abide any information that tarnishes the reputation of their idol. The fact that those who leave such comments do so anonymously speaks volumes.
You may be right Terry. How often these things are true. I have known many famous aholes. I just happen to be a fan of him and his movies. Sad to me that he died so young.
Deleteyou should look at the big picture. Laurence Harvey is an enigma who could be different in various situations.. Did you know him personally. I always feel that if someone has a capacity to capture admiration or love from a audience, then there will always be some negative character to cut him down.
DeleteTo suggest that Laurence Harvey was not a terrific actor nor a real star, is ridiculous. You must be very young. He was briefly a huge star. He was brilliant in Room at theTop, Darling, The Manchurian Candidate, and Butterfield 8. Some people didn't care for him, some did. Elizabeth Taylor adored him. And he was sexy, no doubt about it.And had one of the most distinctive delicious speaking voices in movies.
ReplyDeleteHow about walk on the wild side with Jane Fonda and Stanwyck...that was Hollywoodd new sexy image...wonder if he ever hung out with Anthony Perkins...gorgeous couple they would ha ve made...yes Harvey was IT for a few years
DeleteYou must be very young not to think that Laurence Harvey was a terrific actor and brifly, a huge star. He was sensational in Room at the Top, Butterfield 8, Darling, The Alamo, and Summer and Smoke, among others. True, he was widely disliked. But having said that, Dirk Bogarde wasn't universally loved either, and he was a wonderful actor. Who is loved by all? The one person who adored him totally however, was Elizabeth Taylor, and to me that alone counts for a great deal. In fact she loved him so much, that when he was dying, she had to be barred from hospital visits because she created such a drama. And he had one of the most delicious speaking voices in films. I thought he was wonderful. On the screen anyway.
ReplyDeleteHarvey was one of the top 5 sexiest actors Hollywood ever gave birth to. his shirtless scenes are sine qua none.
ReplyDeleteI thought the review was unnecessarily negative and reeks of bitterness and a tinge of antisemitism. I saw him in "Walk on the wild side" and thought he was the stuff dreams were made of, his uniqueness in the roaster of stars shines...oh not to forget "The Manchurian Candidate"...greatness!
ReplyDeleteTo Toby Ross: I think you mean "roster of stars" but "roaster" a great description ~ a real hoot!! After all, the film world is akin to a pressure cooker! BTW ~ didn't Liz (Taylor) & L Harvey make a movie in the early '70s, a mystery where Liz plays his wife and he's trying to kill her? Please, what's the name of that one?
DeleteHarvey has always been my favorite actor and I enjoy watching his movies over and over, not something I can say about other more gifted and well thought of actors. He was a beautiful man and had a special quality which was entrancing.
ReplyDeleteI've read elsewhere what an atrocious actor Harvey was but never felt that. Maybe some of this was gay bashing, somemof it by gays hating he was closeted, some of it by Jew baiting and upper-class Brit pretension -- which he cut against certainly in Room at the Top. This was an important movie, kitchen sink, angry young men, and as Joe Lambert, Harvey inhabited the part well, his ambiguity and shiftiness very much an attribute. And maybe it did feed into his psyche, dumping on the upper-class young girl and wanting the older Simone Signoret. He was also not bad in Manchurian Candidate, maybe again the older woman (Lansberry) dominating him and his very shallowness perfect givenhe's brainwashed. Casting might be everything.
ReplyDeleteI am not concerned about L.H's sexual orientation, nor whether he was much liked/disliked. I am in awe of him as an actor, blessed with one of the most beautiful voices on the screen! I am not an actor, director, producer, therefore it wouldn't be fair for me to throw critic darts at L.H. I consider myself a film conossieur. I enjoy films for various reasons,especially the classics(black & white films).I find them very comforting. I feel blessed to be able to watch the great/greatest actors of their time/generation. I wanted to add L.H. is awfully convincing as a double agent/spy in "A Dandy In Aspic". Please view it if you can. Thank you. Anonymous
ReplyDeleteApparently, Sinatra used to refer to Harvey as "ladyboy"
ReplyDeleteAlso must add to the chorus--Laurence Harvey WAS a star, and gave some compelling and unforgettable performances. Agreed, he was not popular among his costars and was an obvious narcissist..but Elizabeth Taylor adored him and gave him a job when no one else would, as her husband in Night Watch, when he was dying of cancer in 1972...
ReplyDeleteNot that I am a big fan of Harvey either...but his performance in the title role of Manchurian Candidate is indisputably iconic...
I love your blog, am having so much fun reading!
-Chris
"Night Watch"! Couldn't remember the name ~ thank U, angelman66! I started to watch it but had to quit so will have to find it on Netflix or TCM ~ seemed like a good "escapist" movie. Liz Taylor remained a good and faithful friend to Rock Hudson, Laurence Harvey and others, very nice to see. And sorry ~ but I remember Laurence Harvey as being a star (way back when). He had a beautiful voice and several of his performances hold their own for all time. It's a shame he was so difficult with others.
DeleteIncidentally, Harvey died of colon cancer, not stomach cancer.
ReplyDeleteNo, it was stomach cancer.
DeleteMartha Hyer was another detractor of LH. She spoke harshly of him in her biography. The appeared together in A Girl Named Tamiko (1962.)
ReplyDeleteInteresting to know all of this. The first movie I saw him in was "Walk on the wild side" and I thought him terrific in that movie. Later on I saw him in "Butterfield 8", "Of human bondage", "Manchurian Candidate", "Summer and Smoke" among others. I thought him quite a good actor and was able to pull off several different accents in his movies. I really had no idea he was gay or that so many of his fellow actors and actresses disliked working with him. I certainly enjoy his performances in the movies and television shows he has been in though.
ReplyDeleteWhether he was a nice guy or not, he was a good actor. I had no idea that so many of his fellow actors and actresses disliked working with him so much. He certainly could pull off different accents. Just his work in "Walk on the wild side" proved that! I thought him very handsome and sexy myself.
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ReplyDeleteLaurence Harvey was an incredibly talented actor and I absolutely adored him. He left an amazing body of work, and he is singlehandedly responsible for the success of The Manchurian Candidate, in the opinion of many. Room at the Top, Darling, Butterfield 8....I could go on and on. Who cares what his peers thought of him? He was flawed just like the rest of us. He left a wonderful film legacy, and that's all that matters...
DeleteHe IS one of my favorite actors of all time,.. up there with Dirk, Michael Caine, Richard Harris, Peter Finch, O'Toole, Burton, Sean Connery, Lawrence O, all great UK actors who made movies that i will cherish always.
DeleteJust saw "Room at the top" for the 1st time,.. won't be the last!!! Laurence Harvey is the best of British actors, love the man and his performances! " GOD save the Queen"
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ReplyDelete"Neither the public, critics nor friends said anything positive about his acting ability."
ReplyDeleteExcept his Best Actor nomination.
Oh Lord. Laurence Harvey was very pretty and mesmerizingly talented actor. He put great care into his career. Whether he was a drunken disagreeable whore who cares. Half of actors are anyway. His sexuality is not an issue. Let's be respectful of his wife Pauline and late daughter domino. Thanks to LH for just being. Right. PEACE.
ReplyDeleteLaurence Harvey was an incredibly brilliant talented actor who never gave a bad performance. It's amazing how all this negativity about him, mostly posthumous,has been generated apropos his ability. His difficulties in working with him related by other actors is absolutely irrelevant. If this were a factor, 75% or more of actors would be classified as "untalented " and "uninspiring."
ReplyDeleteWell, the people that knew him well, worked closely with him, and married him, hated him. He treated his child poor Domino so abhorrently the poor kid grew up in great distress trying to achieve affection from a selfish narcissist not reciprocated. The emotionally induced ponderings of remote and complete strangers, and aroused layman and women alike, often conceived from the artifice of Cinema and television induced trance. Seldom bares any relationship to reality, and why Political figures that lie as if there is no tomorrow, still maintain popularity. It is a sad testimony that negates Evolutions theories we are improving as entities or the Myth we are Rational animals. We are emotionally activated fools by and large.The man was a monster, and you can't wise up a chump, but with a randy chump, it is pointless and not even worth attempting. I bet Eva loved Hitler too. There's one born every minute.
ReplyDeleteHis daughter was only 4 when he died...
DeleteI imagine Eva did love Hitler. May I ask and should you answer In what capacity and just how well did you know Laurence Harvey and family?
ReplyDeleteLovely and compelling on-screen. Fine voice, always enjoy watching him portray anything. Would never have tagged him as a lousy actor...quite the opposite, in fact.
ReplyDeleteAll Laurence Harvey owed his audience was a fine performance and that he always gave. I thought he was handsome and enjoyed watching all of his movies. He is one of my favorite actors.
ReplyDeleteThe Magic Christian entertained and fascinated me when I saw it in 1969 at a movie theater. Neither the movie nor Mr. Harvey are perfect but I was one who enjoyed it as entertainment (unlike some who saw it, entertainment is all I was seeking).
ReplyDeleteFun film by all means!! Ringo!! I do love Laurence Harvey and always will!
ReplyDeleteI really liked Laurence Harvey & his acting; he was brilliant regardless of what some thought. I only wish he could have had the opportunity to do more films.....Gone too soon!
ReplyDeleteI'm quite surprised that you've include Harvey as a gay/bi man of importance since you have such a negative view if his career. I've admired his acting for decades, but accept it's a matter of taste. His major significance was that his portrait of Joe Lampton in 'Room at the Top' was the first outing of the Angry Young Man that reached the general public. Skilful, original and influential on culture to this day. Ground-breaking.
ReplyDeleteI don't think you red all the way to the end of this post. It is not I who had a negative view of his career. It was his peers and biographers, all of them referenced in this post.
DeleteFrank Sinatra’s nickname for Laurence Harvey, according to his valet George Jacobs, was “Ladyboy.” It was well known in the business that James Woolf, who co-owned Romulus Films with his brother Sir John Woolf, was in love with Harvey. He had put his protégé into film after film, all of which had flopped, until he bought the film rights to John Braine’s bestseller Room at the Top, contracted the great Simone Signoret to play opposite Harvey, and finally made his lover a star.
ReplyDeleteExcerpted from the Article: She Was Oddly Beautiful: An Homage To Elaine Stritch
https://ericlindsay.wordpress.com/page/2/
I don't have a clue what he was like in person, probably a dick from what I've read, but god, he was so gorgeous! He was so handsome, so sexy and had that great voice. I enjoyed every performance I saw him do, but then I had the hots for him, so that might have influenced my feelings, somewhat. LOL. Perhaps he wasn't a great actor, but I never cared.
ReplyDeleteHow vicious are the man wrote, just vile and twisted. Harvey was magnificent.
ReplyDeleteI liked Harvey quite a lot, knew nothing of his personal life till this post and thread, except for the excessive drinking with Peter Finch and Peter O'Toole. His posture when walking so tall, brisk and slim in b & w 'Room at the Top' is something I have often imitated on the streets; I think it's precisely the way to walk aristocratically. I would say that 'Darling', BUtterfield 8, and 'Room at the Top' are all great films, but most won't agree with me about 'BUtterfield 8'. John O'Hara was a great fiction writer, but maybe too macho for today's tastes (I am sure of it, having read stupid stuff from Kakutani on him), and people forget he also wrote the Pal Joey Stories and then the book for that delicious musical (most are worthless, I think at this point in my life). And Liz was better as a whore in that than in any other performance she ever did--came so naturally, and she was always so dizzy she condemned it herself. Maybe Harvey is also 'out of fashion' like O'Hara, and that kind of thing happens.
ReplyDeleteHe worked with my favourite actor,Ronald Lewis, there is so little information about him, can anyone point me to some info other than the usual when googled?
ReplyDeleteI agree loved Laurence Harvey. His brooding bad boy persona, his handsome looks, and compelling performances always made him a favorite of mine.
ReplyDeleteI also liked him in Butterfield 8 but there always seemed to be something sad about him Now I understand why,it was tough for him being closeted.
ReplyDeleteYour Instinct are correct...Sinatra mentioned that vwhenever he would visit he would come on to his chauffeur...still next to Lamarr and Bacall ones of the most beautiful Hebrews...we have the world some beauties
DeleteI swooned
ReplyDeleteI don't care if Laurence Harvey was gay, bisexual or trisexual---he was a terrific actor---thoroughly mesmerizing on the screen with his gorgeous looks and voice and manner---and was one of my favorites.I had the hots for him since I was in junior high school and he still is one of my favorite actors of all time!
ReplyDeleteI'll always remember Harvey for the frightening and disquieting episode of Night Gallery: "The Caterpillar." His acting in that episode was stellar!
ReplyDeleteHarvey appeared as the bad guy in a Columbo episode on 1973. Was this Harvey's last acting job?
ReplyDeleteI just happened to see that Columbo rerun episode tonight. Despite what the blog sources said about him, he brought a lot of enjoyment to many people, including me, through his acting roles, his voice, and his attractive and intense presence.
DeleteI just watched that Columbo episode last night (which led me to this blog). Regardless of the sources' nasty comments about him, he brought enjoymemt to many people as an actor, with his intense presence, including his beautiful speaking voice.
DeleteYikes! You need to do more research. Harvey was a pretty major star in the USA. Not only was he in the huge The Alamo(1960)but he was in many films that were big for that time,not only including the very popular Butterfield 8(1960) and Summer and Smoke(1961), but many others including Walk on the Wild Side(1962),Of Human Bondage(1963), the Ceromony(1963), The Outrage(1964), and A Dandy in Aspic(1968). His film career died down in the late 60s, but he had a much better run than many other less fortunate actors. Other big 1960s actors who have also been forgotten like Harvey are Rod Taylor, Stuart Whitman, Stephen Boyd and George Peppard. All big names in big films for that time. Learn your classic film history, my friend.
ReplyDeleteGreat response.
DeleteHarvey was a brilliant, versatile actor who was much maligned and resented during his short lifetime. Much like Orson Welles, he came to the scene with great notices, and took ambitious projects, but too soon, was not accorded his due. Welles was a strong personality, and antagonized the Hollywood elite. Laurence Harvey's great range - from classical drama to comedy, was highly evident. It didn't help that his most iconic work - Manchurian Candidate, was banned for 25 years. In addition, he showed a great flair for comedy. Would that he had a director like Leo McCarey, who could have explored this side to his work. This comedic bent is apparent in his game show appearances - so natural, at ease, not in the least bit "wooden," and a master of various dialects to boot. TCM is having a retrospective of his works tomorrow. I hope a whole new audience can come to appreciate this complex actor and his work. He often appeared like a character actor trapped in the body of a matinee idol. That comparison to Welles is ironic - Harvey had been working on a project with Welles that was never completed. Sadly, the original footage has been lost, and one can only see glimpses of the working print.
ReplyDeleteThe first time I saw Laurence Harvey on screen was in “The Alamo” and I still enjoy him as Travis.He looked great in that uniform and wide brimmed hat which really did it for me.I also like him in “Two Loves” but most of his films don’t appeal to me
ReplyDeleteat all.He was a most unusual man and I would like to have met him ; I have a feeling he would have appealed to men rather than women (John Wayne personally selected him) because
most of the female stars did not seem to enjoy working with him.
Check out Laurence Harvey in "Room at the Top," "Expresso Bongo," and "Summer and Smoke (with the great Geraldine Page)." He was excellent in all three films.
DeleteIt was said Harvey liked to drink and spent more than he earned later in his career, perhaps from having to be in the closet for so long. He deserved better from the film industry.
ReplyDeleteFrom the memoirs of Jerry Pam, Harvey's one-time publicist: ""Larry Harvey was also bisexual, and unlike many other leading men who feared it might damage their careers, never hid that fact. Though many rumors circulated that his long-time lover was British film producer James Woolf, I never asked Larry about his personal life, taking the view that ignorance was my best line of defense if I was ever quizzed on the subject." I don't know Harvey's work very well, but he seems to have a great deal of charisma on the screen. The reason this article comes off as such a hit piece is because it focuses too heavily on his being a "bad actor" which is a matter of opinion. There is no objective evidence that can back that up. There is certainly evidence that he was disliked by many costars, although Jerry Pam speaks highly of him calling him "one of the classiest actors in Hollywood." I'm sure the guy was miserable not being able to truly be himself (doesn't excuse rude behavior but does provide a possible reason for it). I give him credit for being more open about his sexuality than most (according to Jerry). Jerry also says he was a heavy smoker and didn't stop smoking even when dying of stomach cancer, believing that it had no effect on him.
ReplyDeleteI think he was deplorable and do not have that same reaction to any other actor. He looked to me like a totally miserable human being. I felt this since my childhood and can hardly stand the sight of him.
ReplyDeleteMuch of film/acting criticism is subjective, and interestingly, many performers whose performances were lauded years ago, now appear dated and stilted. Gary Cooper won awards, but today much of his work seems wooden; his flat, monotone voice is irritating. I did not really explore Laurence Harvey's entire filmography until recently. I had seen the major Hollywood films, but, seeing his work in total, has given me renewed interest and respect for Harvey as an actor. He's especially strong in the early British films, Sadly, some interesting projects never materialized. He was supposed to work on a Hitchcock film, co-starring with Audrey Hepburn, which was scratched when Hepburn was expecting. There was an incomplete film with Orson Welles, of which I've only glimpsed isolated scenes. Harvey did have a commanding presence, a keen ear for dialects, and a surprising gift for comedy. He's wonderful in the British film, Expresso Bongo, a wonderful satire about celebrity, Also, he did manage to have sustaining r working relationships with various female actors, although this garnishes little attention. Tragic that his life was cut-off so soon,
ReplyDeleteI love Harvey's performances and he was a big deal in America in the 60s and 70s. He was constantly in movie magazines as well too explain to you how popular he was with fans. I'm sorry he died so young, that's heartbreaking.
ReplyDeleteI've noticed that Harvey's female detractors were mostly young American actresses, more known for their glamour than acting ability- e.g. Kim Novak and Martha Hyer come to to mind. Hitchcock disparaged Novak's acting in Vertigo, though the film is excellent. Hyer worked in 1950's to early 1960's, but was never a great actress. Interestingly, his female British co-stars didn't speak negatively of him. I've read interviews with Angela Lansbury, Sylvia Sims which mention Harvey favorably. He made a few films with Claire Bloom, who also never criticized him, as far as I know. The American actress, Julie Harris, made 2 films with him as well; again no mention of discord, and he and Mia Farrow go on quite well. Maybe he preferred serious actresses.
ReplyDeleteYou have made an excellent point. I learned, for example, from "Walk on the Wild Side" IMDB: "According to Penny Stallings' 'Flesh and Fantasy', when Barbara Stanwyck first encountered Laurence Harvey on the set lounging in his gold brocade bathrobe and drinking champagne, she walked up to him and said, "All right, Larry, let's go! Get your ass in gear. We've got a picture to make, and I don't have time for prima donnas!" After a moment of silence, this struck Harvey as highly amusing, and he burst into laughter. He and Stanwyck immediately became friends."
DeleteAnd then there was incident with the repugnant Capucine (a consummate non-actress), again from WOTWS IMDB: "During the filming, Capucine objected to filming kissing scenes with Laurence Harvey, feeling that he was not manly enough for her. Harvey reportedly replied, 'Perhaps if you were more of a woman, I would be more of a man. Honey, kissing you is like kissing the side of a beer bottle.'"
I had no idea of all this behind the scenes movie history. I found it all so informative I will surely read more on the mentioned actors, directors, written books, and films.
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