Peter Oâ??Toole, an Irish bookmakerâ??s son with a hell-raising streak whose magnetic performance in the 1962 epic film â??Lawrence of Arabiaâ? earned him overnight fame and put him on the road to becoming one of his generationâ??s most accomplished and charismatic actors, died on Saturday in London. He was 81.
His daughter Kate Oâ??Toole said in a statement that he had been ill for some time.
A blond, blue-eyed six-footer, Mr. Oâ??Toole had the dashing good looks and high spirits befitting a leading man, â??and he did not disappoint in â??Lawrence,â? David Leanâ??s wide-screen, almost-four-hour homage to T. E. Lawrence, the daring British soldier and adventurer who led an Arab rebellion against the Turks in the Middle East in World War I.
The performance brought Mr. Oâ??Toole the first of eight Academy Award nominations, a flood of film offers and a string of artistic successes in the â??60s and early â??70s. In the theater â?? he was a classically trained actor â?? he played an anguished, angular tramp in Beckettâ??s â??Waiting for Godotâ? and a memorably battered title character in Chekhovâ??s â??Uncle Vanya.â? In film, he twice played a robust King Henry II: first opposite Richard Burton in â??Becket,â? (1964), then with Katharine Hepburn as his queen in â??The Lion in Winterâ? (1968). Both earned Oscar nominations for Best Actor, as did his repressed, decaying schoolmaster in â??Goodbye, Mr. Chipsâ? in 1970 and the crazed 14th Earl of Gurney in â??The Ruling Classâ? in 1973.
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