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The first biography of a brilliant, mercurial actor, who was a genuine ‘60s superstar. Once hailed by John Osborne as the greatest actor since Brando, latterly known as a ruined genius whose unpredictable, hellraising behavior was legendary, Nicol Williamson always went his own way. Openly dismissive of
technical actors, or others who played The Bard as if their finger was up their arse, Williamson tore up the rule book to deliver a fast-talking canon of Shakespearean heroes, with portrayals marked by gut-wrenching passion. According to one co-star, Williamson was like a tornado on stage - he felt he was paddling for his life. Fiercely uncompromising, choosy about the roles he accepted, contemptuous of the suits who made money off artists, and a perfectionist who never accepted second best from himself or others, Nicol alienated or fell out with many long-standing collaborators. But even his detractors still acknowledge his brilliance. After an extraordinary career on both stage and screen, Williamson was burnt out as an actor by the age of 60. But, as Gabriel Hershman explains in this authorised biography, a premature end was perhaps inevitable for an actor who always went the extra mile in every performance. AUTHOR: Gabriel Hershman is an experienced British journalist who has written for many international publications. His abiding interest is in film and theatre, and his previous biography of a lesser-known British actor, Ian Hendry, continues to be a hit among followers of cult film and has won rave reviews. He is the author of Strolling Player: The Life and Career of Albert Finney (THP, 2017).
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The first biography of a brilliant, mercurial actor, who was a genuine ‘60s superstar. Once hailed by John Osborne as the greatest actor since Brando, latterly known as a ruined genius whose unpredictable, hellraising behavior was legendary, Nicol Williamson always went his own way. Openly dismissive of
technical actors, or others who played The Bard as if their finger was up their arse, Williamson tore up the rule book to deliver a fast-talking canon of Shakespearean heroes, with portrayals marked by gut-wrenching passion. According to one co-star, Williamson was like a tornado on stage - he felt he was paddling for his life. Fiercely uncompromising, choosy about the roles he accepted, contemptuous of the suits who made money off artists, and a perfectionist who never accepted second best from himself or others, Nicol alienated or fell out with many long-standing collaborators. But even his detractors still acknowledge his brilliance. After an extraordinary career on both stage and screen, Williamson was burnt out as an actor by the age of 60. But, as Gabriel Hershman explains in this authorised biography, a premature end was perhaps inevitable for an actor who always went the extra mile in every performance. AUTHOR: Gabriel Hershman is an experienced British journalist who has written for many international publications. His abiding interest is in film and theatre, and his previous biography of a lesser-known British actor, Ian Hendry, continues to be a hit among followers of cult film and has won rave reviews. He is the author of Strolling Player: The Life and Career of Albert Finney (THP, 2017).