Daniel Massey - Turner Classic Movies

Daniel Massey


Actor

About

Also Known As
Daniel Raymond Massey
Birth Place
London, England, GB
Born
October 10, 1933
Died
March 25, 1998
Cause of Death
Heart Failure

Biography

This incisive character player was the son of acclaimed stage and screen actors Raymond Massey and Adrianne Allen and brother of Anna Massey. Always prominently cast and adept at sophisticated roles, Daniel Massey has acted primarily on the stage, but has made fairly regular film and TV appearances since the late 1950s. He first appeared in film at age eight in his godfather Noel Coward'...

Family & Companions

Adrienne Corri
Wife
Actor. Born on November 13, 1930 in Glasgow, Scotland; married in 1961; divorced in 1968; has acted in films including "The River" (1951), "Lease of Life" (1954), "The Rough and the Smooth" (1959), "Doctor Zhivago" (1965) and "A Clockwork Orange" (1971).
Penelope Wilton
Wife
Actor. Born on June 3, 1946 in Scarborough, England; married in 1975; divorced in 1987; has acted in films including "The French Lieutenant's Woman", "Country" (both 1981), "Cry Freedom" (1987), and "The Secret Rapture" (1993).
Lindsay Wilton
Wife
Younger sister of Penelope Wilton; together since c. 1987; survived him.

Biography

This incisive character player was the son of acclaimed stage and screen actors Raymond Massey and Adrianne Allen and brother of Anna Massey. Always prominently cast and adept at sophisticated roles, Daniel Massey has acted primarily on the stage, but has made fairly regular film and TV appearances since the late 1950s. He first appeared in film at age eight in his godfather Noel Coward's moving tribute to the WWII British military, "In Which We Serve" (1942). Massey proceeded to cut his acting teeth on the British stage and did not return to films for 15 years. His first important film credit was as part of the sterling company enacting John Osborne's blistering play, "The Entertainer" (1960).

Massey began to conquer audiences on the other side of the Atlantic when he played one of the leading roles in the Broadway musical, "She Loves Me" (1963). With his dapper appearance and polished, actorly flair, he again invoked his stage origins in his most acclaimed US film performance, as his own godfather in the otherwise disappointing biopic of Gertrude Lawrence, "Star!" (1968). Massey upstaged Julie Andrews in his carefully realized and slightly parodic rendition of Coward and won himself a Best Supporting Actor Oscar nomination. Subsequent films included biopics ("Mary, Queen of Scots" 1971, "The Incredible Sarah" 1976) and courtroom drama ("Scandal" 1989; "In the Name of the Father," as the prosecuting attorney, 1993). Massey also showed a fondness for old-fashioned entertainment with the fun horror fare of "Vault of Horror" (1973), in which he acted opposite his sister, and the likable remake, "The Cat and the Canary" (1979). His fop was but one memorable item in Nicholas Roeg's obsessive "Bad Timing" (1980).

In between stage work, Massey worked in TV ranging from fine PBS adaptations ("The Roads to Freedom" 1972, "The Golden Bowl" 1973) to offbeat turns in eclectic fare. He played Trotsky in HBO's "Stalin" (1992), romanced Marilu Henner in "Love With a Perfect Stranger" (Showtime, 1986) and was moving as an AIDS sufferer in "Intimate Contact" (HBO, 1987).

Life Events

1942

Made feature film debut at age eight in "In Which We Serve", co-directed and starring his godfather, Noel Coward

1956

Stage acting debut in "Peril at End House" in Worthing

1957

London stage debut, "The Happiest Millionaire"

1958

Returned to films to make his second feature and play first adult role, "Girls at Sea"

1963

Played on Broadway in the musical, "She Loves Me"; billed third after Jack Cassidy and Barbara Cook; American stage debut

1968

First US film, "Star!", in which he played Noel Coward and received an Oscar nomination as Best Supporting Actor

1971

Played Robert Dudley opposite Glenda Jackson and Vanessa Redgrave in "Mary, Queen of Scots"

1972

Had featured role in the British TV adaptation of "War and Peace"

1972

Earliest US TV appearances included his leading role in the PBS adaptation, "The Roads to Freedom", based on a trilogy of novels by Jean-Paul Sartre

1973

Acted in the six-part made-for-TV miniseries, "The Golden Bowl", based on the novel by Henry James; miniseries was aired on PBS in the USA

1973

Acted opposite his sister Anna Massey in the "Midnight Mass" segment of the five-part horror anthology film, "Vault of Horror"

1977

Scored a critical success opposite Claire Bloom in the London stage production of Ibsen's "Rosmersholm"

1981

Last feature film for eight years, "Escape to Victory"

1986

Earliest work made specifically for American TV, the Showtime TV-movie, "Love With a Perfect Stranger"

1987

Starred opposite Diana Rigg and Julia McKenzie in the London production of the Stephen Sondheim-James Goldman musical "Follies"

1987

Co-starred with Claire Bloom in the HBO production "Intimate Contact", playing a businessman who contracts AIDS after a liaison during a trip to Asia

1989

Returned to film work with a role in the British-made feature, "Scandal"

1993

Last feature film, played the prosecutor in "In the Name of the Father"

1995

Final London stage appearance, originating the role of conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler in "Taking Sides"

1996

Returned to US stage reprising his London role in "Taking Sides", co-starring with Ed Harris

Family

Raymond Massey
Father
Actor. Born on August 30, 1896 in Toronto; died on July 29, 1983 in Los Angeles; was married to Massey's mother from 1929 to 1939; prominent stage and screen actor, in many films including "The Old Dark House" (1932), "The Scarlet Pimpernel" (1935), "Abe Lincoln in Illinois" (1940), "A Matter of Life and Death" (1945) and "East of Eden" (1955).
Adrianne Allen
Mother
Actor. Born on February 7, 1907 in Manchester, England; died on September 14, 1993 in Montreux, Switzerland; worked primarily onstage in plays ranging from "Easy Virtue" (1926) to "Pride and Prejudice" (1935) and "Edward My Son" (1948); later played character roles; acted in a few films, including "The Woman Between" (1931) and "The October Man" (1947).
William Whitney
Step-Father
Anna Massey
Sister
Actor. Born in Sussex, England on August 11, 1937; made London stage debut in "The Reluctant Debutante" (1958); prominent in TV and film; perhaps best remembered in the latter capacity in Michael Powell's "Peeping Tom" (1960) and Alfred Hitchcock's "Frenzy" (1972).
Paul Massey
Son
Mother, Adrienne Corri; survived him.
Alice Pearl Massey
Daughter
Mother, Penelope Wilton; survived him.

Companions

Adrienne Corri
Wife
Actor. Born on November 13, 1930 in Glasgow, Scotland; married in 1961; divorced in 1968; has acted in films including "The River" (1951), "Lease of Life" (1954), "The Rough and the Smooth" (1959), "Doctor Zhivago" (1965) and "A Clockwork Orange" (1971).
Penelope Wilton
Wife
Actor. Born on June 3, 1946 in Scarborough, England; married in 1975; divorced in 1987; has acted in films including "The French Lieutenant's Woman", "Country" (both 1981), "Cry Freedom" (1987), and "The Secret Rapture" (1993).
Lindsay Wilton
Wife
Younger sister of Penelope Wilton; together since c. 1987; survived him.

Bibliography