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Difference between revisions of "Henry Woolf"

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Yet there was far more to Woolf than his role in Pinter's plays. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s he was at the forefront of avant-garde theatre, appearing in Brecht's Man is Man at the Royal Court in 1971. In 1974 he grew a beard to play Toulouse-Lautrec in the musical Bordello, and in 1977 he played Tony Hancock in Hancock's Last Half Hour, a ghoulish reimagining of the comedian's untimely end nine years earlier.
 
Yet there was far more to Woolf than his role in Pinter's plays. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s he was at the forefront of avant-garde theatre, appearing in Brecht's Man is Man at the Royal Court in 1971. In 1974 he grew a beard to play Toulouse-Lautrec in the musical Bordello, and in 1977 he played Tony Hancock in Hancock's Last Half Hour, a ghoulish reimagining of the comedian's untimely end nine years earlier.
  
He was also involved in film, playing a Transylvanian in The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), a shopkeeper in The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978) and the mystic Arthur Sultan in the Beatles spoof The Rutles: All You Need is Cash (also 1978). On television he was the gangster Frankie Barrow in a 1974 episode of Steptoe and Son and appeared in the Doctor Who story T[[broadwcast:he Sun Makers|he Sun Makers]] (1977) with Tom Baker. "I put the heroine in a steamer and was generally a nasty little so and so," he said.
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He was also involved in film, playing a Transylvanian in The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), a shopkeeper in The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978) and the mystic Arthur Sultan in the Beatles spoof The Rutles: All You Need is Cash (also 1978). On television he was the gangster Frankie Barrow in a 1974 episode of Steptoe and Son and appeared in the Doctor Who story [[broadwcast:The Sun Makers|The Sun Makers]] (1977) with Tom Baker. "I put the heroine in a steamer and was generally a nasty little so and so," he said.
  
 
Woolf was Pinter's choice for his one-man television play Monologue (1973), in which Man spends 30 minutes addressing an absent friend. "He could have got any actor, who would have given their left frontal lobe to play a Pinter monologue on TV, but he gives it to H Woolf," he said, adding in self-flagellation: "You know how I rewarded him? By giving one of the worst performances ever seen on television. Harold never said a word."
 
Woolf was Pinter's choice for his one-man television play Monologue (1973), in which Man spends 30 minutes addressing an absent friend. "He could have got any actor, who would have given their left frontal lobe to play a Pinter monologue on TV, but he gives it to H Woolf," he said, adding in self-flagellation: "You know how I rewarded him? By giving one of the worst performances ever seen on television. Harold never said a word."

Latest revision as of 11:42, 1 January 2025

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