Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Nigel Patrick

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Years active
  
1932–81

Name
  
Nigel Patrick


Role
  
Actor

TV shows
  
Zero One (UK)

Nigel Patrick tumblrlxdxu8DQpD1qd3ucoo11280jpg

Full Name
  
Nigel Dennis Patrick Wemyss-Gorman

Born
  
2 May 1912 (
1912-05-02
)
Clapham, London, England

Occupation
  
Actor/director/stage manager/writer

Awards
  
Zulueta Award – Best Actor1960 The League of Gentlemen

Died
  
September 21, 1981, London, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Beatrice Campbell (m. 1951–1979)

Parents
  
Dorothy Turner, Charles Wemyss

Movies
  
Pandora and the Flying Du, The League of Gentlemen, Sapphire, Battle of Britain, Raintree County

Similar People
  
Basil Dearden, Albert Lewin, Yvonne Mitchell, Beatrice Campbell, Ken Annakin

Ava gardner james mason nigel patrick etude in a flat major chopin


Nigel Patrick (born Nigel Dennis Patrick Wemyss-Gorman; 2 May 1912 – 21 September 1981) was an English actor and stage director born into a theatrical family.

Contents

During the late 1940s and 1950s, he became known as a debonair leading man in British films, though he could also portray rogues. He featured in The Sound Barrier (aka, Breaking Through the Sound Barrier, 1952), under the direction of David Lean.

The Informers (1961) - Nigel Patrick meets with an informer


Biography

Patrick was born in London, England, the son of actress Dorothy Turner (1890–1969).

Stage Actor

He made his professional stage debut in The Life Machine at the Regent Theatre, King's Cross in 1932 following a period in repertory. Thereafter he appeared in many successful plays, including Half a Crown (1934), Ringmaster (1935), Roulette (1935), The Lady of La Paz (1936), and Madmoiselle (1936)

He starredin the long-running George and Margaret (1937) at the Wyndham's Theatre, which ran for 799 performances.

He followed it with Tony Draws a Horse (1939) and Children to Bless You (1939).

World War Two

His acting career was put on hold until after service in World War II, during which, as a Lieutenant Colonel in the King's Royal Rifle Corps, he fought in the Middle East, North Africa and Italy.

Film Career

After the war he appeared in Morning Departure (1946) on TV and Fools Rush In, Tomorrow's Child (1946) and Noose (1947) on stage.

Patrick had film roles in Spring in Park Lane (1948), Uneasy Terms (1948), and notably Noose (1948) playing a spiv. Patrick had a good part in Silent Dust (1948) and was promoted to star for The Jack of Diamonds (1949), which he also co-wrote.

He supported Patricia Roc in The Perfect Woman (1949), and had a key role in the film version of Morning Departure (1950) (a different part to the one he had played on TV).

Patrick was one of several names in Trio (1950) based on stories by W. Somerset Maugham and appeared in the Hollywood-financed Pandora and the Flying Dutchman (1951). He was the young teacher in The Browning Version (1951) with Michael Redgrave, and appeared in a popular comedy Young Wives' Tale (1951). He returned to the world of Maugham with Encore (1951) and was in Who Goes There! (1951) on stage.

Patrick reprised his Who Goes There! (1952) performance on film then played a test pilot in the popular The Sound Barrier (1952). He was then in Meet Me Tonight (1952) and The Pickwick Papers (1952). Due mostly to The Sound Barrier, exhibitors voted Patrick the seventh most popular British film star with the public, in 1952.

Patrick was in Grand National Night (1953) and was the ninth most popular British star. On stage he was in Escapade (1953) and Birthday Honours (1953).

The following year he was in Forbidden Cargo (1954) and was one of several British stars in The Sea Shall Not Have Them (1954). He supported Richard Widmark in A Prize of Gold (1955) for Warwick Films, who announced Patrick might direct In All Dishonesty for them on stage. It did not happen. Instead Patrick starred in a comedy All for Mary (1955). On stage he was in Green Room Rags (1954) and The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker (1955).

He had a major role in Raintree County (1957).

Director

For Warwick Films, Patrick starred in and directed How to Murder a Rich Uncle (1957).

He supported Jeffrey Hunter in Count Five and Die (1957) and appeared in The Egg (1957) on stage. Patrick made another for Warwick but as an actor only, The Man Inside (1958), with Jack Palance.

On stage Patrick directed No Way to Kill (1958) and Not in the Book (1958) and acted in and directed Pleasure of His Company (1959).

He starred in Sapphire (1959), winner of Best British Film at the 1960 BAFTA Film Awards. It was directed by Basil Dearden who then used Patrick in The League of Gentlemen (1960). On stage he acted in and directed Settled Out of Court (1960).

Patrick made another for Warwick as an actor, The Trials of Oscar Wilde (1960), then made Johnny Nobody (1961) for them as director and actor.

He was in Zero One (1962–65) on TV and starred in The Informers (1963).

Later Career

Patrick appeared on stage in The Schoolmistress (1964) and Present Laughter (1965) and he directed Past Imperfect (1964) andPresent Laughter (1965) and Alan Ayckbourn's Relatively Speaking (1967) at the Duke of York's Theatre. Film appearances included Battle of Britain (1969), The Virgin Soldiers (1969) and The Executioner (1970). He directed Avanti! (1968) on Broadway.

Other stage appearances included Best of Friends (1970), Reunion in Vienna (1971), Habeas Corpus (1974), The Pay Off (1974), Dear Daddy (1976) and Peter Pan (1978). He also worked steadily as a director.

Personal Life and Death

He married the actress Beatrice Campbell at St James's Roman Catholic Church, Spanish Place, Marylebone, London on 12 January 1951. She predeceased him in 1979; he died, two years later, from lung cancer, on 21 September 1981.

As a director

  • How to Murder a Rich Uncle (1957)
  • Johnny Nobody (1961)
  • As a writer

  • The Jack of Diamonds (1949)
  • As a narrator

  • Arrivederci Roma (1958)
  • Goal! (1966)
  • The Year of Sir Ivor (1969)
  • As a director/stage manager

    Filmography

    Actor
    1981
    Sunday Night Thriller (TV Series) as
    Hugh Logan
    - Blunt Instrument: Part 2 (1981) - Hugh Logan
    - Blunt Instrument: Part 1 (1981) - Hugh Logan
    1977
    Silver Bears as
    Financial Mediator (uncredited)
    1974
    ITV Playhouse (TV Series) as
    Charles
    - A Kind of Bonus (1974) - Charles
    1973
    The MacKintosh Man as
    Soames-Trevelyan
    1972
    The Great Waltz as
    Johann Strauss Sr.
    1972
    Tales from the Crypt as
    Rogers (segment "Blind Alleys")
    1970
    The Executioner as
    Colonel Scott
    1969
    It Takes a Thief (TV Series) as
    Charles
    - Flowers from Alexander (1969) - Charles
    1969
    The Virgin Soldiers as
    R.S.M. Raskin
    1969
    The Battle of Britain as
    Group Capt. Hope
    1966
    ITV Play of the Week (TV Series) as
    Gerald Parkinson
    - You'll Know Me by the Stars in My Eyes (1966) - Gerald Parkinson
    1962
    Zero One (TV Series) as
    Alan Garnett
    - Excess Baggage (1965) - Alan Garnett
    - The Body (1965) - Alan Garnett
    - Point of View (1965) - Alan Garnett
    - And One to Go (1965) - Alan Garnett
    - A Case of Charity (1964) - Alan Garnett
    - The Trial (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Delayed Reaction (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Triple Cross (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - The Switch (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Stopover (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Louder Than Nightingales (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Hurricane (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Key Witness (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - The Stowaway (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - The Last of the Squadron (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - The Impostor (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Ghost Strip (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - The Creators (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - And Maya Makes Three (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - The Golden Silence (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Discord (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Downdraft (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Danger on Cloud Seven (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - The Man Who Waited (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - The Good Old Days (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Everybody's Uncle (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Deadly Angels (1963) - Alan Garnett
    - Big Sister (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - Million Dollar Lift (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - Gunpoint to Shannon (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - The Marriage Broker (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - Return Trip (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - Fly Away Peter (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - The Bovard Affair (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - Donovan's Disaster (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - The Contender (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - The Liar (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - Glidepath (1962) - Alan Garnett
    - Stoneface (1962) - Alan Garnett
    1965
    Present Laughter (TV Movie) as
    Garry Essendine
    1963
    Underworld Informers as
    Chief Inspector John Edward Johnnoe
    1961
    Johnny Nobody as
    Father Carey
    1960
    The Trials of Oscar Wilde as
    Sir Edward Clarke
    1960
    The League of Gentlemen as
    Race
    1959
    Sapphire as
    Chief Inspector Hazard
    1958
    Target (TV Series) as
    Ffolkes
    - Four Against Three Millions (1958) - Ffolkes
    1958
    The Man Inside as
    Sam Carter
    1957
    Count Five and Die as
    Major Julien Howard
    1957
    Seven Hills of Rome as
    Narrator (voice, uncredited)
    1957
    Raintree County as
    Professor Jerusalem Webster Stiles
    1957
    How to Murder a Rich Uncle as
    Henry
    1955
    All for Mary as
    Capt. Clive Norton
    1955
    A Prize of Gold as
    Brian Hammell
    1954
    The Sea Shall Not Have Them as
    Flight Sgt. Singsby
    1954
    Forbidden Cargo as
    Insp. Michael Kenyon
    1953
    Escapade (TV Movie) as
    John Hampden
    1953
    Wicked Wife as
    Gerald Coates
    1952
    The Pickwick Papers as
    Mr. Jingle
    1952
    Tonight at 8:30 as
    Toby Cartwright (segment "Ways and Means")
    1952
    The Sound Barrier as
    Tony
    1952
    The Passionate Sentry as
    Miles Cornwall
    1951
    Young Wives' Tale as
    Rodney Pennant
    1951
    Encore as
    Tom Ramsay (segment "The Ant and the Grasshopper")
    1951
    The Browning Version as
    Frank Hunter
    1951
    Pandora and the Flying Dutchman as
    Stephen Cameron
    1950
    Trio as
    Max Kelada (segment "Mr. Know-All")
    1950
    Operation Disaster as
    Lieut. Manson
    1949
    The Perfect Woman as
    Roger Cavendish
    1949
    The Jack of Diamonds as
    Alan Butler
    1949
    Silent Dust as
    Simon Rawley
    1948
    The Silk Noose as
    Bar Gorman
    1948
    Uneasy Terms as
    Lucien Donnelly
    1948
    Spring in Park Lane as
    Mr. Bacon
    1946
    Morning Departure (TV Movie) as
    Lt-Cmdr. Stanford
    1946
    A Hundred Years Old (TV Movie) as
    Trino
    1940
    Mrs. Pym of Scotland Yard as
    Richard Loddon
    1932
    All That Is England (Short)
    Director
    1967
    Relatively Speaking (TV Movie) (theatre director)
    1965
    Present Laughter (TV Movie)
    1961
    Johnny Nobody
    1958
    Theatre Night (TV Series) (1 episode)
    - Not in the Book (1958)
    1957
    How to Murder a Rich Uncle
    Writer
    1949
    The Jack of Diamonds (dialogue)
    Self
    1981
    Looks Familiar (TV Series) as
    Self - Guest
    - Episode dated 5 May 1981 (1981) - Self - Guest
    1970
    Talking of Patents (Documentary short) as
    Self - Commentator
    1969
    The Year of Sir Ivor (Documentary) as
    Narrator (voice)
    1967
    Relatively Speaking (TV Movie) as
    Self - Introduction
    1966
    Goal! The World Cup (Documentary) as
    Narrator (voice)
    1961
    Variety Club of Great Britain Awards for 1960 (TV Special documentary short) as
    Self - Best Stage Actor
    1957
    Operation Raintree (Documentary short) as
    Self (uncredited)
    1948
    Play the Game (TV Series) as
    Self
    - Episode dated 5 March 1949 (1949) - Self
    - Episode dated 23 October 1948 (1948) - Self
    Archive Footage
    2000
    Hollywood Remembers Lee Marvin (TV Movie documentary) as
    Self / Prof. Jerusalem Webster Stiles
    1995
    Arena (TV Series documentary) as
    Self
    - The Peter Sellers Story Part 2: Jack to Jacques (1995) - Self

    References

    Nigel Patrick Wikipedia