Paramount ref1
Parfitt, Judy ref1
Paris ref1, ref2, ref3
Parkinson, Michael ref1
Peck, Gregory ref1
Penthouse magazine ref1, ref2
Perkins, Anthony ref1, ref2, ref3
Perkins, Peter ref1, ref2
Philip, Prince ref1
Phillips, Leslie ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Phillips, Mamgu (Siân’s mother) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Phillips, Siân (Peter’s wife) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11
affair with Robin Sachs ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
attends Peter’s funeral ref1
and the birth of her first child, Kate ref1
and the birth of her second child, Patricia ref1
Bryanston Street residence ref1
career
achieves success ref1
after marrying Peter ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9
How Green Was My Valley ref1
I, Claudius ref1, ref2
Murphy’s War ref1
Night of the Iguana ref1
Under Milk Wood ref1
and Clifden, Connemara ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
and the death of her father ref1
divorces first husband ref1
divorces Peter ref1
and the end of her marriage to Peter ref1, ref2
on European tour with O’Toole ref1
and family life with Peter ref1
and Guyon house ref1
introduces O’Toole to her Welsh family ref1
on location for Caligula ref1
on location in Dorset ref1
on location for Lawrence of Arabia ref1, ref2, ref3
on location for Lord Jim ref1, ref2
and Malinche Verdugo’s move into Guyon House ref1
marital rows with Peter ref1, ref2
marriage to O’Toole ref1
on Peter in Baal ref1
Peter sells Siân’s jewellery at Sotheby’s following their separation ref1
and Peter’s contradictory nature ref1
on Peter’s dark side ref1
on Peter’s drinking ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6
on Peter’s introversion ref1
on Peter’s National Hamlet
performance ref1
on Peter’s stomach pains ref1
and Peter’s womanizing ref1, ref2, ref3
reunited with Peter after the shooting of Lawrence ref1, ref2
similarities to Karen Brown
Somerville ref1
tires of Peter’s hell-raising ref1
and the trappings of Peter’s stardom ref1, ref2
Phoenix Theatre, London ref1
Piccadilly Theatre ref1
Pinewood Studios ref1, ref2, ref3
Pinter, Harold ref1
Pirandello, Henry IV ref1
Pitt, Brad ref1
Planco, Johnnie ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14
Planco, Lois ref1, ref2
Playboy magazine ref1
Players Club, New York ref1, ref2
Pleasence, Donald ref1
Plummer, Amanda ref1, ref2
Plummer, Christopher ref1, ref2
Plunkett, James ref1
Polanski, Roman ref1
Poll, Martin ref1
Pompeii ref1
Porter, Eric ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Positano ref1
Postlethwaite, Pete ref1
Powell, Dilys ref1
Preminger, Eric ref1
Preminger, Otto ref1, ref2
Priggen, Norman ref1
Pringle, Bryan ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Pu Yi, The Last Emperor ref1
Puerto Ordaz ref1
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico ref1
Quarmby, Kevin ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Quinn, Anthony ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
RADA see Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
RADA Keepsake and Counsellor ref1
Radio Times ref1
Railsback, Steve ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Rampling, Charlotte ref1
Rank organization ref1
Raphael, Frederic ref1
Rattigan, Terence ref1, ref2
Ray, Nicholas ref1
Raymond, Gary ref1, ref2, ref3
Reagan, Ronald ref1
Red Guard ref1
Redgrave, Michael ref1, ref2
Redgrave, Vanessa ref1
Redman, Joyce ref1
Redwood, Michael ref1, ref2
Rees-Williams, Elizabeth see Harris, Elizabeth
Richardson, Ralph ref1, ref2, ref3
Richardson, Tony ref1
Rimmington, Tony ref1, ref2, ref3
Robards, Jason ref1
Roberts, Guinevere ref1
Roberts, Julia ref1
Roberts, Rachel ref1
Robertson, Cliff ref1
Robertson, Toby ref1
Robinson, David ref1
Roeg, Nicolas ref1
Rogers, Malcolm ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Roker Park ref1
Rome ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Ronet, Maurice ref1
Ross, Herbert ref1, ref2, ref3
Ross, Katharine ref1
Rosslyn Park Rugby Club, Roehampton ref1
Roundhay Park ref1
Roundtree, Richard ref1
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12
Royal Alexandria Theatre ref1
Royal Canadian Mounted Police ref1
Royal Court theatre, London ref1, ref2, ref3
Royal Navy ref1
Rush, Richard ref1, ref2, ref3
Ryan’s Daughter (1970) ref1
Sachs, Robin ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Sagal, Boris ref1, ref2
Saranson, Susan ref1
Sartre, Jean-Paul ref1
Saturday Review (London weekly newspaper) ref1
Savoy Hotel ref1
scenery, inflatable ref1
Schell, Maximilian ref1
Schreiber, Liev ref1
Scofield, Paul ref1, ref2, ref3
Scott, George C. ref1
Second World War ref1
Selby, Tony ref1
Sellers, Peter ref1, ref2, ref3
Senton, Oliver ref1
Seville, Spain ref1
Seymour, Carolyn ref1, ref2
Seymour, Michael ref1
Shaftesbury Theatre, London ref1, ref2
Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford ref1, ref2
Shakespeare, William ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8
A Midsummer Night’s Dream ref1
Hamlet ref1, ref2, ref3
King John ref1
Macbeth ref1, ref2, ref3
Othello ref1
Taming of the Shrew ref1
The Merchant of Venice ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Sharif, Omar ref1, ref2
friendship with O’Toole ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
in Lawrence of Arabia ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8
in The Night of the Generals ref1, ref2, ref3
in The Rainbow Thief ref1
Shaw, George Bernard ref1, ref2, ref3
Great Catherine ref1, ref2
Major Barbara ref1
Man and Superman ref1, ref2, ref3
Pygmalion ref1, ref2
The Apple Cart ref1, ref2, ref3
Shaw, Robert ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7
Shepperton Studios ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6
Sherborne, Dorset ref1
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, The Rivals ref1
Sherrin, Ned ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Sihanouk, Prince ref1
Silverstein, Elliot ref1
Sim, Alastair ref1
Simmons, Bob ref1
Sinclair, Andrew ref1, ref2, ref3
The Breaking of Bumbo ref1
Sinden, Donald ref1
Somerville, Karen Brown ref1, ref2
attends Peter’s funeral ref1
and the birth of her and Peter’s son Lorcan ref1
custody battles ref1
pregnancy ref1
relationship breakdown with Peter ref1
Spacey, Kevin ref1, ref2
Spain ref1, ref2, ref3
Spectator magazine ref1
Spencer, Earl ref1
Spencer, Norman ref1
Spiegel, Sam ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9
Spielberg, Steven ref1
Spinetti, Victor ref1
Stamp, Terence ref1
Standing, John ref1, ref2
Standing, Sarah ref1, ref2, ref3
Stanislavski school ref1
Steele, Barbara ref1
Steiger, Rod ref1
Stella, Bernardo ref1
Stephens, Robert ref1
Stevenson, Robert Louis, Kidnapped ref1
Stewart, Patrick ref1, ref2
Sting ref1
Stock, Nigel ref1, ref2, ref3
Stoppard, Tom ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Strauss, Peter ref1, ref2
Streep, Meryl ref1, ref2
Stride, John ref1, ref2
Strindberg, August ref1
Studios de Boulogne ref1
Sturridge, Charles ref1
Styler, Trude ref1, ref2, ref3
Sunday Times (newspaper) ref1, ref2
Sunderland AFC ref1
Sutton, Dudley ref1
Swann, Alan ref1
Swift, Jonathan ref1
Switzerland ref1, ref2, ref3
Taylor, Barbara see Bradford, Barbara Taylor
Taylor, Elizabeth ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
disapproval of O’Toole and Burton’s drinking and friendship ref1, ref2
marriage to Eddie Fisher ref1
in Suddenly, Last Summer ref1
in the Sandpiper ref1
in Under Milk Wood ref1, ref2
Telluride Film Festival 2002 ref1
Terry, Nigel ref1, ref2
Thaw, John ref1
Theatre of Comedy Company ref1
Theatre Royal, Bath ref1
Theatre Royal, Brighton ref1, ref2
Theatre Royal, Bristol (Home of the Bristol Old Vic) ref1, ref2
Theatre Royal, Haymarket ref1
Thomas, Dylan ref1, ref2
Under Milk Wood ref1
Thomas, Jeremy ref1, ref2
Thompson, Eric ref1
Thorne, Stephen ref1, ref2
Time magazine ref1
Times, The (newspaper) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4
Tinker, Jack ref1
To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) ref1
Todd, Richard ref1
Tolstoy, Leo, Anna Karenina ref1
Tomelty, Frances ref1, ref2
Tonight Show, The (TV talk show) ref1
Tony Awards ref1
Toole, J. L. ref1
Toronto ref1, ref2
Toronto Film Festival ref1
Tracy, Spencer ref1
Trans-Siberian Express ref1
Travers, Ben, Plunder ref1, ref2
Trenchard-Smith, Brian ref1
Tribune ref1
Tringham, David ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Truffaut, François ref1
Trumbo, Dalton ref1
Turner, Clifford ref1
Twickenham Studios ref1, ref2
Tynan, Kenneth ref1, ref2, ref3
Under Milk Wood (1972) ref1
United Artists ref1
Ustinov, Peter, The Empty Chair ref1
Vanbrugh, Dame Irene ref1
Variety magazine ref1
Vaughn, Matthew ref1
Venezuela ref1, ref2
Venice ref1
Venus (2006) ref1, ref2, ref3
Verdugo, Malinche ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Via Veneto ref1
Vidal, Gore ref1, ref2
Villiers, James ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Villiers, Lucy ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6
Visconti ref1
Vonnegut, Kurt ref1
Walker, Alexander ref1
Wallach, Eli ref1, ref2
Wallis, Hal B. ref1
Wambaugh, Joseph ref1
Ward, Natalie ref1
Ward, Simon ref1
Wardle, Irving ref1
Warner Brothers ref1, ref2
Warsaw ref1, ref2
Wasserman, Dale ref1
Waterhouse, Keith ref1, ref2, ref3
Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5
Our Song ref1
Waterman, Dennis ref1
Wayne, John ref1
Welles, Orson ref1
Werner, Oscar ref1
West Indies cricket team 1969 ref1
West, Timothy ref1, ref2, ref3
Whitaker, Forest ref1
Whittaker, Jodie ref1
Wilder, Billy ref1
Wilder, Thornton
The Matchmaker ref1
The Skin of our Teeth ref1
William Morris Agency ref1
Williams, John ref1
Williams, Kenneth ref1
Williams, Robin ref1
Williams, Tennessee, Night of the Iguana ref1
Williams, Wendy ref1
Willoughby, Bob ref1, ref2, ref3
Wilson, Don ref1
Wilton, Penelope ref1, ref2
Wingate, Orde ref1
Wise, Ernie ref1
Wodehouse, P. G., Heavy Weather ref1
Wolfit, Donald ref1, ref2, ref3
Wood, Charles ref1
Wood, Clive ref1
Wyler, William ref1, ref2, ref3
Wymark, Patrick ref1
Yanomami Indians ref1
Yates, Peter ref1, ref2
Yeats, Jack Butler ref1
York, Susannah ref1, ref2, ref3
Yorkshire Evening News (newspaper) ref1
Yorkshire Evening Post (newspaper) ref1, ref2, ref3
Young, Roger ref1, ref2
List of Illustrations
1. O’Toole’s birth certificate proves he wasn’t born in Ireland, as he sometimes claimed, but in Leeds.
2. Peter O’Toole, fresh out of drama school and before his nose job.
3. Helping himself at the Dirty Duck pub during his stay in Stratford. Notice the famed ‘yard of ale glass’ above the bar.
4. Joining aged twenty-seven, O’Toole was the Royal Shakespeare Company’s youngest ever leading man, seen here with his fellow members. Left to right: Paul Hardwick, Frances Cuka, Denholm Elliott, Dorothy Tutin, Peter O’Toole, Patrick Wymark and Jack MacGowran.
5. The role of a lifetime: O’Toole was David Lean’s choice to play British Lieutenant T. E. Lawrence in Lawrence of Arabia after Marlon Brando and Albert Finney turned it down.
6. The film seemed to follow O’Toole around wherever he went for the rest of his life, sometimes literally.
7. The men who brought Lawrence of Arabia to the screen. Left to right: Peter O’Toole, David Lean, producer Sam Spiegel and writer Robert Bolt at the Gala London opening in 1962.
8. O’Toole’s marriage to Welsh actress Siân Phillips was a rollercoaster ride; she would later describe him as a ‘dangerous, disruptive human being’.
9. Off duty with Richard Burton during filming of the historical drama Becket (1964).
10. O’Toole (left) parties with Elizabeth Taylor (centre) and Richard Burton (right).
11. On location in Paris with Woody Allen for the sex comedy hit What’s New Pussycat? (1965).
12. In How To Steal A Million (1966) with Audrey Hepburn, who turned a blind eye to O’Toole’s hell-raising on location in Paris.
13. O’Toole met his match while filming The Lion In Winter (1968) with Katharine Hepburn, who refused to tolerate his boisterous behaviour.
14. Enjoying an improvised
game of his beloved cricket on location in Venezuela for Murphy’s War (1971).
15. O’Toole as the mad 14th Earl of Gurney in The Ruling Class (1972), one of his most celebrated roles.
16. Relaxing at home with Siân in 1972. The couple are all smiles for the camera but their marriage was at near breaking point.
17. O’Toole (pictured here with Malcolm McDowell, left) was later to regret his appearance in the infamous and debauched Caligula, which was filmed in 1976 but not released until 1979.
18. With his youngest daughter Patricia and girlfriend Malinche Verdugo.
19. O’Toole (second from right) backstage at the Old Vic during the infamous Macbeth production, with Sting (far left), Frances Tomelty (who played Lady Macbeth, second from left) and director Bryan Forbes (far right).
20. As maverick film director Eli Cross in the cult classic The Stunt Man (1980).
21. O’Toole steals the show with a great comedic film performance in My Favourite Year (1982).
22. In 1982, with daughter Kate (left) and his girlfriend at the time, former model Karen Somerville.
23. After a string of flops and forgettable films, O’Toole finally won plaudits for his role in The Last Emperor (1987).
24. O’Toole had a passion for breeding horses and regularly attended the annual Connemara pony show.
25. O’Toole in one of his greatest triumphs on the London stage, Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell (1989).
26. With Lorcan, the son he had always wanted.
27. With Omar Sharif, a lifelong friend.
28. O’Toole makes a grand entrance on a camel in an unforgettable appearance on The David Letterman Show (1995).
29. Meryl Streep presents O’Toole with his honorary Oscar in 2003.
30. Embracing the new generation, with Eric Bana and Brad Pitt at the launch of Troy (2004).
31. A final hurrah: O’Toole giving his last great performance in Venus (2006), for which he received his eighth and final Oscar nomination for Best Actor.
32. A proud father, with son Lorcan and daughter Kate.
1. O’Toole’s birth certificate proves he wasn’t born in Ireland, as he sometimes claimed, but in Leeds.
2. Peter O’Toole, fresh out of drama school and before his nose job.
3. Helping himself at the Dirty Duck pub during his stay in Stratford. Notice the famed ‘yard of ale glass’ above the bar.
4. Joining aged twenty-seven, O’Toole was the Royal Shakespeare Company’s youngest ever leading man, seen here with his fellow members. Left to right: Paul Hardwick, Frances Cuka, Denholm Elliott, Dorothy Tutin, Peter O’Toole, Patrick Wymark and Jack MacGowran.
5. The role of a lifetime: O’Toole was David Lean’s choice to play British Lieutenant T. E. Lawrence in Lawrence of Arabia after Marlon Brando and Albert Finney turned it down.
Peter O'Toole Page 42