• David Warner, the famous Titanic actor, passes away at age 80 from cancer-related ailment

    Entertainment
    David Warner, the famous Titanic actor, passes away at age 80 from cancer-related ailment

    He was nominated for a British Academy Film Award for his performance as the titular character in the Swinging London tragicomedy Morgan: A Suitable Case for Treatment by Karel Reisz in 1966. He later garnered an Emmy nomination for his portrayal of Roman politician Pomponius Falco in the 1981 TV miniseries Masada.

    Digital Desk: David Warner, a gifted
    British actor who appeared in Shakespearean tragedies as well as sci-fi cult
    masterpieces, has passed away. He was 80. Warner's family announced that he
    died on Sunday from a cancer-related illness at Denville Hall, a retirement
    home for entertainers in London.



    In
    the movies Time After Time (1979), in which he played Jack the Ripper; Straw
    Dogs (1971), The Omen (1976), and Titanic (1997), Warner, who was frequently
    cast as the villain, played the cunning valet, Spicer Lovejoy.



    Warner,
    a young member of the Royal Shakespeare Company who studied at the Royal
    Academy of Dramatic Art in London, has performed as King Henry VI and King
    Richard II, among other roles. His depiction of Hamlet in the company's 1965
    staging under Peter Hall's direction was among the best of his generation.



    According
    to Gregor Doran, artistic director emeritus of the RSC, Warner's Hamlet, who
    was portrayed as a troubled student, "seemed the personification of 1960's
    youth, and caught the radical spirit of a stormy age." Warner participated
    in Hall's 1968 production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, which also included
    Helen Mirren and Diana Rigg.



    Because
    of his enduring stage phobia, Warner spent many years preferring film and TV
    work despite his fame as a stage performer.



    He
    was nominated for a British Academy Film Award for his performance as the
    titular character in the Swinging London tragicomedy Morgan: A Suitable Case
    for Treatment by Karel Reisz in 1966. He later garnered an Emmy nomination for
    his portrayal of Roman politician Pomponius Falco in the 1981 TV miniseries
    Masada.



    His
    parts in Tim Burton's Planet of the Apes remake, Terry Gilliam's Time Bandits,
    Tron, and the Star Trek series, where he made multiple appearances in various
    roles, won him the hearts of sci-fi enthusiasts. He has had a great career in
    both film and television in both Britain and the United States.



    Nearly
    30 years after his previous appearance, Warner returned to the stage in 2001 to
    play Andrew Undershaft in the Broadway version of George Bernard Shaw's Major
    Barbara. In 2005, he made his Chichester Festival Theatre debut in King Lear.
    The following year, he returned to the stage to reprise his role as
    Shakespeare's hilarious clown, Falstaff.



    In
    Mary Poppins Returns, which was released in 2018, retired navy officer Admiral
    Boom played one of his last film roles.



    Warner's family released a statement
    regarding how he would be remembered: "As a kind-hearted, gentle, and
    caring guy, partner, and dad whose legacy of excellent work has influenced the
    lives of so many over the years."



    The
    family declared, "We are brokenhearted." In addition to his first
    wife, Harriet Evans, and several gold dust buddies, they said that Warner is
    survived by his companion, Lisa Bowerman, son Luke, daughter-in-law Sarah, and
    "his good friend Jane Spencer Prior."







     



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