Dirk Bogarde

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Sir Derek Jules Gaspard Ulric Niven van den Bogaerde (28 March, 1921 - 8 May, 1999), better known by his stage name Dirk Bogarde, was an actor and author.

Bogarde was born in West Hampstead, London, of mixed Dutch and Scottish ancestry. His father Ulric van den Bogaerde (born in Perry Barr, Birmingham) was the art editor of The Times and his mother Margaret Niven was a former actress. He joined the army and served in World War II, reaching the rank of captain. Bogarde served in both the European and Pacific theatres, principally as an intelligence officer. In April 1945 he was one of the first Allied officers to reach the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in Germany, an experience that had the most profound effect on him and about which he found it difficult to speak for several decades afterwards. His horror and revulsion at the cruelty and inhumanity that he witnessed in Belsen left him with a deep-seated hostility towards Germany; he wrote in the 1990s that he would get out of a lift/elevator rather than ride with a German. Ironically, three of his more memorable film roles would be playing a German, one of them as a former SS officer.

After the war, Bogarde's good looks helped him begin a career as a film actor, contracted to The Rank Organisation. His 1950 appearance as the criminal, Tom Riley, who shoots Police Constable George Dixon in The Blue Lamp launched him as a lead player, but it was the comedy, Doctor in the House (1954), that made him a star. He quickly became a matinee idol and was Britain's number one box office draw.

During the 1960s and 1970s, Bogarde gradually abandoned his heart-throb image for more challenging parts, such as Hugo Barrett in The Servant (directed by Joseph Losey); the ex-Nazi, Max, in the chilling The Night Porter (1974); Melville Farr in Victim (1961); Stephen, a bored University professor, in Accident (1967), and, most notably, as Gustav von Aschenbach in Death in Venice (1971) directed by Luchino Visconti, now probably his best-remembered role. In all he made 63 films between 1939 and 1991.

In 1977 he embarked on his second career - as an author. Starting with a first volume A Postillion Struck by Lightning, he wrote a series of autobiographical volumes, novels and book reviews. As a writer Bogarde proved to be a witty, elegant, highly literate and thoughtful author, if at times somewhat precious.

Bogarde never married and, even during his lifetime, was reported to be homosexual. For many years he shared a home with a male friend, his manager Anthony (Tony) Forwood (a former husband of the actress Glynis Johns and the father of her only child, actor Gareth Forwood), but repeatedly denied that their relationship was anything other than friendship. In 2001, however, a British documentary called The Private Dirk Bogarde produced in agreement with Bogarde's family, made it very clear that he and Forwood had a lifelong commitment.

Although Bogarde has been criticised by some for never publicly "coming out", he starred in the 1961 film Victim as a homosexual lawyer defending a client who must risk ruining his own career in order to see justice served. This helped lead to a changing of the law regarding homosexuality in Britain, by Harold Wilson's Labour government in 1967. Bogarde's only serious relationship with a woman seems to have been with the French actress Capucine, who may have been a lesbian.

Sir Dirk Bogarde was knighted in 1992 for his services to acting, and was the recipient of several honorary doctorates, including those from St Andrews and Sussex universities. Never afraid of voicing his opinion, he was active in promoting voluntary euthanasia for terminally ill patients in Britain, and toured the country giving lectures and answering questions from live audiences. Formerly a heavy smoker, Bogarde suffered a minor stroke in November 1987, while Anthony Forwood was dying of liver cancer. In September 1996 he underwent surgery to widen an artery leading to his heart, and suffered a severe pulmonary embolism immediately after the operation. For the final three years of his life Bogarde was paralysed on one side of his body, with his speech affected.

He managed however to complete one final volume of autobiography, dealing with the stroke and its effect on him. Sir Dirk Bogarde died in London from a heart attack on May 8, 1999, aged 78.

Contents

Filmography

Film Year Character
Come on George! 1939 (uncredited) Extra
Dancing with Crime 1947 Policeman
Once a Jolly Swagman 1948 Bill Fox
Esther Waters 1948 William Latch
Boys in Brown 1949 Alfie Rawlins
Quartet 1949 George Bland (segment "The Alien Corn")
Dear Mr. Prohack 1949 Charles Prohack
The Woman in Question 1950 R.W. (Bob) Baker
The Blue Lamp 1950 Tom Riley
Blackmailed 1950 Stephen Mundy
So Long at the Fair 1950 George Hathaway
Appointment in London 1952 Wing-Commander Tim Mason
Hunted 1952 Chris Lloyd
Penny Princess 1952 Tony Craig
The Gentle Gunman 1952 Matt Sullivan
They Who Dare 1953 Lt. Graham
The Sea Shall Not Have Them 1954 Flight Sgt. MacKay
For Better, for Worse 1954 Tony Howard
Doctor in the House 1954 Dr Simon Sparrow
The Sleeping Tiger 1954 Frank Clemmons
Simba 1955 Alan Howard
Doctor at Sea 1955 Dr. Simon Sparrow
The Spanish Gardener 1956 Jose
Cast a Dark Shadow 1957 Edward "Teddy" Bare
Ill Met by Moonlight 1957 Maj. Patrick Leigh Fermor aka Philedem
Doctor at Large 1957 Dr. Simon Sparrow
Campbell's Kingdom 1957 Bruce Campbell
A Tale of Two Cities 1958 Sydney Carton
The Wind Cannot Read 1958 Flight Lt. Michael Quinn
The Doctor's Dilemma 1958 Louis Dubedat
Libel 1959 Sir Mark Sebastian Loddon/Frank Welney/Number Fifteen
Song Without End 1960 Franz Liszt
The Angel Wore Red 1960 Arturo Carrera
Victim 1961 Melville Farr
We Joined the Navy 1962 Cameo appearance (Dr. Simon Sparrow)
The Singer Not the Song 1961 Anacleto
H.M.S. Defiant 1962 1st Lt. Scott-Padget
The Password Is Courage 1962 Sgt. Maj. Charles Coward
The Mind Benders 1963 Dr. Henry Longman
I Could Go on Singing 1963 David Donne
The Servant 1963 Hugo Barrett
Doctor in Distress 1963 Dr. Simon Sparrow
King & Country 1964 Capt. Hargreaves
Hot Enough for June 1964 Nicholas Whistler
The High Bright Sun 1964 Maj. McGuire
Darling 1965 Robert Gold
Modesty Blaise 1966 Gabriel
Blithe Spirit 1966 (TV) Charles Condomine
Accident 1967 Stephen
Our Mother's House 1967 Charlie Hook
Sebastian 1968 Sebastian
The Fixer 1968 Bibikov
La Caduta degli dei (The Damned) 1969 Frederick Bruckmann
Oh! What a Lovely War 1969 Stephen
Justine 1969 Pursewarden
Upon This Rock 1970 (TV) Bonnie Prince Charlie
Morte a Venezia (Death in Venice) 1971 Gustav von Aschenbach
Le Serpent 1973 Philip Boyle
Il Portiere di notte (The Night Porter) 1974 Maximilian Theo Aldorfer
Permission to Kill 1975 Alan Curtis
A Bridge Too Far 1977 Lt. Gen. Frederick 'Boy' Browning
Providence 1977 Claude Langham
Despair 1978 Hermann Hermann
The Patricia Neal Story' 1981 (TV) Roald Dahl
May We Borrow Your Husband? 1986 (TV) William Harris
The Vision 1987 James Marriner
Daddy Nostalgie 1990 Daddy

Other works

Autobiography/Memoirs

  • A Postillion Struck by Lightning, 1977
  • Snakes and Ladders, 1978
  • An Orderly Man, 1983
  • Backcloth, 1986
  • A Particular Friendship, 1989
  • Great Meadow, 1992
  • A Short Walk from Harrods, 1993
  • Cleared for Take-Off, 1995
  • For the Time Being: Collected Journalism, 1998
  • Dirk Bogarde: The Complete Autobiography
  • Dirk Bogarde: The Complete Career Illustrated with Robert Tanitch

Novels

  • A Gentle Occupation, 1980
  • Voices in the Garden, 1981
  • West of Sunset, 1984
  • Jericho, 1991
  • A Period of Adjustment, 1994
  • Closing Ranks, 1997

Biography

Dirk Bogarde's authorised biography, by John Coldstream, appeared in 2004.

External links

fi:Dirk Bogarde fr:Dirk Bogarde lb:Dirk Bogarde no:Dirk Bogarde sv:Dirk Bogarde