Douglas Wilmer


Douglas Norman Wilmer was an English actor, best known for playing Sherlock Holmes in the eponymous 1965 TV series.

Early life

Wilmer was born 8 January 1920 in Brentford, Middlesex, to Harry Bradlaugh Wilmer and Kate. His father was an accountant for Jardine Matheson, and Wilmer spent his childhood in Shanghai where his father worked. When he was about 13 years old, Douglas was sent back to the United Kingdom to attend King's School, Canterbury, and Stonyhurst College. A performance as the Archbishop of Canterbury in a school play at King's School was seen by Dame Sybil Thorndike who afterward told the headmaster "If that boy, playing the Archbishop, were to take to the stage, I think that he could well make a go of it."
After completing school, Wilmer applied for a scholarship at Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and was accepted. Whilst in training at RADA, he was conscripted into the British Army for military service with the Royal Artillery in the Second World War. After training, he was posted to an anti-tank battery, and saw war service in Africa with the Royal West African Frontier Force. He was later invalided out of the Armed Forces, having contracted tuberculosis.

Career

Wilmer made his theatre stage debut in 1945 in repertory at Rugby. He appeared frequently on the London stage, mainly in classical and Shakespearean roles. He made his first major film appearance in Laurence Olivier's Richard III ; thereafter, he appeared in a large number of films, mostly in supporting roles. They include several epic films: as M. Desmoulins in The Battle of the River Plate, as Al-Mu'tamin in El Cid, Cleopatra, The Fall of the Roman Empire, as Khalifa Abdullah in Khartoum, as Maj. Gen. Francis de Guingand in Patton, as Sir Thomas Fairfax in Cromwell, and Antony and Cleopatra. Other appearances include Jason and the Argonauts as Pelias, the Pink Panther films A Shot in the Dark and Revenge of the Pink Panther, The Vampire Lovers, The Golden Voyage of Sinbad, and Octopussy.
He is mainly associated with the role of Sherlock Holmes, which he first played in the BBC's 1964 production of "The Speckled Band". Together with co-star Nigel Stock, who played Doctor Watson, Wilmer was brought back for a further twelve episodes of [Sherlock Holmes (1965 TV series)|the Sherlock (TV series)|Sherlock Holmes series]. In 1973, Wilmer played author Jacques Futrelle's Holmesian detective Professor Van Dusen in The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes for ITV. In 1975, he once again appeared as Holmes in Gene Wilder's The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother, with Thorley Walters as Dr. Watson. Wilmer also played Sir Denis Nayland Smith in two of Harry Alan Towers' Fu Manchu films, The Brides of Fu Manchu and The Vengeance of Fu Manchu.
He recorded a series of the stories on audiocassette for Penguin audio books and appeared as a guest at several UK and US events, including the Society's Golden Jubilee Dinner in January 2001. His other television credits include: The Adventures of Robin Hood, The Saint, The Troubleshooters, The Avengers, The Baron, UFO, and Space: 1999. He made a cameo appearance in "The Reichenbach Fall" episode of Sherlock as an irate old man in the Diogenes Club.

Personal life and death

Douglas Wilmer was married three times. In 1946, he married Elizabeth Melville, a fellow RADA student, their marriage was annulled after 25 years. His second marriage in 1973 to wife Barbara ended in a divorce. He married his third wife, Anne in 1985. He lived in Woodbridge, Suffolk in later life, where he ran a wine bar called Sherlock's.
Wilmer's autobiography Stage Whispers was published in 2010. On 31 March 2016, after a short bout of pneumonia, Wilmer died aged 96 at Ipswich Hospital in Suffolk, England. Roger Moore posted a tribute on social media the same day that Wilmer had died; the actors had worked together in the James Bond feature film Octopussy and on the television show The Saint.

Honours and awards

Wilmer was an honorary member of the Sherlock Holmes Society of London, which considered Wilmer "the definitive Holmes". On 24 March 2009 Wilmer was guest of honour at a launch party for his book, held at the National Liberal Club in Whitehall Place, London.

Filmography

It is Midnight, Doctor Schweitzer as Father CharlesSacrifice to the Wind as MenelausThe Men of Sherwood Forest as Sir Nigel SaltireRichard III as The Lord DorsetPassport to Treason as Dr. RandolfThe Battle of the River Plate as M. Desmoulins − French Minister, MontevideoDial 999 (TV series), as BurtonAn Honourable Murder as R. CassiusEl Cid as MoutaminMarco Polo Cleopatra as DecimusJason and the Argonauts as PeliasThe Fall of the Roman Empire as Pescennius NigerWoman of Straw as Dr. Murray A Shot in the Dark as Henri LaFargeThe Golden Head as Detective Inspector StevensonOne Way Pendulum as Judge / Maintenance ManKhartoum as Khalifa AbdullahThe Brides of Fu Manchu as Nayland SmithThe Vengeance of Fu Manchu as Nayland SmithHammerhead as Pietro VendrianiA Nice Girl Like Me as Postnatal Clinic DoctorThe Reckoning as MoylePatton as Major General Freddie de GuingandCromwell as Sir Thomas FairfaxThe Vampire Lovers as Baron Joachim Von HartogJourney to Murder as Harry Vaneste Unman, Wittering and Zigo as HeadmasterAntony and Cleopatra as AgrippaThe Golden Voyage of Sinbad as VizierThe Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother as Sherlock HolmesThe Incredible Sarah as MontignyRevenge of the Pink Panther as Police CommissionerRough Cut as Maxwell LevyOctopussy as Jim FanningSword of the Valiant as The Black Knight