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Stephen Haggard

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Cause of death
  
Suicide

Role
  
Actor

Nationality
  
British

Died
  
February 25, 1943, Egypt


Years active
  
1930s–1940s

Parents
  
Godfrey Haggard

Name
  
Stephen Haggard

Children
  
Piers Haggard

Stephen Haggard httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb6

Born
  
21 March 1911 (
1911-03-21
)
Guatemala City, Guatemala

Resting place
  
Heliopolis War Cemetery

Occupation
  
actor, writer, poet, intelligence officer

Spouse
  
Morna Gillespie (m. 1935–1943)

Books
  
Development - democracy - and welfa, Famine in North Korea, Developing Nations and the P, The Slavery Business, Pathways from the periphery

Similar People
  
Piers Haggard, Daisy Haggard, Dani Rodrik, Albert Fishlow, Pope Dioscorus I of Alexan

Stephen Hubert Avenel Haggard (21 March 1911 – 25 February 1943) was a British actor, writer and poet.

Contents

Early life

Haggard was born on 21 March 1911 in Guatemala City, Guatemala and was the son of Sir Godfrey Digby Napier Haggard, a British diplomat, and his wife Georgianna Ruel Haggard. He was the grandnephew of author H. Rider Haggard, and the brother of photographer and author Virginia Haggard, the companion of the painter Marc Chagall. He was also the father of the film director Piers Haggard. Haggard was educated at Haileybury College, where he became close to the artist-schoolmaster Wilfrid Blunt.

Training and career

After an initial foray into journalism, and determined to obtain some overseas experience, Haggard moved to Munich, where he studied for stage at the Munich State Theatres under Frau Magda Lena. He made his stage debut at the Schauspielhaus in October 1930 in the play Das Kluge Kind directed by Max Reinhardt. He later appeared as Hamlet at the same theatre.

Returning to the United Kingdom in 1931, Haggard's career path was initially discouraging: he received only small parts in various London plays and worked in repertory in Worthing. He undertook further study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. and subsequently received good notices when he played Silvius in Shakespeare's As You Like It in London in 1933. He was noticed by the playwright Clemence Dane and Haggard made his first appearance in New York in 1934 as the poet Thomas Chatterton in her play Come of Age. Returning to Britain, he had successful roles in a number of plays, including Flowers of the Forest, a production of Mazo de la Roche's Whiteoaks, and he appeared as Konstantin in Chekhov's The Seagull, and was hailed as one of the most promising and handsome classical actors of the era.

Haggard married Morna Gillespie in September 1935, and they had three children, of whom one died young.

In 1938, Haggard returned to New York to reprise his role as Finch in Whiteoaks, which he also directed. His novel Nya was published in the same year. He appeared as Mozart in the film Whom the Gods Love (1936). The film was not a success, in part because Haggard was considered to be inexperienced, and was unknown. He also appeared in Alfred Hitchcock's film Jamaica Inn (1939) and subsequently appeared as Lord Nelson in the Carol Reed film The Young Mr Pitt (1942).

Second World War

At the outbreak of the Second World War Haggard joined the British Army, serving as a captain in the Intelligence Corps. His wife and two sons went to the United States in 1940, where his father was consul-general in New York. Shortly after their departure, he wrote his sons a letter, which was subsequently published in the Atlantic Monthly later that year as "I'll Go to Bed at Noon: A Soldier's Letter to His Sons." Haggard was posted to the Middle East and worked for the Department of Political Warfare. There he met the author Olivia Manning and her husband, the broadcaster R. D. Smith. The latter recruited Haggard to play starring roles in his radio productions of Henry V and Hamlet on local radio in Jerusalem.

Death

While in the Middle East, Haggard fell in love with a beautiful Egyptian married woman whose husband worked in Palestine. Haggard was overworked and felt that the war had destroyed his acting career. He was on the edge of a nervous breakdown when after some months the woman decided to end the relationship. Haggard shot himself on a train between Cairo and Palestine on 25 February 1943 at the age of 31.

The manner of Haggard's death was hushed up and is not mentioned in the biography of Haggard written by Christopher Hassell and published in 1948. Haggard is buried in Heliopolis War Cemetery, in Cairo, Egypt.

Legacy

Manning based the character Aidan Sheridan in her Fortunes of War novel sequence on Haggard.

Works

  • Haggard, S. (1938). Nya. London: Faber & Faber Limited.
  • Haggard, S. (1944). I’ll Go to Bed at Noon: A Soldier’s Letter to His Sons. London, Faber and Faber
  • Haggard, S. (1945). The Unpublished Poems of Stephen Haggard Salamander Press
  • Athene Seyler with Stephen Haggard (1946). The Craft of Comedy. New York : Theatre Arts
  • Filmography

    Actor
    1942
    The Young Mr. Pitt as
    Lord Nelson
    1940
    Fear and Peter Brown (Short) as
    Peter Brown
    1939
    Johnson Was No Gentleman (TV Movie) as
    Philip Stanhope, his son
    1939
    Jamaica Inn as
    Willie Penhale - Sir Humphrey's Gang
    1939
    The Tempest/II (TV Movie) as
    Ariel
    1939
    The Tempest (TV Movie) as
    Ariel
    1938
    The Duchess of Malfi (TV Movie) as
    Antonio
    1937
    Knight Without Armor as
    Minor Role (uncredited)
    1936
    Mozart as
    Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
    Soundtrack
    1941
    Old Bill and Son (lyrics: "The French Song")

    References

    Stephen Haggard Wikipedia