Michael Tarn


Michael Tarn is a British actor. He is best known for playing Pete in Stanley Kubrick's film A Clockwork Orange.

Biography

Michael Tarn was born in London in 1953 to a father who worked as a stuntman in the film industry. He is married with one son, Chris, who works in lighting. In the mid 2000s, he and his wife moved to Spain but returned to the United Kingdom a few years later for family reasons.

Career

Early career

He had attended Italia Conti Academy of Theatre Arts part time since he was around ten or eleven years old and found work as a teenager as a background extra in television productions. While he was in grammar school, he landed a role as Fleance in a production of Macbeth at the Royal Shakespeare Company, featuring Paul Scofield and Vivien Merchant. On one night, around sixty of his classmates came to see Tarn in the show; during that show, the actor who played the third apparition fell ill, so Tarn stepped in, and had what he described at "ffiteen seconds of glory" of him and Paul Scofield on stage.

''A Clockwork Orange''

In summer 1969, the Italia Conti academy was one of many schools that were given a phone call from Stanley Kubrick's casting directors looking for fourteen to fifteen year old boys for an upcoming film, A Clockwork Orange; Tarn was sent over to audition at fifteen years old, and was given the final slot of the day for a five minute audition.
When Tarn found out he got the job, he was working a saturday job selling electric shavers in Kingston upon Thames when he received a phone call from his agent that he got the part, however because so much time had passed since the audition, he forgot it ever happened and at first was confused when his agent told him he "got the part as Pete" until he discovered it was for the production of A Clockwork Orange.
Tarn's character, Pete, was a part of Alex DeLarge's "droog" gang, and was the only of the droog actors who was actually a teenager at the time, as Clarke and Marcus were in their mid to late 20s.

Later career

Tarn played the title character in the three-part series Zigger Zagger in September/October 1975, which eventually became a stage show that did not feature Michael. In 1976, his father was asked to be a stuntman on the film At the Earth's Core, and managed to get Michael a role as a dinosaur on the film, which he notes as his "biggest part in film".
By the late 1970s, Tarn was still acting but noticed that directors kept casting him to play teenagers, despite pushing thirty, and when playing these typecast roles, mentioned that he felt like "Warren and Jimmy must have felt when I'd come in as a teenager and they were playing teenagers".
Tarn's career began slowing down when he received an audition for an upcoming sitcom, only for the role to be turned down by his agent on his behalf as he thought Michael was "worth more money they were offering" and according to Tarn, "when he declined that, the industry doors closed on me".
Tarn, who had just got married and had a child on the way, decided to stop acting and start teaching drama with his wife, eventually forming their own drama group. He played small roles occasional roles, his last being in the 2002 film Shooters as Vic.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNote
1973Owen, M.D.BenOne episode
1973Marked PersonalRuss RileyTwo episodes
1974Intimate StrangersDaleOne episode
1975Shades of GreeneThird boyOne episode
1975Zigger ZaggerZigger ZaggerThree episodes
1975It's a Lovely Day TomorrowMichael EllisTelevision movie
1975—1976Play for TodayCharlie Jackson Mark Two episodes
19781990John BrooksOne episode
1978The SweeneyCharlie PearceOne episode
1979ScumBackground extraUncredited
1979ThundercloudL.S. HodgeOne episode
1979ShoestringRadio technicianOne episode
1979Apprentice for Livingunknown
1981Thicker than WaterMalcolm LockwoodUnaired pilot
1995Hamish MacbethMick JensieUncredited
1995Empire of the CensorsHimselfArchive footage
2006O Lucky Malcolm!PeteArchive footage
2011Turning Like ClockworkPeteArchive footage
2015Six Different Kinds of Light John AlcottPeteArchive footage
2018The DirectorsHimselfArchive footage

Theatre

Podcasts