logo
British actor Terence Stamp, ‘Superman' star and famed figure of swinging London, dies at 87

British actor Terence Stamp, ‘Superman' star and famed figure of swinging London, dies at 87

CNN5 hours ago
Terence Stamp, the British actor who became synonymous with Swinging London in the 1960s, has died, his family said Sunday, according to Reuters. He was 87 years old.
Stamp first came to prominence when he took on the titular role in the 1962 film 'Billy Budd.' The black and white drama, directed by Peter Ustinov, who also starred, saw Stamp nominated for an Academy Award for best supporting actor - the only Oscar nomination of his lengthy career.
He went on to star in a host of films in the 1960s, among them John Schlesinger's Thomas Hardy adaptation 'Far From the Madding Crowd' and Ken Loach's first feature film, 'Poor Cow.'
CNN has reached out to his representatives for confirmation of his death.
He was a star who rose from humble beginnings in London's East End, about as far from Hollywood as you can get. He was born on July 22, 1938, to parents Ethel and Thomas, a merchant seaman.
In a 2013 interview with the British Film Institute (BFI), Stamp revealed that his father tried to deter him from a career in showbiz.
'He genuinely believed that people like us didn't do things like that,' he said. But his mother, he said, 'loved every second of it.'
'In retrospect, my mother must have always wanted me to do it and must have wished that she could have been more supportive. But my dad was the head of the family and I never really knew what he thought of it because he was of that generation.
'He was a merchant seaman, he shovelled coal, and in that confined living quarters any show of emotion would have been considered unbearably flash.'
Stamp would become one of the biggest figures of 1960s London, romantically linked to model Jean Shrimpton and actresses Julie Christie - his 'Far From the Madding Crowd' co-star - and Brigitte Bardot.
His only marriage came in 2002 - to an Australian pharmacist 35 years his junior - but that lasted just six years, according to the Guardian.
Stamp famously roomed with fellow actor Michael Caine, who was also a rising star at the time. The pair lost touch, however, as he disclosed in an interview with The Guardian newspaper in 2015.
'We just went different ways. I can understand it: in many ways he was much more mature than me,' he said of Caine, who was five years older.
'Caine gave me all my early values, like making sure you were doing good stuff, waiting for the right things – then as soon as he got away he did exactly the opposite. Went from one movie to another.'
After a few years away from the screen, Stamp appeared in the 1978 blockbuster 'Superman' as the superhero's adversary, General Zod. He reprised the role of the comic book villain in the sequel two years later.
Ironically, more than two decades later Stamp went on to voice the role of Superman's father Jor-El in the TV series 'Smallville.'
His many screen credits also included his role as drag queen Bernadette in the 1990s Australian comedy 'The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.'
Of his eclectic career - including roles in Hollywood's 'Wall Street' and 'The Adjustment Bureau' - he told the Guardian that he had no ambitions, adding: 'I've had bad experiences and things that didn't work out; my love for film sometimes diminishes but then it just resurrects itself.
'I never have to gee myself up, or demand a huge wage to get out of bed in the morning. I've done crap, because sometimes I didn't have the rent. But when I've got the rent, I want to do the best I can.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sharpie markers and a handmade badge: How officials say the ‘Devil in the Ozarks' planned a prison escape over several months
Sharpie markers and a handmade badge: How officials say the ‘Devil in the Ozarks' planned a prison escape over several months

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Sharpie markers and a handmade badge: How officials say the ‘Devil in the Ozarks' planned a prison escape over several months

Soon after the convicted murderer and rapist known as the 'Devil in the Ozarks' was recaptured after evading police for more than 10 days in the rocky terrain and dense vegetation of rural northwest Arkansas, officials say they interviewed him at least five times about how he pulled off the prison break. Grant Hardin, a one-time Arkansas police chief and the subject of the 2023 HBO Max documentary series 'Devil in the Ozarks,' was serving a 30-year sentence for murder and two 25-year sentences for two counts of rape when he began the six-month process of planning and preparing to break out, he allegedly told Arkansas Division of Corrections Director Dexter Payne. HBO Max and CNN share a parent company, Warner Bros. Discovery. Hardin ultimately walked out of the Calico Rock prison on May 25. He has pleaded not guilty to an escape charge and is set to go on trial in November. Following his capture, Hardin, 56, told the committee in separate interviews how he colored his clothing and a hat and wore what appeared to be a law enforcement stab vest made from black aprons from the facility's kitchen, according to a report released Friday from the state Department of Corrections' critical incident review committee, which details procedural issues at the facility that likely contributed to Hardin's success in escaping. 'Inmate Hardin was inconsistent and deceptive in answering all questions' to committee members, the report stated. However, investigators said they were able to verify certain details provided by Hardin that were included in their report. Hardin planned his escape for six months, report says Hardin was assigned to work in the prison kitchen and allegedly told Payne that kitchen supervisors didn't monitor him when he worked on the back loading dock. Hardin allegedly told committee members he utilized his access to supplies and unsupervised time to fashion a law enforcement costume using black aprons, and he used black Sharpie markers he took from the kitchen and nearby laundry to color black a regular white inmate uniform and hat, according to the report. The would-be fugitive allegedly told the committee he left the word 'POLICE' in white on the back as he colored the rest of the shirt with the black markers, the report said. To make the uniform more believable, the report alleges Hardin said he used black kitchen aprons to fabricate an officer's stab vest and he molded a lid from a can of food to resemble a shiny silver badge. 'Hardin stated he would hide the clothes and other items he was going to need in the bottom of a trash can in the kitchen due to no one ever shaking it down,' the report alleged Hardin said during his interview with Payne. How Hardin allegedly left the prison, according to report Hardin allegedly told Payne that on May 25, he overheard a deputy warden tell one of the kitchen supervisors that inmates would no longer be able to go outside on the dock by themselves. When he got to work that day, he gathered up everything he had been hiding as well as food from around the kitchen and dock area, he allegedly told Payne. Despite the heavy rain, he went outside on the dock and then made his way toward the prison gate, the report alleged. A prison employee told colleagues 'he had let an officer out the gate who walked across the parking lot' to the facility's garage, the report said. The employee allegedly said he 'answered a phone call and, when he finished, the man dressed as an officer was gone,' according to the report. 'Open the gate' Prison officials say they reviewed security camera footage and saw that at 2:53 p.m., Hardin could be seen coming out from a blind spot from the camera on the back dock and walking to the sally port gate, according to the report. He was 'pulling a cart, wearing altered clothes (dyed) black, a vest, and a black hat. The cart contained what appeared to be a home-made ladder made of pallets and a box. Hardin walks to the ICC garage and then around the south end where he is not seen again,' the report stated. Hardin allegedly told Payne that the ladder made from wooden pallets was just a backup plan if he had to climb over the fence, but he didn't even need it. The report said he explained to Payne how he walked up to the guarded exit and simply directed the officer to 'open the gate,' and the officer did. Hardin said he pretended to place something in a vehicle parked in the area, but then doubled back, crossed the road to the deputy warden's house and then down a trail into the woods, the report said. On the lam Meanwhile, the prison went on lockdown as officials tried to organize a search for Hardin, according to the report. The cart with the pallet ladder was discovered abandoned, and a K-9 team with a dog named Gracie began to track Hardin to the trail into the woods, the report said. Eventually, Gracie lost his scent, but somewhere along the way, the report said, the K-9 team found Hardin's homemade badge hanging on a bush. On his first night on the lam in the Arkansas woods, Hardin allegedly said he stayed in one spot, hiding from the K-9 teams tracking him, according to the report. He allegedly told members of the committee he had planned to hide in the woods for six months if he had to. Hardin said he began moving west out of the area, but the next night, he set a bag full of food he brought down on the ground while he moved around the area. The search teams cut him off from his supplies, and he couldn't get back to his bag, according to the officials' report. 'He stated he ate whatever he could find including berries, bird eggs and ants. He drank water from the creek in the area. He also had some distilled water he used for his CPAP machine he got from the Infirmary,' the report said. Hardin said he began to get very hungry and worried about how close the search teams were getting to him, so he began trying to leave the area, the report alleged. 'This is what led to the search teams spotting him and capturing inmate Hardin,' the report said. Committee finds multiple problems — and details corrective actions Several procedural issues at the facility contributed to Hardin's successful escape, the critical incident review committee said in the report, including confusion over which agency was overseeing the initial response to Hardin's escape. Some workers were not properly notified that an inmate had escaped, the report added. 'The Escape Notification Checklist was started but, due to the misunderstanding of the communication of the question, 'Have the Notifications been made?' and new staff arriving at the Command Center to assume post it was not completed,' it said. 'Corrective action and policy changes have already taken place. However, this committee feels that a command center drill should be added to the many drills already done during training and practice,' the report added. The committee also recommended that the facility replace the black aprons used by inmates with white aprons, add additional surveillance cameras to avoid blind spots from the guard towers and change the types of locks used on interior and exterior doors. The committee also found Hardin's custody level had been incorrectly classified, and he should have been in a more secure facility with more restrictions. Ultimately, two employees at the prison have been fired for policy violations, corrections officials have said, while others received demotions or disciplinary action for violations of the code of conduct, but officials have said there was no evidence employees knowingly assisted Hardin's escape, and he has denied having any help from other inmates. The DOC declined to provide any additional comment on the report. After his capture on June 6, Hardin was transferred to a maximum-security prison in Varner, Arkansas, about 75 miles southeast of Little Rock. CNN's Zoe Sottile and Taylor Romine contributed to this report.

Why Terence Stamp was THE icon of the 60s
Why Terence Stamp was THE icon of the 60s

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Why Terence Stamp was THE icon of the 60s

The actor was a defining presence in British cinema during the 1960s. When it came to casting his swinging 60s-set drama Last Night In Soho, director Edgar Wright peppered his film with actors whose fame was tied to the decade of peace and love. But of all those players – Diana Rigg and Rita Tushingham among them – it was the late Terence Stamp whose face was the most synonymous with the era. That line about "Terry and Julie" in The Kinks' 1967 masterpiece Waterloo Sunset? That's Terence and Julie Christie, they're namechecking. Meanwhile, go to any exhibition of photographs from that ultimate chronicler of the decade, David Bailey, and you'll see Stamp's portrait among them. Once dubbed 'the most beautiful man in the world", the actor would date some of the era's most beautiful women, including Jean Shrimpton, Julie Christie and Brigitte Bardot. "I was in my prime," he reflected in 2015, "but when the 1960s ended, I ended with it." As a working-class boy made good, Stamp was as much a personification of the socially liberal 1960s as his one-time flatmate Michael Caine. But Caine, who was already 27 at the dawn of the decade, was never tied to Swinging London like Stamp was. Read more: Terence Stamp dies at 87 Five years Caine's junior, he was much more a contemporary of the era's hippest names, partying with the decade's biggest rock stars (his brother Chris managed The Who and Jimi Hendrix) and being sought after its more art house filmmakers, from Joseph Losey (Modesty Blaise) to Pier Paolo Pasolini (Teorema) to Ken Loach (Poor Cow). Stamp was just 24 when he made his big screen debut as the titular Billy Budd in Peter Ustinov's widely successful historical epic. The movie won him rave reviews, plus an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor and a Most Promising Newcomer BAFTA nod, jumpstarting a career which would take in such classics as The Collector (1965) and Far from the Madding Crowd (1967). His role as an icon of the '60s would have been even stronger had he not lost the lead in one of the decade's defining films. Michelangelo Antonioni's Blow-Up starred David Hemmings as a David Bailey-inspired hipster who finds himself accidentally photographing a murder, but it was Stamp who was originally cast, only to lose the role shortly before filming began. "I don't know why they didn't use Terence Stamp," Bailey would say in 2012. "He was less of a sissy than Hemmings, and at least he was from the East End like me." A brush with Bond Another near-miss was the character of James Bond. When Sean Connery left the role after 1967's You Only Live Twice, Stamp, quite naturally, as one of the country's most in-demand and desired actors, found himself courted by the franchise's co-producer, Harry Saltzman. "He took me out for dinner at the White Elephant in Curzon Street," the actor recalled of his brush with Bond. "He said, 'We're looking for the new 007. You're really fit and really English.' "Like most English actors, I'd have loved to be 007 because I really know how to wear a suit," Stamp said. "But I think my ideas about it put the frighteners on Harry. I didn't get a second call from him." The part likely would have been an ill fit for the actor. He was possibly too counter-cultural and too bohemian for the role of the solidly Establishment James Bond. Shortly after his meeting with Saltzman, he would work with Federico Fellini on the arthouse horror Spirits of the Dead and was introduced by the director to the Indian philosopher Krishnamurti, ending up walking the classic hippie trail — practising yoga, going vegetarian and living on an ashram. "Kneel before Zod" The flipside of being the embodiment of an era, however, is that you're often out of favour once that decade passes. And so it was with Terence Stamp as the '60s drew to a close, when at the age of just 32, he found himself considered a has-been. "I remember my agent telling me: 'They are all looking for a young Terence Stamp,'" he said years later. "And I thought: 'I am young.' I couldn't believe it. It was tough to wake up in the morning, and the phone not ringing. I thought: this can't be happening now, it's only just started. The day-to-day thing was awful, and I couldn't live with it. So I bought a round-the-world ticket and left.' Stamp was long past his commercial peak when he was offered the role of General Zod in Superman: The Movie (1978) and its 1980 sequel Superman II. However, the part of the Man of Steel's Kryptonian nemesis would prove one of his most popular, and kickstarted a renaissance that included roles in such movies as The Hit (1994) and The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994). Then, in 1999, Steven Soderbergh cast him as an ageing British hit-man in The Limey, which traded off Stamp's pretty boy past by including clips of the actor from the 1967 film Poor Cow, used as flashbacks to the character's youth. There may have been successes in the '70s and beyond, but it's that golden run of movies in the 1960s for which Terence Stamp will be forever remembered. As a working-class lad from the East End who became one of the most popular and bankable stars of that decade, he represented the era like no other actor. He was the poster boy not just of Swinging London but of a new social mobility, and for that, his place in our cultural history is guaranteed.

Jackie Kennedy's Emotional Final Letter to JFK Jr. Revealed in New Documentary ‘American Prince'
Jackie Kennedy's Emotional Final Letter to JFK Jr. Revealed in New Documentary ‘American Prince'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Jackie Kennedy's Emotional Final Letter to JFK Jr. Revealed in New Documentary ‘American Prince'

CNN's new John F. Kennedy Jr. documentary unearthed a heartbreaking final letter that Jackie Kennedy wrote to her son days before her 1994 death from cancer. Family friend Gary Ginsberg revealed in the three-episode docuseries American Prince that, while Jackie was on her deathbed, she shared encouraging words for her then 33-year-old son about his place in their family's grand political legacy. 'I understand the pressure you'll forever have to endure as a Kennedy even though we brought you into this world as an innocent,' Jackie wrote to John. 'You, especially, have a place in history, no matter what course in life you choose.' She poignantly concluded, 'All I can ask is that you continue to make me, the Kennedy family and yourself proud.' Why JFK Jr. Didn't Call William and Harry After Princess Diana's Death Despite Wife Carolyn's Plea Jackie was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma in December 1993 and immediately underwent a course of chemotherapy. This treatment was ultimately ineffective, as the cancer spread to Jackie's spinal cord, brain and liver by March 1994. Jackie died in May 1994, only a few days after she confirmed in a press release that she was stopping all treatment. The former first lady's diagnosis came at the same time as her nephew Anthony Radziwill had a recurrence of testicular cancer. In American Prince, Anthony's wife, Carole Radziwill, opened up about how Jackie and Anthony broke the news about their respective cancer diagnoses to one another in the same phone call. (Anthony died from cancer less than a month after John, his wife, Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy, and her sister Lauren Bessette were killed in a plane crash near Martha's Vineyard in July 1999.) 'I remember [Anthony] saying, 'OK, you go first.' Then, [Jackie] said, 'I have bad news that I've been diagnosed with lymphoma,'' Carole, 61, recalled. 'The end [for Jackie] came pretty quickly. I remember it was a Sunday when we all were together, and [by] Thursday, she passed away.' Carole looked back on how Jackie's death impacted John, as his mother had been very assertive over the lawyer-turned-magazine editor's career and dating choices throughout his lifetime. 'John and Jackie, they were really close,' Carole said. 'He was heartbroken and it was a very hard time for him, but there was almost, I would say, an emancipation [after Jackie's death]. I think, for the first time, he felt free to do what he wanted to do in a way that he wouldn't have when his mom was alive. A lot of good came out of that.' Jackie never got to meet her future daughter-in-law, Carolyn, as the couple had not gone public with their budding romance by the time the former first lady died in May 1994. Later in American Prince, Carole reflected on how neither she nor Carolyn ever truly felt like they fit in with the Kennedy clan. Cheryl Hines Tells Husband Robert F. Kennedy Jr. That Late Mother 'Was Very Proud of You' 'It's a big family, and like all big families, there's a lot of politics and quirks that you just have to learn. Maybe John's family more than other families,' Carole admitted. 'There was a higher expectation and [Carolyn] didn't play the game. She didn't suck up to anyone, no one in his family.' The RHONY alum then explained, 'Carolyn and I came from a very similar background. I grew up very from humble beginnings, like working class, upstate New York. Her mom was a single mom raising three daughters in a very working-class neighborhood. I think we felt like a real sisterhood because of it. We were like the ultimate outsiders.' American Prince premieres on CNN Saturday, August 9, at 9 p.m. ET, with new episodes continuing each Saturday through August 23. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store