Richard Griffiths- Biography

About Richard Griffiths

He further earned a host of new admirers for his comic villain Uncle Vernon Dursley in the film adaptation of J.K. Rowling's mega-successful book "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" (2001).

Born in Stockton-on-Tees and raised in Thornaby, Griffiths was the son of deaf parents and he learned sign language before he could speak. He experienced a somewhat troubled childhood, which included frequent attempts to run away from home, and he dropped out of school at age 15. Hired as a porter, he was encouraged to return to school by his boss and a drama class at Stockton & Billingham College literally changed his life.

Shortly after leaving the college, the portly actor earned a spot in the repertory company of BBC Radio. Too young to be a character player and too hefty to be a young leading man, Griffiths then found himself working in small theaters around Britain, sometimes acting, sometimes stage managing. Finally settling in Manchester, he began to get solid parts on stage, including in an early work of a then unknown Alan Ayckbourn. Griffiths also made his first forays on the small screen, appearing in bit roles in Granada Television productions. By chance, he was working in front of the cameras when Trevor Nunn, the artistic director of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre Company, happened to be in the studios and saw him on a monitor. Nunn encouraged the actor to head to London for a spot with the Royal Shakespeare Company. Griffiths spent several seasons with the RSC at first playing small comic roles in the classics, such as Peter in "Romeo and Juliet" and six lines in "A Comedy of Errors". Proving the old adage that there are no small parts, Griffiths proved a success with audiences despite his limited stage time and was graduated to more important roles like Bottom in a 1977 staging of "A Midsummer Night's Dream". In 1979, he earned several accolades for his turn as the Hollywood-bound George in the Kaufman and Hart play "Once in a Lifetime". He went on to be perfectly cast as Falstaff in "The Merry Wives of Windsor" (filmed for British TV) and appeared in several other productions as well.

Having made his feature debut in "It Shouldn't Happen to a Vet/All Things Bright and Beautiful" (1975), Griffiths landed the key role of the British husband of an American woman (Elaine Stritch) in "Nobody's Perfect" (1980, 1982), a sort of Anglicized version of the popular American sitcom "Maude". The one-time porter portrayed one in the Oscar-winning "Chariots of Fire" (1981) and appeared as a reporter in the next year's Best Picture "Gandhi". He excelled as a mild-mannered computer genius who discovers a financial conspiracy in the thriller "Bird of Prey" (1982) and reprised the part in a 1984 sequel "Bird of Prey 2". In between, Griffiths had a chance to make an impression with audiences as a cynical lawyer in the feature "Gorky Park" (1983) and as the accountant who inexplicably falls in love with a pig in "A Private Function" (1985). But it was his turn as gay Uncle Monty with eyes for Paul McGann's Marwood (the "I" of the title) in "Withnail and I" that really established him as a character player in films, although he retreated to British sitcoms ("Ffizz", ITV 1987, 1989; "A Kind of Living", ITV 1988-90; "Pie in the Sky", BBC 1994-97). The actor did make occasional appearances in TV-movies that aired in the USA like "Casanova" (ABC, 1987) and features like "Guarding Tess" (1994), in which he was dryly amusing as a butler. In 2000, Griffiths delivered a finely calibrated turn as the piggish thug overseeing the kitchen in the BBC miniseries "Gormenghast" and appeared on the London stage the following year in the long-running comedy "Art" and the revival of "Luther" starring Rufus Sewell. After earning his stripes as Uncle Vernon Dursley in the first Harry Potter film, the actor reprised the role in the sequel "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" (2002).

Partners

Wife

Heather Gibson. Married in 1980

Education

Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester , England

Stockton & Billingham College

Career Milestones

2011

Cast in Martin Scorsese's family adventure "Hugo"

2011

Portrayed King George II in "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides," the fourth installment in the "Pirates" series

2010

Reprised role of Uncle Vernon for the seventh and final installment of the series directed by David Yates, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1"

2008

Co-starred with Adam Sandler in "Bedtime Stories"

2007

Reprised the role of Uncle Dursley for "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix"

2007

Reunited with "Harry Potter" star Daniel Radcliffe in a stage revival of Peter Shaffer's "Equus" at the Gielgud Theatre in London; transferred to Broadway in 2008

2006

Starred opposite Peter O'Toole in "Venus"

2006

Reprised his role for the film version of "The History Boys"

2006

Portrayed a beloved teacher in the Broadway production of "The History Boys"

2004

Starred opposite Claire Danes and Billy Crudup in "Stage Beauty"

2004

Again played Uncle Dursley in "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban"

2002

Reprised the role of Uncle Dursley for "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets"

2001

Co-starred in the London stage production of "Luther," alongside Rufus Sewell

2001

Cast as Uncle Dursley in the feature adaptation of "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone"

2000

Portrayed a doctor in "Vatel"

2000

Offered a memorable performance as the corpulent kitchen master in the British miniseries, "Gormenghast"

1999

Played one of the magistrates in "Sleepy Hollow"

1995

Was featured in "Funny Bones"

1994

Starred in the British police drama, "Pie in the Sky"

1994

Had title role in "The Life of Galileo" at the Alameida Theatre

1991

Played dual roles of a German scientist and an American Southerner in the comedy "The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear"

1988

Cast as a teacher who moves from Bolton to London with his resentful wife and newborn child in the British series, "A Kind of Living"

1987

Starred as a wine merchant in the British comedy series, "Ffizz"

1987

Delivered memorable performance as the lusty Uncle Monty in "Withnail and I"

1986

Co-starred with Madonna and Sean Penn in the bomb, "Shanghai Surprise"

1984

Reprised role of Henry Jay for "Bird of Prey 2"

1984

Portrayed "Henry VIII" at the Royal Shakespeare Company

1983

First significant film role, "Gorky Park"

1982

Played the lead role of computer programmer Henry Jay in the four-part BBC drama "Bird of Prey"

1982

Was perfectly cast as Sir John Falstaff in the BBC TV production of "The Merry Wives of Windsor"

1982

Played a British reporter in "Gandhi"

1981

Had a small role in the Oscar-winning film, "Chariots of Fire"

1980

Played the husband of an American (Elaine Stritch) living in England in the British TV comedy, "Nobody's Perfect"

1979

Won raves for his performances as Lariosik in "The White Guard" on the London stage

1977

Offered impressive turn as Bottom in the RSC production of "A Midsummer Night's Dream"

1975

Made first film appearance in "It Shouldn't Happen to a Vet"; re-released three years later as "All Things Bright and Beautiful"

1975

Joined the Royal Shakespeare Company

Made TV debut in small roles in Granada TV dramas

1970

Was a member of BBC Radio Drama repertory company