Rex Harrison- Biography

Also Credited As:

Reginald Carey Harrison

About Rex Harrison

Best known for his Tony- and Oscar-winning portrayal of Professor Henry Higgins in Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe's "My Fair Lady", he made his West End debut in "Getting George Married" (1930) and his Broadway debut in "Sweet Aloes" (1936), but it was a two year run on the London stage in Sir Terrence Rattigan's "French Without Tears" that made him a star. Appearances in other sophisticated comedies, S N Behrman's "No Time for Comedy" and Noel Coward's "Design for Living" (both 1939), established him as what Coward himself called "the best light comedian in the world--after me."

Harrison's feature debut came in "The Great Game" (1930), and starring turns in movies like "Night Train to Munich", (1940) "Major Barbara" (1941) and "Blithe Spirit" (1945) brought him to the attention of Hollywood, leading to a seven-year contract with 20th Century-Fox. He scored a major triumph as the King in "Anna and the King of Siam" (1946) and recorded another success with "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir" (1947), but subsequent films performed poorly at the box office, although Preston Sturges' "Unfaithfully Yours" (1948) later acquired a cult status. Actor and studio parted company by mutual agreement, and Harrison returned to Broadway, earning a Tony for his 1948 performance as King Henry VIII in Maxwell Anderson's "Anne of the Thousand Days". Continued acclaim followed for his work in T S Eliot's "The Cocktail Party" and John van Druten's "Bell, Book and Candle" (both 1950). He directed and starred in "The Love of Four Colonels" (1953) and a revival of "Bell, Book and Candle" (1954) and helmed "Nina" (1955), all for the London stage. He made his Broadway directing debut with "The Bright One" (1958).

Despite having, in his own words, a vocal range of "one-and-a-half notes", Harrison talked his way through the numbers of Lerner and Loewe's "My Fair Lady" (1956), directed for the stage by Moss Hart, and became the darling of the critics, playing the show for two years in New York and another in London. His waspish professor of phonetics was "crisp, lean, complacent and condescending until at last a real flare of human emotions burns the egotism away," wrote Brooks Atkinson in THE NEW YORK TIMES, and the success of "My Fair Lady" once again brought Harrison important film offers. He earned his first Oscar nomination for his portrayal of Julius Caesar in "Cleopatra" (1963), stealing the picture from his more famous co-stars, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton. Reprising Higgins for the 1964 film version of "My Fair Lady" opposite Audrey Hepburn brought him a Best Actor Oscar and international fame, and "Dr. Dolittle" (1967) introduced him to a new generation of moviegoers as he shamelessly enjoyed himself playing the fanciful jungle gentleman who conversed with wildlife.

Harrison devoted most of his remaining years to his first love, the stage, taking parts in such diverse plays as Luigi Pirandello's "Henry IV" and Rattigan's "In Praise of Love" (both 1974). He co-starred with Claudette Colbert in a Broadway production of "The Kingfisher" (1978), and, after returning to Broadway in "My Fair Lady" (1981), garnered some of the best reviews of his career for a Broadway revival of "Heartbreak House" (1983), later captured for posterity in a 1985 Showtime cable special. Harrison portrayed Lord Grenham in London and Broadway productions of "Aren't We All?" (1984-85) and Grand Duke Cyril Romanov in the NBC miniseries, "Anastasia: The Story of Anna" (1986). He last appeared on the London stage in "The Admirable Crichton" (1988) and bowed out in a Broadway revival of W Somerset Maugham's "The Circle", playing eight times a week just prior to his June 1990 death. The oft-married man dubbed 'Sexy Rexy' by Walter Winchell never wanted to be anything but an actor and never intended to retire. "He died with his boots on, no doubt about it," said "The Circle" producer Elliot Martin.

Partners

Wife

Elizabeth Rees. Daughter of Labor peer Lord Ogmore; previously married to actor Richard Harris with whom she had three sons; married 1971; divorced 1975

Wife

Kay Kendall. Married June 1957 until her death from leukemia Sept. 6, 1957

Wife

Lilli Palmer. Married 1943; divorced 1957

Wife

Noel Marjorie Collette Thomas. Married 1933; divorced 1942

Wife

Rachel Roberts. Married 1962; divorced 1971

Wife

Mercia Tinker. Married 1978 until his death June 1990

Family

Father

William Reginald Harrison.

Mother

Edith Carey Harrison.

Son

Carey Harrison. mother, Lilli Palmer

Son

Noel Harrison. born on January 29, 1936; mother, Marjorie Thomas

Step-Son

Jared Harris.

Education

Liverpool College, Liverpool

Career Milestones

Performed the part of Lord Porteus in W Somerset Maugham's 1920s comedy "The Circle" on Broadway up unitl three weeks prior to his death

1988

Last appearance on the London stage, "The Admirable Crichton"

1986

Portrayed Grand Duke Cyril Romanov in NBC miniseries, "Anastasia: The Story of Anna"

Played Lord Grenham in "Aren't We All?", first in London and then on Broadway; again teamed opposite Claudette Colbert

1983

Received much critical acclaim for his portrayal of the aging Captain Shotover in Broadway revival of Shaw's "Heartbreak House"; Walter Kerr of THE NEW YORK TIMES called it "the best work the actor has ever done"; filmed for Showtime in 1985

1981

Reprised "My Fair Lady" on Broadway

1979

Filmed last feature, "A Time to Die" (released in 1983)

1978

Returned to drawing-room comedy for Broadway production of "The Kingfisher", opposite Claudette Colbert

1977

Appeared as Caesar in Broadway production of "Caesar and Cleopatra"

1974

Played title role in Luigi Pirandello's "Henry IV" on London stage and Sebastian Crutwell in Rattigan's "In Praise of Love" on Broadway

1967

Portrayed title role in "Doctor Dolittle"

1965

Reteamed with director Carol Reed to play Pope Julius II in "The Agony and the Ecstacy"

1964

Reprised Higgins for film version of "My Fair Lady" opposite Audrey Hepburn; won Best Actor Oscar

1964

Acted in "The Yellow Rolls-Royce"; screenplay by Rattigan

1963

Earned first Best Actor Academy Award nomination for his portrayal of Julius Caesar in "Cleopatra", stealing the film from his more famous co-stars Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton

1960

Played Doris Day's husband in "Midnight Lace"

1958

After two years on Broadway, reprised "My Fair Lady" in London

1956

"My Fair Lady" opened on Broadway with Harrison as Professor Henry Higgins and Julie Andrews as Eliza Doolittle; received TOny Award for Best Actor in a Musical

1953

Directed and appeared as the Man in Broadway production of "The Love of Four Colonels"

1950

Received acclaim for his performances in T S Eliot's "The Cocktail Party" in London and in John van Druten's "Bell, Book and Candle" on both sides of the Atlantic

1948

Returned to Broadway as Henry VIII in Maxwell Anderson's "Anne of the Thousand Days"; earned first Tony Award

1948

Starred as a music conductor who plots to kill his adulterous wife in Preston Sturges' comedy "Unfaithfully Yours"

1947

Followed with another film success, "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir", opposite Gene Tierney

1946

Scored major triumph as the 19th Century Siamese King Mongkut in his Hollywood debut, "Anna and the King of Siam"; years later Rodgers and Hammerstein would offer him the role of the King in their musical version of the tale, but other commitments prevented him from accepting

1946

Signed by 20th Century-Fox to seven year contract

1945

Portrayed Charles Condimine in David Lean's film version of Coward's "Blithe Spirit"

Served in Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve

1941

Offered brilliant turn opposite Wendy Hiller in Gabriel Pascal's "Major Barbara"

1940

Starred in Carol Reed's "Night Train to Munich"

1939

Acted onstage in S N Behrman's "No Time for Comedy" and Noel Coward's "Design for Living"

1938

Had supporting part in King Vidor's "The Citadel", based on the A J Cronin novel

Became stage star in Terrence Rattigan's "French Without Tears"

1936

Broadway debut as Tubbs Barrow in "Sweet Aloes"

1930

Film debut, "The Great Game"

1930

London stage debut as Honorable Fred Thripplehorn in "Getting George Married"

1924

Was member of Liverpool Repertory Theatre