Harold Pinter English playwright screenwriter poet actor director author political activist
Harold Pinter is a 78 years old English playwright screenwriter poet actor director author political activist from London, England. Harold Pinter was born on October 10, 1930 (died on December 24, 2008, he was 78 years old) in London, England.
About
No, he died on 12/24/2008, 15 years ago. He was 78 years old when he died. Cause of death: liver cancer. He died in London and buried in Kensal Green Cemetery .
Family
His mother is Frances Moskowitz and his father is Jack Haim Pinter.
Parents
Wives
Harold Pinter had two marriages.
Vivien Merchant, English actress
He married with Vivien Merchant (53), in 1956. Harold Pinter was 25 and Vivien Merchant was 26 years old. After 24 years, they break up in 1980.
Antonia Fraser, Historian biographer and novelist
Pinter married with Antonia Fraser (87), on Thursday, November 27th, 1980. Harold Pinter was 50 and Antonia Fraser was 48 years old. They ended their 28 years, 27 days marriage in 2008.
Child
He had one child, Daniel (79, Olympic wrestler) . When his first child, Daniel Brand, was born, Harold Pinter was 4 years old.
Works
Harold Pinter Movies (21)
There are 21 movies of Harold Pinter.
His first feature film was Mansfield Park (1999, as Sir Thomas Bertram). He was 69 when he starred in this movie. Since 1999, he has appeared in 21 feature films. The last one is Krapp's Last Tape (2007). In this movie, we watched him in the Krapp character .
View all Harold Pinter movies.Harold Pinter movie characters
The names of the characters/jobs in the films he starred in are as follows:
Character/Job | Movie | Age |
---|---|---|
Sir Thomas Bertram | Mansfield Park (1999) | 69 |
Society Man | The Servant (1963) | 33 |
Mr. Bearing | Wit (2001) | 70 |
Man on T.V. | Sleuth (2007) | 77 |
Uncle Benny | The Tailor of Panama (2001) | 70 |
Bell | Accident (1967) | 36 |
Saul Abrahams | Rogue Male (1976) | 46 |
Man | The Caretaker (1964) | 32 |
John Smith | Breaking the Code (1996) | 65 |
The Director | Catastrophe (2000) | 69 |
Man in Bookshop | Turtle Diary (1985) | 54 |
Sam Ross | Mojo (1997) | 66 |
Garcin | In Camera (1964) | 34 |
Stott | The Basement (1967) | 36 |
Monologue (1973) | 42 | |
Barry Shannon | Langrishe, Go Down (1978) | 47 |
Interviewee | The South Bank Show: The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981) | 50 |
Poets Against the Bomb (1981) | 51 | |
Nat Goldberg | The Birthday Party (1987) | 56 |
himself | Against the War (1999) | 68 |
Krapp | Krapp's Last Tape (2007) | 76 |
Harold Pinter TV Shows (2)
His first TV Show was Tony Awards (1956).
Awards (14)
awarded Franz Kafka Prize in 2004 , awarded Nobel Prize in Literature in 2004 , awarded Austrian State Prize for European Literature in 1972 , awarded Hermann Kesten Prize ,
Education
He graduated from Royal Academy Of Dramatic Art and Central School Of Speech And Drama
What was Harold's zodiac sign?Harold Pinter zodiac sign was libra.
Other facts about Harold Pinter
Award | Order of the Companions of Honour, Nobel Prize in Literature, Legion of Honour, Laurence Olivier Award, David Cohen Prize |
---|---|
Place of death | London |
Spouse | Antonia Fraser, Vivien Merchant |
Pseudonym | David Baron |
Religion | Atheism |
Libris-URI | 1zcfg92k2n2nkqr |
Given name | Harold |
Family name | Pinter. Show people with the surname Pinter |
Notable work | The Caretaker |
Name in native language | Harold Pinter |
Member of | Royal Society Of Literature |
Manner of death | Natural Causes |
List of works | Harold Pinter Bibliography |
Official website | Harold Pinter official website , language of work or name: English |
Work period (start) | 1947-01-01T00:00:00Z |
Writing language | English |
CiNii author ID (books) | DA00843553 |
Ethnic group | Jewish People |
Cause of death | Liver Cancer |
Europeana entity | Agent/base/60898 |
Country of citizenship | United Kingdom |
Languages spoken, written or signed | English |
Swedish Royal Theater Archive | Person/814 |
Date of death | 2008-12-24T00:00:00Z |
Place of burial | Kensal Green Cemetery |
Exact match | Http://data.nobelprize.org/resource/laureate/801 |
Archives at | British Library |