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Percy Herbert | |
---|---|
Herbert in 1967 | |
Born | (1920-07-31)31 July 1920 London, England |
Died | 6 December 1992(1992-12-06) (aged 72) Kent, England |
Education | Royal Academy of Dramatic Art |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1951–1987 |
Spouse | Amy Lindsay (m. 1947) |
Children | 2 |
Percy Herbert (31 July 1920 – 6 December 1992)[1] was an English actor. He worked predominantly from the 1950s into the 1970s and became one of the most recognisable faces inpost-war British cinema.
Herbert served in theRoyal Army Ordnance Corps during theSecond World War and spent four years in theJapaneseprisoner of war camp Changi. After the war, he was helped by DameSybil Thorndike[2]to secure an interview with theRoyal Academy of Dramatic Art where he won a scholarship.[3] His acting career began in the theatre, which included working atJohn Gielgud'sOld Vic Company.[4]
Beginning in 1954, he went on to make nearly seventy films, often playing soldiers, most notably inThe Cockleshell Heroes,The Bridge on the River Kwai (for which he also worked as consultant as well as suggesting the use of the well-known "Colonel Bogey March" which the prisoners whistled in the film),Sea of Sand,Tunes of Glory,The Guns of Navarone,Guns at Batasi,Tobruk andThe Wild Geese.[5] However, he was equally at home in comedies (Barnacle Bill,Casino Royale, twoCarry On films), fantasy (One Million Years B.C.,Mysterious Island), drama (Becket,Bunny Lake is Missing), and science fiction (Quatermass 2,Night of the Big Heat).[1]
He also acted on television; he was a regular on the short-lived American seriesCimarron Strip, during a brief foray to Hollywood. Other television work includesDanger Man (retitledSecret Agent when shown on American TV),The Saint,Z-Cars,Dixon of Dock Green andWorzel Gummidge.[5][6]
Herbert was born in east London, and spent his youth learning to become a boxer at the Repton Boxing club. One of three siblings, he was the middle child. His father left home when he was a young boy and he was brought up by his mother Ann Herbert along with his brother Lawrence and his sister Maisie.During World War II he joined the British Army as a young man and was sent to Singapore via ship to fight in the Pacific. The British ship miscalculated the timing of its entry into harbour, and sailed into Singapore Harbour in broad daylight. The British were immediately bombed by Japanese aircraft and Herbert jumped ship and swam to shore with a broken collar bone. He was picked up by British soldiers and taken to theBritish Military Hospital, Singapore, where Herbert survived theAlexandra Hospital massacre. He was among 11 soldiers who survived and ultimately were captured and sent to the notorious Japanese Prison Camp at Changi, where he remained as a POW for the duration of the war. He was assigned to work on the Burma Railway and was released from Changi at the end of the war, after which he returned to London. One of the first films he was cast in wasBridge on the River Kwai, which was about British prisoners of the Japanese. David Lean, the producer of the film, paid Herbert a stipend to be a consultant on the film as he had been a POW there and was also cast in the role of Grogan, one of the first roles in which he was cast during his long and varied acting career.Herbert died of a heart attack, aged 72, on the 6th of December 1992 in Broadstairs, Kent, which is on the south coast of England. He was survived by his childhood sweetheart and wife Amy and his two daughters Vanessa and Katrina .[7]