Anthony Andrews

This tall, attractive blond Englishman has often been cast in aristocratic roles, many of which aired on public television in the USA. Anthony Andrews delivered what should have been a star-making turn as the charmingly charismatic but alcoholic Sebastian Flyte in the Granada TV miniseries "Brideshead Revisited" (1980-81; aired in the USA on PBS in 1982). Yet, unlike his "Brideshead" co-star Jeremy Irons, he was unable (or unwilling) to capitalize on his small screen success.

The son of a bandleader and a dancer, Andrews decided early in his life he wanted to be an actor. Dropping out of school in his late teens, he worked at a series of odd jobs (including a brief stint as a journalist) before he found employment as an assistant stage manager and understudy. Andrews soon found work onstage and later in BBC TV productions like Dennis Potter's "A Beast With Two Backs" (1968), a regular role on "Dixon of the Dock Green" (BBC, 1972) and as a British soldier who romances an Irish lass in Belfast in the acclaimed Emmy-winner "A War of Children" (CBS, 1972). He appeared as titled aristocrats in the miniseries "The Pallisers" (BBC, 1974) and in an episode of "Upstairs/Downstairs". Andrews was cast as Anthony Hopkins' son in "QB VII" (ABC, 1974) and gained a loyal following as the dashing young officer affiliated with a team that disarmed German bombs in WWII-era London in "Danger UXB" (Thames TV, 1979). After earning an Emmy nomination as Sebastian Flyte, he went on to headline a number of period TV-movies. Andrews followed in the footsteps of legendary actors like Leslie Howard as "The Scarlet Pimpernel" (CBS, 1982), Robert Taylor as "Ivanhoe" (CBS, 1982), Peter Ustinov as the Emperor Nero in the NBC miniseries "A.D." (1985), Cary Grant in the small screen remake of "Suspicion" (PBS, 1988) and both Fredric March and Spencer Tracy in "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (Showtime, 1989). He also garnered attention for his portrayal of King Edward VIII who abdicated the British throne for "The Woman He Loved" (CBS, 1988) and for a rare villainous turn as Prof. Moriarty to Edward Woodward's Sherlock Holmes in "Hands of a Murderer" (CBS, 1990).

Andrews has been less successful on the big screen. He debut in the little seen "Take Me High/Hot Property" (1973) and appeared in such forgettable fare as "Les Adolescents" (1975). John Huston tapped him to play Albert Finney's brother in "Under the Volcano" (1984) but the film was a box office disappointment. Andrews was then cast in several military roles in films that reached a limited audience, with the Australian-produced "The Lighthorsemen" (1987) perhaps the best. He earned critical praise for his emotional turn as an arrogant British archeologist wrongly imprisoned by the Soviet Union for spying in "Lost in Siberia" (1991). In 1996, he co-produced and co-starred as a malevolent artist with incestuous feelings for his sister in the stylized ghost story "Haunted".

  • Also Credited As:
    Anthony Corin Gerald Andrews
  • Born:
    January 12, 1948 in London, England
  • Job Titles:
    Actor, Stage manager, Journalist
Family
  • Daughter: Amy-Samantha Andrews.
  • Daughter: Jessica Andrews.
  • Son: Joshua Andrews.
Education
  • Royal Masonic School, Bushey, Hertfordshire, England
Milestones
  • 1967 Began acting in provincial theater productions
  • 1968 Appeared in stage production, "Forty Years On" alongside John Gielgud
  • 1972 American TV acting debut, "A War of the Children"
  • 1972 Featured in the BBC serial "Dixon of Dock Green"
  • 1973 Feature film debut in "Take Me High/Hot Property"
  • 1974 Co-starred in the British series "The Pallisers" (aired in the USA in 1977 on PBS' "Masterpiece Theatre"
  • 1978 Appeared as Mercutio in a British TV production of "Romeo and Juliet"
  • 1978 Starred in the British series "Danger UXB" (shown in the USA on PBS' "Masterpiece Theatre")
  • 1981 Breakthrough performance as Sebastian Flyte in the acclaimed British series "Brideshead Revisited" (aired on PBS in the USA in 1982); nominated for an Emmy as Best Actor
  • 1982 Starred in the CBS TV-movie "The Scarlet Pimpernel"
  • 1984 Returned to features after nearly a decade in a supporting role in John Huston's "Under the Volcano"
  • 1985 Played Emperor Nero in the NBC miniseries "A.D."
  • 1987 Appeared in the Australian feature "The Lighthorsemen"
  • 1987 Made rare London stage appearance in "Coming In to Land"
  • 1988 Cast as King Edward VIII (later the Duke of Windsor) in the CBS biopic "The Woman He Loved"
  • 1989 Had title role in "The Strange Case of Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde" (Showtime)
  • 1991 Portrayed an archeologist mistaken for a spy in "Lost in Siberia/Zatyeryanny V Sibri"
  • 1995 Produced and starred in "Haunted"
  • 2001 Co-starred in Ibsen's "Ghosts" on the London stage
  • Quit school at age 17; supported himself doing odd jobs
  • Raised in Finchley, England
  • Worked briefly as a journalist at WEST SUSSEX COUNTY TIMES

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