Corin Redgrave

@Actors, Career and Family

Corin Redgrave was a talented British actor known for his role in the play ‘Not About Nightingales.’

Jul 16, 1939

Cancer CelebritiesBritishFilm & Theater PersonalitiesActors
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: July 16, 1939
  • Died on: April 6, 2010
  • Nationality: British
  • Famous: Film & Theater Personalities, Actors
  • Cause of death: Cancer
  • Birth Place: Marylebone, England
  • Height: 187cm

Corin Redgrave born at

Marylebone, England

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Birth Place

Corin Redgrave first tied the nuptial knot with Deirdre Deline Hamilton-Hill. They had a daughter, actress Jemma Redgrave, and a son, Luke, a camera operator and production assistant. The marriage did not last long and the two divorced in 1975.

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Personal Life

Following his divorce from Deirdre, Redgrave remained single for quite some time. In 1985, he married Kika Markham in Wandsworth, London. The couple was blessed with two sons, Harvey and Arden. Meanwhile in 1997, Deirdre died of cancer.

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Personal Life

In 2000, Redgrave was diagnosed with prostate cancer. He suffered from the disease all through his later years. In 2005, his condition became critical following a severe heart attack but stabilized eventually.

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Personal Life

Corin Redgrave was born on July 16, 1939 in Marylebone, London to Michael Redgrave and Rachel Kempson. Both his parents were actors by profession. Redgrave was the only son of the couple; he had two sisters, Vanessa and Lynn Redgrave.

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Childhood & Early Life

Redgrave attained his formal education from Westminster School. He then won a scholarship to King's College, Cambridge, where he studied English. It was while in Cambridge that Redgrave’s future in acting was sealed.

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Childhood & Early Life

At Cambridge, Redgrave followed the footsteps of his actor parents and actively participated in college stage productions. Within a matter of time, his mettle as an actor was established. His exceptional performance earned him loads of accolades. In Cambridge, he also explored his directorial skills.

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Childhood & Early Life

After graduating from Cambridge, Corin Redgrave pursued acting full time. He got into theatre and started taking up roles. Redgrave’s first role was as Lysander in Tony Richardson’s Royal Court production ‘A Midsummer Night's Dream’ in 1961.

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Stage Career

Just as his acting career commenced, Redgrave became active politically as well. He supported the far-left politics and became a lifelong activist.

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Stage Career

After appearing in Tony Richardson’s play, he essayed the role of a Pilot Officer in Arnold Wesker's ‘Chips with Everything’ in London in 1962 and in New York in 1963. He next appeared in a number of West End shows, including ‘Lady Windermere's Fan’ in 1966 and ‘Abelard and Heloise’ in 1971.

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Stage Career

On the political ground, Redgrave joined the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament encouraged by his sister. In 1971, he joined the Trotskyist Workers Revolutionary Party.

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Stage Career

In 1972, he moved to Stratford. Therein, he clubbed with John Wood as the latter’s twin Antipholi in ‘The Comedy of Errors’. He was cast in several Shakespearean plays including ‘Much Ado about Nothing’, ‘Henry IV Part 1’, ‘Antony and Cleopatra’, and ‘The Tempest’. He also starred in a highly successful revival of ‘A Song At Twilight’ co-starring his sister and wife.

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Stage Career

In 1964, Corin Redgrave made his on-screen debut with guest roles in the TV series and films ‘Camera Three’, ‘The Avengers’ and ‘Crooks in Cloisters’. Early on in his career, he received critical and commercial acclaim for his role as Thomas More's son-in-law in the successful film ‘A Man for All Seasons’.

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Film & Television Career

Towards the end of the 1960s, Redgrave made guest appearances in a number of television series including ‘Theatre 625’, ‘Mystery and Imagination’ and ‘The Gambler’. Other shows that he was a part of include ‘The Girl with Pistol’, ‘The Magus’, and ‘Oh! What a Lovely War’. He took the lead part of Sir George Grey in the New Zealand TV miniseries ‘The Governor’ in 1977.

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Film & Television Career

In 1981, he played the role of a doomed Cornwall in ‘Excalibur’, followed by Worsley in ‘Eureka’. He then capped the role of a corrupt lead police investigator in ‘In the Name of the Father,’ a biographical courtroom drama film.

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Film & Television Career

In 1994, Redgrave starred in the British romantic comedy film ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’ as Hamish, fiancé of Andie MacDowell’s character. His next role came in Roger Michell’s ‘Persuasion’ as Sir Walter Eliot.

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Film & Television Career

From mid-1995 to 2000, Redgrave appeared in British television programs, such as ‘Ultraviolet’, ‘The Vice’, ‘Trial & Retribution’, ‘Shameless’, ‘Foyle's War’, ‘The Relief of Belsen’, ‘The Ice House’ and the Emmy Award-winning telefilm ‘The Girl in the Cafe’, in which he played the prime minister.

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Film & Television Career