第四名:4. Richard Harris. (1930-2002). Hailing from the gritty Western Irish city of Limerick, Mr. Harris is famed for his numerous and often offbeat film appearances. As a young man, he was an up-and-coming rugby star but was forced to abandon that pursuit after enduring a bout of tuberculosis. Relocating to England after WWII, he dabbled in directing plays while studying to become an actor, living for many years in poverty as he studied and perfected his craft.
He spent time onstage in England and appeared in small Hollywood film roles in the late 1950s and early 1960s. But reportedly, he didn’t much like his Tinseltown experiences. Worse, he would quarrel with well-known stars like Marlon Brando and Charleton Heston, behavior not likely to boost his career.
But he gradually reconciled himself with movie acting, appearing as King Arthur in the film version of the Broadway musical “Camelot” (1967); as a British adventurer in “A Man Called Horse” (1970); the uniquely quirky role of English Bob in the Clint Eastwood classic, “Unforgiven” (1992); and the small but significant role of the dying philosopher/emperor Marcus Aurelius in “Gladiator” (2000).
But perhaps his crowning achievement was a surprise that occurred at the end of his career when he was cast as the crafty old wizard and headmaster Albus Dumbledore in the first two installments of the lucrative “Harry Potter” film franchise. He died of cancer just prior to the opening of the second Potter film.
Statue of a sporting young Richard Harris in Kilkee, Ireland. (Wikipedia)