James Villiers
James Michael Hyde Villiers was an English actor. He was described by The Independent as "one of the country's most distinctive character actors, with ripe articulation and a flair for displaying supercilious arrogance that put him in the Vincent Price class of screen villains".
Villiers was a great-grandson of the 4th Earl of Clarendon.
Early life
Villiers was born on 29 September 1933 in London, the son of Eric Hyde Villiers and Joan Ankaret Talbot. He was brought up in Shropshire and at Ormeley Lodge, Richmond-upon-Thames, later the home of James Goldsmith. At his prep school he was considered its best actor and continued his education at Wellington College, Berkshire. Stage-struck, after leaving school he applied unsuccessfully to Colchester Repertory to be taken on in any capacity and then trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, graduating in 1953.Villiers was from an upper-class background, the grandson of Sir Francis Hyde Villiers and great grandson of George Villiers, 4th Earl of Clarendon; his mother was descended from Earl Talbot. His aristocratic ancestry was often reflected in casting, he performed roles such as King Charles II in the BBC series The First Churchills, the Earl of Warwick in Saint Joan, and on stage as Lord Thurlow in The Madness of George III.
Through his father, Villiers was a relative of Thomas Hyde Villiers, Charles Pelham Villiers, Henry Montagu Villiers and the former Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Theresa Villiers. Through his mother, he was distantly related to Charles Chetwynd-Talbot, 22nd Earl of Shrewsbury.
Career
Villiers made his film début in 1958 and appeared in many British productions, including Joseph Losey's The Damned, shot in 1961 but not released until 1963; Seth Holt's The Nanny, Joseph Andrews, For Your Eyes Only, The Scarlet Pimpernel, Mountains of the Moon and The Tichborne Claimant, along with numerous other projects. He often specialised in portraying cold, somewhat effete villains.Villiers portrayed the role of Colonel Hensman in the television adaptation of Brendon Chase and was heard on BBC Radio 4 as the voice of Roderick Spode in The Code of the Woosters and several other adaptations of the Jeeves stories of P. G. Wodehouse, which starred Michael Hordern and Richard Briers. In a 1965 episode of the TV series The Human Jungle, "Solo Performance", as theatre director Paul Stockhill. In the 1978 television adaption of The Famous Five, Villiers featured strongly in the two-part pilot in which he played the antagonist, a rogue bureaucrat known only as Johnson.
Personal life
In 1966, at Maidstone, Kent, Villiers married Patricia Donovan. They adopted a son, Alan Michael Hyde Villiers, and the marriage lasted until 1984, when it was dissolved. In 1994, at Worthing, Villiers married secondly Lucinda Jex; they were still together at the time of his death.Nicholas Whittaker, author of Platform Souls and Blue Period, worked in the Belsize Tavern in 1979 and 1980 and claimed to recall Villiers' visits to the pub in the company of local actor Ronald Fraser. After closing time, the pair would often be found in the beer and curry restaurant opposite. Rupert Everett also claims to have encountered Villiers in an Indian restaurant, some time in 1985, "leglessly drunk, booming orders and insults to the poor long-suffering waiter in a strange breathy vibrato that was pitched for the upper circle". Elsewhere, Villiers is described as a "big drinker" who entered into drinking competitions with his friend Peter O'Toole.
Death
Villiers died on 18 January 1998 in Arundel, Sussex, of cancer.Selected filmography
- Scotland Yard - as Mortuary Assistant
- Carry On Sergeant as Seventh Recruit
- Edgar Wallace Mysteries '''' as Tab Holland
- Bomb in the High Street as Stevens
- Petticoat Pirates as English Lieutenant
- Operation Snatch as Lt. Keen
- Eva as Alan McCormick – a screenwriter
- The Damned as Captain Gregory
- Murder at the Gallop as Michael Shane
- Girl in the Headlines as David Dane
- Father Came Too! as Benzil Bulstrode*
- Hancock as Captain Mainwaring
- Nothing But the Best as Hugh
- King & Country as Captain Midgely
- Repulsion as John
- Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines as Yamamoto
- The Alphabet Murders as Franklin
- You Must Be Joking! as Bill Simpson
- The Nanny as Bill Fane
- The Wrong Box as Sydney Whitcombe Sykes
- Sword of Honour BBC TV as Ian Kibannock
- Half a Sixpence as Hubert
- The Touchables as Twyning
- Some Girls Do as Carl Petersen
- Otley as Hendrickson
- A Nice Girl Like Me as Freddie
- Blood from the Mummy's Tomb as Corbeck
- The Ruling Class as Dinsdale Gurney
- Asylum as George
- Follow Me! as Dinner Guest
- The Amazing Mr. Blunden as Uncle Bertie
- Ghost in the Noonday Sun as Parsley-Freck
- Seven Nights in Japan as Fin
- Spectre as Sir Geoffrey Cyon
- Joseph Andrews as Mr. Boody
- Saint Jack as Frogget
- The Music Machine as Hector Woodville
- For Your Eyes Only as Bill Tanner
- The Scarlet Pimpernel as Baron de Batz
- Under the Volcano as Brit
- Running Out of Luck
- Fortunes of War as Inchcape
- Scandal as Conservative M.P.
- Mountains of the Moon as Lord Oliphant
- King Ralph as Prime Minister Geoffrey Hale
- Let Him Have It as Cassels
- Uncovered as Montegrifo
- The Tichborne Claimant as Uncle Henry