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Alfred Marks est un Acteur Britannique né le 28 janvier 1921 à Holborn (Royaume-uni)

Alfred Marks

Alfred Marks
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Nom de naissance Ruchel Tuszynski
Nationalité Royaume-uni
Naissance 28 janvier 1921 à Holborn (Royaume-uni)
Mort 1 juillet 1996 (à 75 ans)
Récompenses Officier de l'ordre de l'Empire britannique

Alfred Edward Marks OBE (28 January 1921 – 1 July 1996) was a British actor and comedian.

Biographie

Marks was born as Ruchel Kutchinsky in Holborn, London. He left Bell Lane School at 14 and started in entertainment at the Windmill Theatre. He then served in the RAF as a Flight Sergeant in the Middle East where he arranged concerts for servicemen. He also worked as an auctioneer and engineer.

He started in variety at the Kilburn Empire in 1946, and his stage appearances included The Sunshine Boys and Fiddler on the Roof. He also did comedy work with Peter Sellers and Harry Secombe which later led to the formation (along with writer Spike Milligan) of The Goon Show, though Marks himself was not to become a member of that comedy group

His films included The Frightened City, Scream and Scream Again and Our Miss Fred. His television show, Alfred Marks Time, ran for 6 years on ITV. He compered Sunday Night at the London Palladium and appeared in numerous other television programmes including The Good Old Days, The Sweeney, Blankety Blank, The Marti Caine Show, The Two Ronnies, The Generation Game, Lovejoy, Minder, Parkinson, The All New Alexei Sayle Show, and others.

In 1967 Marks toured Australia for J.C. Williamson Theatres in Bill Naughton's Spring & Port Wine. In 1968 he played the lead in The Young Visiters a musical version of the turn of the 20th century Daisy Ashford novel (written when she was nine and published as submitted by her with the spelling errors) at the Vaudeville Theatre in London.He was the subject of This Is Your Life in December 1971 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at London's Garrick Theatre. He was a fine bass-baritone and appeared regularly on the BBC TV series 'The Good Old Days'. One of his most memorable renditions was of Kipling's 'The Road to Mandalay', in the version made famous by Peter Dawson. He appeared as "Wilfred Shadbolt" in a video production of the Gilbert and Sullivan opera The Yeomen of the Guard in 1982.


While on tour in Australia, Marks was appointed the second King of Moomba (1968) by the Melbourne Moomba festival committee; when asked what his qualifications were, he quipped (in full Cockney):"When I was eleven there were rival gangs around a fruit market in the East End. And desperately, I always wanted to be a member of the bigger rival gang. One day when I was in my best Easter suit, someone from one of the other gangs said to me 'would you like to be King of the Golden Apples?' 'All right, just sit there on this box and call out Apples, Apples, give me the Golden Apples.' Which innocently I did and they cobbled me with every rotten apple in the market.

Le plus souvent avec

Graham Stark
Graham Stark
(4 films)
David Lodge
David Lodge
(3 films)
Ken Russell
Ken Russell
(1 films)
Terence Feely
Terence Feely
(1 films)
Bob Monkhouse
Bob Monkhouse
(2 films)
Source : Wikidata

Filmographie de Alfred Marks (14 films)

Afficher la filmographie sous forme détaillée
AnnéeNomMétierRôle
1990Antonia et JaneActeur
1983Fanny HillActeur
1977ValentinoActeur
1972Hide and SeekActeur
1972Our Miss FredActeur
1970Lâchez les monstresActeur
1970ScrambleActeur
1962She'll Have to GoActeur
1961L'Enquête mystérieuseActeur
1961A Weekend With LuluActeur
1960There Was a Crooked ManActeur
1959Desert MiceActeur
1956Johnny, You're WantedActeur
1951Penny Points au paradisActeur