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Robert Stephens
'Sir Robert Stephens' (14 July 1931 – 12 November 1995) was a leading actor in the early years of England's Royal National Theatre.
Stephens was born in Bristol, England, and rose to become one of the most respected actors of his generation. By the 1960s he was regarded as the natural successor to Laurence Olivier. He and his third wife, actress Maggie Smith appeared together on stage and in film, notably in the film version of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie in 1969.
His other films in this period included a minor role as Prince Escalus in Franco Zeffirelli's Romeo & Juliet (1968), as well as a starring role in Billy Wilder's The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes (1970)
and the science fiction film, The Asphyx (1973). However, following his departure from the National Theatre in 1970 and the breakup of his marriage in 1973 he suffered a career slump, not helped by heavy drinking.
Although he continued to work on stage (notably in the National Theatre'sThe Mysteries in 1986), film (The Fruit Machine (1988), a/k/a Wonderland (USA), and television (notably in the role of Abner Brown in the 1984 BBC TV dramatisation of the children's classic The Box of Delights), it wasn't until the 1990s that he re-established himself at the forefront of his profession, when the Royal Shakespeare Company invited him to play Falstaff in Henry IV, part 1 and then the title role in King Lear. He was awarded the Laurence Olivier Theatre Award in 1993 for Best Actor, for his performance as Sir John Falstaff in Henry IV for the Royal Shakespeare Company. He was knighted in 1995.
Robert Stephens provided the voice of Aragorn in the acclaimed 1981 BBC Radio serialisation of The Lord of the Rings.
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Horror Movies Starring Robert Stephens
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DVD Release Date: 2002
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DVD Release Date: 2005
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Academy Award-winner Mark Peploe delivers a terrifying and haunting psychological tale inw hich all of the frightening circumstances of childhood, both real and imagined, are heightened to extremes. A madman is attacking blind people in their homes, and a small boy with disintegrating eyesight begin...
more information, reviews and movie clips of Afraid Of The Dark
DVD Release Date: Unavailable
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When
The Asphyx was released in 1973,
The Exorcist was about to change the landscape of horror forever, moving the genre away from subtlety and into the realm of graphic effects and makeup. That's one of the reasons why
The Asphyx was a box-office flop, fondly remembered by a se...
more information, reviews and movie clips of The Asphyx
Directed By:
George Miller
DVD Release Date: 2006
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A closed down amusement park becomes a terrifying trap for a group of college kids when they inadvertently uncover the home of a cloning project gone wrong ? and unleash a mutant sabertooth tiger. As the bloodthirsty cat begins to stalk any prey left in the park, it becomes a race for survival again...
more information, reviews and movie clips of Attack Of The Sabretooth
DVD Release Date: 2001
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Suppose a stranger told you that your daughter was actually his daughter in another life. Suppose you began to believe him. Suppose it was really true! Sir Anthony Hopkins (Academy AwardA(r) winner* for The Silence of the Lambs) stars with Marsha Mason (Nick of Time) and John Beck (Nightmare Honeymo...
more information, reviews and movie clips of Audrey Rose
DVD Release Date: 2002
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Directed By:
Crane Wilbur
DVD Release Date: 2001
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In
The Bat, top-billed Vincent Price brings his silky, sinister elegance to the second remake of the hoary "old dark house" stage play. But the real stars of the show are Agnes Moorehead, as an eccentric mystery writer who decides to pull off the million-dollar bank heist, and the steel-clawe...
more information, reviews and movie clips of The Bat
Directed By:
Crane Wilbur
DVD Release Date: 2000
MPAA Rating: 
In
The Bat, top-billed Vincent Price brings his silky, sinister elegance to the second remake of the hoary "old dark house" stage play. But the real stars of the show are Agnes Moorehead, as an eccentric mystery writer who decides to pull off the million-dollar bank heist, and the steel-clawe...
more information, reviews and movie clips of The Bat
DVD Release Date: 2005
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DVD Release Date: 2000
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