Ian Holm

Our Artistic Director Gregory Doran writes a tribute to the actor Ian Holm, who died last week.

It is with great sadness that we heard today of the death of Sir Ian Holm. Ian was quite simply one of the RSC greats.

Long before he found fame inChariots of Fire, Alien, Greystoke and as Bilbo Baggins, inThe Lord of the Rings, Ian joined the Stratford Company in 1958. The following year, he played Puck opposite Charles Laughton as Bottom in Peter Hall’s production ofA Midsummer Night’s Dream, (a role he would reprise a decade later in Hall’s film version of the play).

Ian then joined the newly formed Royal Shakespeare Company and appeared in their mammoth undertaking of the History cycle, The Wars of the Roses, playing the young Gloucester who emerges as King Richard III. He also played Prince Hal in theHenry IVplays and Henry V.

When John Barton died in 2018, Trevor Nunn gave a splendid tribute at his funeral. He talked about how John had taught generations of actors to speak Shakespeare. Until he directed Ian in Henry V. Then Trevor said, it was Ian who taught John. And between them they created the way that modern actors speak Shakespeare.

Ian perfectly expressed the cross fertilisation between classics and new writing that Peter Hall forged in the early days of the RSC. He married the technique of a classical Shakespeare actor and the intense naturalism and economy of style of a modern tradition. This was immediately apparent in his originating of the role of Lenny in the premiere of Harold Pinter’sThe Homecoming at the Aldwych in 1965.

Ian was entirely original. Entirely a one off. He had a simmering cool, a compressed volcanic sense of ferocity, of danger, a pressure cooker actor, a rare and magnificent talent.

“There’s a great spirit gone”

Gregory Doran Artistic Director

Ian Holm as Henry V directed by John Barton and Trevor Nunn at the Aldwych Theatre, London in 1965.

Photo by Reg Wilson © RSCBrowse and license our images

Twelfth Night,  1966 - Sir Andrew (David Warner) and Sir Toby (Brewster Mason) spy on Malvolio (Ian Holm, centre) as he reads the letter.

Photo by Reg Wilson © RSCBrowse and license our images

Ian Holm as the Fool inKing Lear with Charles Laughton as Lear in the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon in 1959.

Photo by Angus McBean © RSCBrowse and license our images

Ian Holm as Romeo and Norman Rodway as Mercutio inRomeo and Juliet (1967) at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre.

Photo by Reg Wilson © RSCBrowse and license our images

Dorothy Tutin as Cressida and Ian Holm as Troilus inTroilus and Cressida (1962) at the Aldwych Theatre, London, directed by Peter Hall. 

 

Photo by Reg Wilson © RSCBrowse and license our images

Ian Holm as Puck inA Midsummer Night's Dream (1959) directed by Peter Hall, with Albert Finney as Lysander and Priscilla Morgan as Hermia, at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon. 

Photo by Angus McBean © RSCBrowse and license our images
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