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Christopher Benjamin and John Bennett in Docteur Who (1963)

Biography

John Bennett

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Overview

  • Born
    May 8, 1928 · Beckenham, Kent, England, UK
  • Died
    April 11, 2005 · London, England, UK (undisclosed)
  • Birth name
    John David Bennett
  • Height
    1.82 m

Biography

    • The lean, rather emaciated-looking John Bennett studied acting at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London. After years in repertory theatre, he made his feature debut in 1960, and, thereafter, appeared regularly on British screens. He was prone to perform in diverse ethnic guises, often adopting heavy make-up and using his penchant for accents and dialects. One of his first notable appearances was as the evil Injun Joe in the BBC children's series The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1960). He came to be much in demand for crime-time TV series, like Chapeau melon et bottes de cuir (1961), Le Saint (1962) and Z Cars (1962), effortlessly switching from menacing roles to law enforcement.

      In feature films, he was generally confined to background support, except for his titular lead in the little-seen drama The Barber of Stamford Hill (1963). He also provided an effective thread connecting the various vignettes of La maison qui tue (1971), as the sceptical investigating Chief Inspector. Bennett also appeared as Joseph Goebbels in Les dix derniers jours d'Hitler (1973), French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau in the excellent miniseries La chute des aigles (1974), and as Greek historian and philosopher Xenophon in Moi Claude empereur (1976). He twice guested in Docteur Who (1963), giving one of his most indelible performances as the Fu Manchu look-alike, Li H'sen Chang, an evil Chinese magician and hypnotist roaming Victorian-era London in search of victims to aid in his master's reincarnation, in "The Talons of Weng-Chiang". Bennett managed to avoid the pitfalls of caricature and gave a thoroughly convincing performance, managing to portray the arch villain with dignity and, ultimately, even a degree of sympathy.

      In addition to his work on screen, Bennett remained an exceedingly busy stage performer, at once in classical roles at the National Theatre and with the Royal Shakespeare Company, and in West End revivals of noted musicals like "The King and I" (1979) and "The Sound of Music" (1981).
      - IMDb mini biography by: I.S.Mowis

Family

  • Spouses
      Caroline Mortimer(1979 - April 11, 2005) (his death, 2 children)
      Patricia Hastings(1953 - 1979) (divorced, 1 child)

Trademarks

  • Gaunt, cadaverous face and protruding eyes

Trivia

  • He was considered for the main guest role of Solon in the Docteur Who (1963) serial "The Brain of Morbius".
  • His first ambition was to be an architect.
  • Son-in-law of John Mortimer and Penelope Mortimer.
  • He and John Cater acted together in both Moi Claude empereur (1976) and Mission David (1979). In the former, Cater's character worked undercover to cause someone to be executed and Bennett's character was a physician. In the latter, Bennett's character worked undercover to cause someone to be executed and Cater's character was a physician.
  • Beaten by Alan Badel to the part of Romeo in a production of Romeo and Juliet at the Old Vic in 1951.

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