Celebrities » Dirk Bogarde » Biography
Birthday:
Mar 28, 1921
Birthplace:
Not Available

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Tracey c

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Dirk Bogarde Biography

With an actor father and an artist mother, it might be presumed that fame was in the cards for pinup sensation cum respectable actor and best-selling author Dirk Bogarde. Though a colorful background and a remarkable talent elevated Bogarde to the status of one of Britian's most prolific actors, his phenomenally successful career is ultimately a testament to being in the right place at the right time. Born Derek van den Bogarde in Hampton, England, in 1921, Bogarde and brother Gareth spent much of their childhood in Sussex being raised by thier older sister Elizabeth and their beloved nanny Lally. Receiving his early education at Allen Glen's School in Glascow before attending University College in London, Bogarde went on to study commercial art at Chelsea Polytechnic before nurturing his inherited affection for acting. Though he initially met with some degree of disappointment, leading to his questioning a career as a thespian, Bogarde made his stage debut with the Amersham Repertory Company in 1939 at the age of 19, the same year he made his screen debut in a bit role in Come on George. The next year Bogarde began his career in the Queens Royal Regiment.Popular among his peers in the military, Bogarde (affectionately nicknamed "Pip") quickly rose through the ranks with his position in the Air Photographic Intelligence Unit and soon earned the rank of major. Serving in the war and stationed in the Far East, Bogarde foreshadowed his later success as a writer when a poem he had written titled Steel Cathedrals was published in 1943. Returning from the war as a successful veteran with seven medals, Bogarde would soon move from the nightmares of war to his childhood dreams of becoming a successful actor.Finding out the literal meaning of the phrase "timing is everything," Bogarde walked into the wrong room on his way to a BBC audition, a mistake that quickly landed him in the successful stage role that fueled the flames of his impending stardom. It was with Dancing With Crime (1947) that Bogarde began gaining consistent roles in film, two years before fatefully taking the lead in Wessex Films' Ester Waters after star Stewart Granger dropped the project. His successful turn in Waters prompted Wessex to offer Bogarde a lucrative 14-year contract during which Bogarde would appear in such memorable films as The Blue Lamp before his role as Doctor Simon Sparrow in Doctor in the House (1953) launched him to pin-up status among the hordes of nubile young women who flocked to the film and its numerous sequels. Though thankful for his status and grateful to the fans that had elevated him to the status of heartthrob, Bogarde felt he had outgrown the image that he had fallen into and began to seek more challenging roles in films that dealt with more sensitive subjects. Shattering England's taboos associated with its anti-sodomy laws and the stigma of homosexuality with his risky, typecast-shattering performance in Victim (1961), Bogarde's bold turn resulted in a maturing image for the actor. In 1963, Bogarde expanded his new image and began a successful working relationship with director Joseph Losey in the cutting study of the British class system, The Servant (1963) (a role that won him the British Academy's Best Actor award). Bogarde's roles in such Losey films as King and Country (1964) and Accident (1967), along with his role in John Schlesinger's Darling (1965) and later, 1974's The Night Porter, brought him the critical acclaim that cemented his status as one of Britian's most prolific and respected stars. In the late '60s Bogarde moved to Europe, opting for a career path outside of the English and American system before purchasing a farmhouse in Southern France in the 1970s.Pursuing childhood dreams of farming and writing for the next two decades, Bogarde chose his films roles carefully and infrequently in favor of a turn as a successful novelist. With seven best sellers and a seven-volume autobiography, Bogarde recalled his life and experiences in such works as Snakes and Ladders, and injected real-life experience into such vividly written novels as A Gentle Occupation. It was in France that Bogarde lived in a 15th century farmhouse with longtime friend and manager Tony Forwood, returning to London only after Forwood became stricken with cancer. Bogarde nursed him until his death in 1988 (a period Bogarde would sentimentally recall in his book A Short Walk From Harrods). A fervent supporter of rights regarding Euthanasia, Bogarde became vice-president of the Voluntary Euthanasia Society before making his final film appearance in 1990's Daddy Nostalgia. Suffering a severe stroke in 1996, Bogarde was partially paralyzed, spending the final years of his life in seclusion and requiring 24-hour nursing up to his death from a heart attack in 1999. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

Dirk Bogarde Trivia

He returned to London in 1963,so Forwood could seek treatment for cancer. Bogarde nursed his long-time freind until his death in 1988.His last film was Daddy Nostalgia in 1990 and he was named to the Order of the British Empire in 1992.He remained in London until his own death from a heart attack in 1999.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
He purchased a farmhouse in the south of France in the 1970s and lived there with his longtime partner and manager, Tony Forwood until the early'80s, It was during this time that Bogarde morphed into a prolific writer of significant talent as well, publishing several best sellers such as Snakes and Ladders and A Gentle Occupation and even a seven-volume series of autobiographies.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
He moved to Europe in the late '60s,seeing a niche for his creativity and vision in the films coming out of countries like France and Italy.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
The Servant (1963) earned him the British Academy's Best Actor award and his roles in the films King and Country (1964), Darling(1965) Accident (1967) and The Night Porter (1974)cemented him as one of Britain's finest actors.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
He faced his first cinematic hurdle in 1961's Victim, where he played a closeted gay man dealing with rampant homophobia in early '60s England. At the time,homosexuality was considered a crime in Britain, so Bogarde's bold portrayal of a man Who risks both his family and a successful career as a barrister to "COME OUT" was considered a valiant move by many. The part was risky and alienated many of his fans but in the end,helped shatter many stereotypes and paved the way for him to tackle even edgier roles.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
Looking to shed his hearthrob image, Dirk Bogarde, as he was now billed, made a conscious effort to select more challenging roles,a move that would step on a number of toes but earn him tremendous respect as an actor of deep integritty and fearlessness.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
From there,he began getting steady work in British films like Ester Waters, The Blue Lamp and,the film that made him a star, 1953's Doctor in the house. He would reprise his role as the dashing Dr.Simon Sparrow numerous times, to the delight of his mostly female fans, who were taken with his rugged good looks and charm. The role made him an instant sex symbol, a distinction he held throughout the 1950s. this despite his own ambiguous sexuality.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
After being discharged, he threw himself into acting, struggling to find work for a time before learning firsthand that timing is, in fact,everything. After walking into the wrong room at a BBC audition in 1947, he ended up inadvertently landing a stage role in the play that would ignite his career, Dancing With Crime.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
In 1940,after England became involved in WWII, he enlisted in the Queen's Royal Regiment and quickly rse to the rank of major. He was popular and well liked among his military peers and even dipped his pen into a writing career in 1943 by publishing a poem about the war, Steel Cathedrals.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
Derek Jules Gaspard Niven van den Bogaerde was born March 28, 1921 in London, England to an art critic father and an actress mother, who gave up the profession after marrying and giving birth to Derek, his brother Gareth and their older sister Elizabeth. Raised in nearby Sussex by his sister and his beloved nanny Lally, his father originally tried to groom his son to follow in his footsteps as a newspaper art columnist but the young Derek had other ideas. He chose instead to study acting in London, eventually scoring a spot with the Amersham Repertory Company in 1939. That is the same year, he made his big screen debut in Come On George. The bit part did nothing to fan the flames of his sagging career and worse yet, a major distraction was on its way-one that would take him away from acting altogether.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
The projects he selected pushed the bounds of what society was accustomed to and in the process, managed to break down barriers and take their star from pinup sensation to respected dramatic actor.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)
Dirk Bogarde was one of a select few British actors to come of age in a time when cinema was losing its fun and fluffy demeanor and veering into grittier, more socially conscious territory.
- submitted by Tracey c (2 years ago)

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