|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Acting Life and RomanceHavers' first acting job was in the radio series Mrs Dale's Diary and he subsequently went onto working for the Prospect Theatre Company initially 'carrying a spear and making cups of tea' as he puts it in his autobiography. From an early age Havers had an eye for the ladies and he describes his experiences with an early leading lady, Maxine Audley thus: "I was in her dressing room doing whatever she asked me to, and I mean anything and everything. One afternoon I sauntered into her dressing room, still in my officer's kit, only to find a similarly clad new member of the cast rehearsing what I had perfected over the past few months. My time was up. She blew me a kiss and I slid away. Actually, I was rather relieved, I needed a rest".
His first film appearance was a small part in Pope Joan (1972), but his first major success came with the leading role in a BBC dramatisation of Nicholas Nickleby (1977), closely followed by another BBC drama serial, A Horseman Riding By. By the time he appeared in Chariots of Fire (1981), he was a familiar face on television. Despite appearing in such films as A Passage to India (1984) and Empire of the Sun (1987) he never made a name for himself as a film star, but has continued in a succession of starring roles on television. He co-starred for several years in the 1980s BBC sitcom Don't Wait Up alongside Tony Britton. Havers appeared as Captain Hook in the pantomime "Peter Pan" at the Wycombe Swan, High Wycombe, from December 2006 to mid-January 2007. Nigel Havers' autobiography, Playing with Fire, was published in October 2006. Family and private life
In the mid-eighties Havers began an affair with Polly Williams, the sister of his friend, the actor Simon Williams. News broke as he was appearing in TV series The Charmer and consolidated his public reputation as somewhat of a cad. Havers has written of the depression he experienced trying to choose between his marriage and their young daughter Kate, born in 1977, and his mistress. During this time he consulted a psychiatrist at the Devonshire Hospital in London. Things were resolved in his mind when he took a part in the TV film Naked Under Capricorn which was filmed in Alice Springs, Australia. He describes in his autobiography wrangling a herd of cattle and catching sight of a figure in the distance who turned out to be Williams. The following year they were married. Polly Williams died of cancer in 2004. ControversyHavers achieved notoriety in 2004 for attacking cyclists. The article, in the Daily Mail, while couched as a critique of cyclists who refuse to obey the rules of the road, soon moves to stereotyping all cyclists as "maniacs" who routinely break the law:
Havers unsubtly tried to defend himself:
These comments provoked outrage in various online cycling fora such as Cycling Plus[3] Havers is also critical of anthropogenic global warming. CreditsTelevision
Cinema
Audio books
Notes
|
Sites |
Searched sites for "Nigel Havers" |
|
No sites found. |
Sorry, no matching site records were found. |
Want your site listed here?
|
||||||||||||||
|
Submit
your site |
|
Relevant quality search results and fast easy navigation throughout the
different sections of the site, make Americola.com |