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Peter Ustinov

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Ustinov as Hercule Poirot
<tr valign="top"><th style="text-align:right;">Died</th> <td>28 March, 2004
Genolier, Vaud, Switzerland</td></tr>
Peter Ustinov
Born 16 April, 1921
London, England

Image:Peter-Ustinov.jpg

Sir Peter Alexander Ustinov, CBE (April 16, 1921March 28, 2004), born Peter Alexander von Ustinov, was an Academy Award-winning English-born actor, writer, dramatist and raconteur of French, Italian, German, Russian and Ethiopian ancestry.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Childhood and early life

Ustinov was born in Swiss Cottage, London. His father, Iona (Jona) von Ustinov, known to his friends as "Klop" ("blow" in Yiddish, "bedbug" in Russian), was of Russian and German descent, and had served as a German fighter pilot in World War I, worked as a press officer at the German Embassy in London in the 1930s, and was a reporter for a German news agency. In 1935 he began working for the British intelligence service MI5 and became a British citizen, thus avoiding internment or deportation during the war. (Peter Wright mentions in his book Spycatcher that Klop was possibly the spy known as U35; Ustinov says in his autobiography that his father hosted secret meetings of senior British and German officials at their London home.) The distinguished Swedish tenor Nicolai Gedda, whose father was another Ustinov, is related to this part of the family.

Peter Ustinov's mother, Nadia (Nadezhda) Leontievna Benois, was a painter and ballet designer of Russian, French and Italian ancestry. She also had Ethiopian royal ancestry <ref name="Ethiopia">Frontline: Ustinov</ref>; Peter's great-grandfather, a Swiss engineer, married the daughter of Emperor Tewodros II. This means that Ustinov could arguably be considered the first man of African descent to have won an Academy Award. (However, Ustinov never publicly acknowledged his African ancestry, and this fact was not widely reported during his lifetime.) Her father Leon Benois was an imperial Russian architect and owner of Leonardo's painting Madonna Benois. His more famous brother Alexandre Benois was an outstanding stage designer who worked with Stravinsky and Diaghilev. Their paternal ancestor Jules-César Benois was a chef who had left France for St Petersburg during the French Revolution and became a chef to Tsar Paul.

Ustinov was educated at Westminster School and had a difficult and uncertain childhood because of his parents' constant bickering and personality clashes. After training as an actor in his late teens, he made his stage début in 1938 at the Players' Theatre, becoming quickly established.

A car enthusiast since the age of four, he owned a succession of interesting machines ranging from a Fiat Topolino, several Lancias, a Hispano-Suiza, a pre-selector Delage and a special-bodied Jowett Jupiter. He made records like Phoney Folklore which included the song of the Russian peasant “whose tractor had betrayed him” and his Grand Prix of Gibraltar was a vehicle for his creative wit and ability at car engine sound-effects and voices.

[edit] Career highlights

Following military service as a private soldier during World War II, during which he had made propaganda films, starting with One of Our Aircraft is Missing (1942), with actors such as David Niven, he began to branch out into writing. His first major success was with The Love of Four Colonels in 1951. He starred alongside Humphrey Bogart and Aldo Ray in We're No Angels (1955) His career as a dramatist continued alongside his acting career, his best-known play being Romanoff and Juliet (1956). His film roles include Roman emperor Nero in Quo Vadis? (1951), Captain Vere in Billy Budd (1962), Lentulus Batiatus in Spartacus (1960), an old man surviving a totalitarian future in Logan's Run (1976), and in a half dozen films as Hercule Poirot, a part he first played in Death on the Nile (1978). Ustinov voiced the well-known anthropomorphic lion Prince John of the 1973 Disney animated movie Robin Hood. He also worked on several films as writer and occasionally director, including The Way Ahead (1944), School for Secrets (1946), Hot Millions (1968) and Memed My Hawk (1984).

He won Oscars for Best Supporting Actor for his roles in Spartacus (1960) and Topkapi (1964). He also won two Golden Globe awards (he famously set the Oscar and Globe statues up on his desk as if playing doubles tennis; the game was also a love of his life, as was ocean yachting).

Between 1952 and 1955 Ustinov starred alongside Peter Jones in the much-loved BBC radio comedy In All Directions. The show featured Ustinov and Jones as themselves in a car in London perpetually searching for Copthorne Avenue. The comedy derived from the characters they met along the way, often also played by themselves. The show was unusual for the time as it was largely improvised rather than scripted. Ustinov and Jones improvised on to a tape which was then edited for broadcast by Frank Muir and Denis Norden who also sometimes took part. Possibly the favourite characters were Morris and Dudley Grosvenor, two rather stupid East End spivs whose sketches always ended with the phrase "Run for it Morry" (or Dudley as appropriate.) Sadly no recording is known to survive.[1]

His autobiography, Dear Me (1977), was well received and saw him describe his life (ostensibly his childhood) whilst being interrogated by his own ego.

In the later part of his life (from 1969 until his death), his acting and writing tasks took second place to his work on behalf of UNICEF - the United Nations Children's Fund, for which he was a Goodwill Ambassador and fundraiser. In this role he visited some of the neediest children and made use of his ability to make just about anybody laugh, including many of the world's most disadvantaged children. "Sir Peter could make anyone laugh," UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy is quoted as saying. "His one-man show in German was the funniest performance I have ever seen – and I don’t speak a word of German."

Ustinov also served as President of the World Federalist Movement from 1991 until his death. He once said, "World Government is not only possible, it is inevitable; and when it comes, it will appeal to patriotism in its truest, in its only sense, the patriotism of men who love their national heritages so deeply that they wish to preserve them in safety for the common good" (see [2]).

He is most well-known to many British people as a chat-show guest, a role to which he was ideally suited - his multicultural background made it possible for him to criticise the British character with good humour. Towards the end of his life he undertook some one-man stage shows in which he let loose his raconteur streak - he told the story of his life and of his frequent alienation in British society (as just one example, he took a test as a child which asked him to name a Russian composer; he wrote Rimsky-Korsakov but was marked down, told the correct answer was Tchaikovsky since they had been studying him in class, and told to stop showing off).

He spoke English, French, Spanish, Italian, German, and Russian, fluently, as well as some Turkish and modern Greek. He was proficient in accents and dialects in all his languages.

In the late 1960s, he became a Swiss citizen to avoid the British tax system of the time which taxed the earnings of the wealthy at up to 90 per cent. However, he was knighted in 1990, and was appointed Chancellor of the University of Durham in 1992, having previously served as Rector of the University of Dundee in the late 1970s (a role in which he moved from being merely a figure-head to taking on a political role, negotiating with militant students).

He received an honorary doctorate from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (Belgium).

Ustinov was a frequent defender of the Chinese government, stating in an address to the University of Durham in 2000, "People are annoyed with the Chinese for not respecting more human rights. But with a population that size it's very difficult to have the same attitude to human rights."

In 2003, Durham's postgraduate college (previously known as the Graduate Society) was renamed Ustinov College when it moved to a new site.

He died on March 28, 2004, due to heart failure in a clinic in Genolier, near his home in Bursins, Vaud, Switzerland. He was so well regarded as a goodwill ambassador that UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy spoke at his funeral and represented United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

When, in an interview, he was once asked what he would like it to read on his tombstone, Ustinov replied "Please keep off the grass".

Amongst his lesser known works, Ustinov presented and na the official video review of the 1987 F1 season. His commentary proved highly entertaining. The documentary series "Wings of the Red Star" was also na by him.

Ustinov graciously gave his name to the Foundation of the International Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for their prestigious Sir Peter Ustinov Television Scriptwriting Award, given annually to a young television screenwriter.

Preceded by:
Hugh Griffith
for Ben-Hur
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
1960
for Spartacus
Succeeded by:
George Chakiris
for West Side Story
Preceded by:
Melvyn Douglas
for Hud
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
1964
for Topkapi
Succeeded by:
Martin Balsam
for A Thousand Clowns

[edit] Trivia

  • Angela Lansbury is the younger half-sister of Ustinov's widow, Isolde.
  • Ustinov was 5'9" (1,72 m).
  • On October 31, 1984, the then Prime Minister of India, Mrs. Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards in the garden of her home in Delhi, as she was walking to be interviewed by Peter Ustinov. Bizarrely, at the time of the assassination Ustinov was on an overseas phone call with his theatrical producer (and later manager) Douglas Urbanski, who heard all of the commotion in the background.
  • Ustinov is referenced in the Sheryl Crow song "There Goes the Neighborhood" along with Sunshine Sally (Sally Strouth), a children's show host in west Texas during the 1970s.
  • Ustinov was a frequent guest on the American television talk show The Tonight Show when it was hosted by Jack Paar.
  • Ustinov was the midpoint guest on the night of David Letterman's famous "upside down show," during which the television camera was gradually rotated 360 degrees over the course of the hour. Ustinov was photographed completely upside down during his appearance, in close-up, but Letterman himself was only shot from a distance during this part of the show.

[edit] Quote

By Peter Ustinov
  • As for being a General, well, at the age of four with paper hats and wooden swords, we're all Generals. Only some of us never grow out of it.

[edit] Reference

<References/>

[edit] External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

[edit] Critical viewpoints

Preceded by:
Dame Margot Fonteyn
Chancellor of the University of Durham
1992–2004
Succeeded by:
Bill Bryson
de:Peter Ustinov

et:Peter Ustinov es:Peter Ustinov eo:Peter Ustinov fr:Peter Ustinov it:Peter Ustinov he:פיטר יוסטינוב nl:Peter Ustinov ja:ピーター・ユスティノフ no:Peter Ustinov pl:Peter Ustinov pt:Peter Ustinov ro:Peter Ustinov ru:Устинов, Питер fi:Peter Ustinov sv:Peter Ustinov zh:皮特·乌斯蒂诺夫

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