Celebrities » Peter Ustinov » Biography
Birthday:
Apr 16, 1921
Birthplace:
Not Available

Top Contributors for Peter Ustinov

No contributors for Peter Ustinov facts.

Peter Ustinov Biography

Hirsute, puckish "renaissance man" Peter Ustinov was born in England to parents of Russian lineage. Trained at the London Theatre Studio, Ustinov was on stage from the age of 17, performing sketches written by himself in the 1939 revue Late Joys. In 1940, the year that his first play, Fishing for Shadows, was staged, the 19-year-old Ustinov appeared in his first film. Just before entering the British army, Ustinov penned his first screenplay, The True Glory (1945). School for Secrets (1946) was the first of several films starring, written, and directed by Ustinov; others include Vice Versa (1946), Private Angelo (1949), Romanoff and Juliet (1961) (adapted from his own stage play), and Lady L (1965). Perhaps Ustinov's most ambitious film directorial project was Billy Budd (1962), a laudable if not completely successful attempt to transfer the allegorical style of Herman Melville to the screen. As an actor in films directed by others, Ustinov has sparkled in parts requiring what can best be described as "justifiable ham" -- he was Oscar-nominated for his riveting performance as the addled Nero in 1951's Quo Vadis and has won the Best Supporting Actor prize for Spartacus (1961) and Topkapi (1964). Never one to turn down a good television assignment, Ustinov has appeared on American TV in such guises as King George and Dr. Samuel Johnson, winning the first of his three Emmy awards for the latter characterization; he is also a frequent talk show guest, regaling audiences with his droll wit and his mastery over several dialects. While he has never starred on-camera in a weekly TV series, his voice could be heard essaying virtually all the roles on the 1981 syndicated cartoon series Dr. Snuggles. The closest he has come to repeating himself was with his frequent theatrical film and TV-movie appearances as Agatha Christie's Belgian detective, Hercule Poirot, in the late '70s and early '80s. The author of several plays (the most popular of which included Love of Four Colonels and Photo Finish) and books (including two autobiographies), Peter Ustinov was still going strong into the 1990s, making a long-overdue return to Hollywood in the 1992 film Lorenzo's Oil. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Peter Ustinov Trivia

No trivia approved yet.

Quotes from Peter Ustinov's Characters

    1. Trucker: What are you doing here?
    2. Oscar the Grouch: A very brief cameo.
    3. Trucker: Me too.
    From The Great Muppet Caper. Submitted by Rocky F (24 days ago)
    1. Old Man: The naming of cats is a difficult matter.
    From Logan's Run. Submitted by Gary L (42 days ago)
    1. Hercule Poirot: Little boys laugh easily if it keeps them away even for a moment from their study of Latin.
    From Evil under the Sun. Submitted by Matthew J (3 months ago)
    1. Hercule Poirot: Little boys laugh easily if it keeps them away even for a moment from their study of Latin.
    From Evil under the Sun. Submitted by Matthew J (3 months ago)
    1. Hercule Poirot: The sky is blue, the sun is shining, and yet you forget that everywhere there is evil under the sun.
    From Evil under the Sun. Submitted by Matthew J (3 months ago)
    1. Nero: Tigellinus, the weeping vase!
    From Quo Vadis. Submitted by Lukas M (5 months ago)
    1. Lentulus Batiatus: A good body with a dull brain is as cheap as life itself.
    From Spartacus. Submitted by Chris P (13 months ago)
Help | About | Jobs | Critics Submission | API | Licensing | Mobile