Michael Bryant

from London, England, UK

Artwork for Gandhi

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Michael Dennis Bryant (5 April 1928 – 25 April 2002) was a British stage and television actor.

Bryant attended Battersea Grammar School and after service in the Merchant Navy and Army, he attended drama school and appeared in many productions on the London stage. He made his film debut in 1955. His greatest role was Mathieu in BBC2's 1970 adaptation of Jean-Paul Sartre's Roads to Freedom trilogy. His guest star appearance as Wing Commander Marsh, who feigns insanity in the 'Tweedledum' episode of the BBC drama series, Colditz (1972), is still widely remembered.

Bryant was chosen by Orson Welles to play the lead role in The Deep, Welles's adaptation of the Charles Williams novel Dead Calm. The production frequently ran out of money, and following the death of actor Laurence Harvey in 1973, Welles stopped production and announced the movie - which had been completed except for one special effects shot of a ship exploding - would not be released. (The novel was finally adapted to film in 1989.)

In 1969 Bryant took his love of the stage on a strange trip into the realm of cult films, playing a clever male prostitute who outwits a delusional family of killers in the dark comedy Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny and Girly, an adaptation of a play by Maisie Mosco. Due to poor marketing and a lack of faith in the film by the distributor, the film quickly sank into obscurity even before it could develop a cult following.

One of Bryant's most memorable performances was in the classic BBC television play The Stone Tape (1972), in which he plays the leader of a team of scientists who investigate ghost sightings in a brooding gothic mansion.

Bryant also had a supporting role as a sadistic psychiatrist in the cult classic black comedy The Ruling Class, with Peter O'Toole and Alastair Sim. He also appeared in Richard Attenborough's Gandhi (1982) as a British diplomat.

Having played Lenin in the film Nicholas and Alexandria, Bryant would later reprise the role in Robert Bolt's play State of Revolution (1977). He had previously co-starred in Bolt's unsuccessful Gentle Jack. The 1977 production of a Bolt play though was significant for featuring the first role he performed at the National Theatre where he was a constant presence for a quarter of a century. Bryant, described by Michael Billington as "rock-solid company man", had earlier performed with the Royal Shakespeare Company from 1964, including the premiere production of Harold Pinter's The Homecoming (1965), in which he played Teddy, the returning academic.

In 1980, Michael Bryant won the London Drama Critics Circle Theatre Award for Best Actor, and his other theatrical performances were equally well thought of. Bryant won Laurence Olivier Awards in 1988 and 1990 and was nominated twice more.

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Timeline

2025Aged 97

  • Poster for Mrs. Weekley's Lover

    Ernest Weekley

2007Aged 79

  • Poster for The Deep

    John Ingram

2000Aged 72

  • Poster for The Miracle Maker

    God/ The Doctor (voice)

1998Aged 70

  • Poster for King Lear

    Fool

1996Aged 68

  • Poster for Hamlet

    Priest

1995Aged 67

  • Poster for The Absence of War

    Bryden Thomas

  • Poster for Orson Welles: The One-Man Band

    Self (segment "The deep") (archive footage)

1993Aged 65

1991Aged 63

  • Poster for Heading Home

    Derek Green

1988Aged 60

  • Poster for Franz Kafka's 'The Trial'

    Advocate

1985Aged 57

  • Poster for A Crack in the Ice

    Gen. Kokoshkin

1984Aged 56

  • Poster for Sakharov

    Syshchikov

1982Aged 54

  • Poster for Gandhi

    Principal Secretary

  • Poster for The Merry Wives of Windsor

    Doctor Caius

1976Aged 48

  • Poster for The Daedalus Equations

    Sam McInstrey

  • Poster for My Homeland

    Reader

1974Aged 46

1973Aged 45

1972Aged 44

1971Aged 43

1970Aged 42

  • Poster for The Three Sisters

    Vershinin

  • Poster for Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny & Girly

    New Friend

1969Aged 41

  • Poster for Goodbye, Mr. Chips

    Max Staefel

1968Aged 40

1967Aged 39

1963Aged 35

  • Poster for The Mind Benders

    Dr. Danny Tate

1962Aged 34

  • Poster for Life for Ruth

    John's Counsel

1958Aged 30

  • Poster for A Night to Remember

    Sixth Officer James Moody

1956Aged 28

  • Poster for Uranium Boom

    Peterson

1955Aged 27

  • Poster for Passage Home

    Stebbings