Leslie Phillips(1924-2022)
- Actor
- Producer
- Director
A much-loved comic actor who has specialized in playing plummy,
quintessentially English stereotypes, Leslie Phillips' heart was in
acting from a very young age. He received elocution lessons as a child
in order to lose his natural cockney accent (at that time a regional
British accent was a major impediment to an aspiring actor) and he
attended the Italia Conti School.
During the Second World War he served with the Durham Light Infantry (1942-45), but was invalided out, suffering from shell shock. He returned to acting and it was during the 1950s that he established himself as a notable player in British movies. His greatest claim to fame to this day is the "Doctor" series of movies, which he inherited from Dirk Bogarde. He also worked on radio, most notably 'The Navy Lark' for the BBC.
In later life he returned to playing supporting roles and even appeared in Steven Spielberg's Đế Chế Mặt Trời (1987). He continued to make cameo appearances in films and television, and became a regular guest on British chat shows.
During the Second World War he served with the Durham Light Infantry (1942-45), but was invalided out, suffering from shell shock. He returned to acting and it was during the 1950s that he established himself as a notable player in British movies. His greatest claim to fame to this day is the "Doctor" series of movies, which he inherited from Dirk Bogarde. He also worked on radio, most notably 'The Navy Lark' for the BBC.
In later life he returned to playing supporting roles and even appeared in Steven Spielberg's Đế Chế Mặt Trời (1987). He continued to make cameo appearances in films and television, and became a regular guest on British chat shows.