Laurence Harvey was a British movie star who helped usher in the 1960s
with his indelible portrait of a ruthless social climber, and became one
of the decade's cultural icons for his appearances in socially themed
motion pictures.Harvey was born Zvi Mosheh Skikne on October 1, 1928 in Joniskis, Lithuania, to Ella (Zotnickaita) and Ber Skikne. His family was Jewish. The youngest of three brothers, he emigrated with his family, to South Africa in 1934, and settled in Johannesburg.
The teenager joined the South African army during World War II, and was
assigned to the entertainment unit. His unit served in Egypt and Italy,
and after the war the future Laurence Harvey returned to South Africa
and began a career as an actor. He moved to London after winning a
scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts. He then did his
apprenticeship in regional theatre, moving to Manchester in the 1940s.
The tyro actor reportedly supported himself as a hustler while
appearing with the city's Library Theatre. Even at this point in his
life he was known to be continually in debt and adopted a firm belief
in living beyond his means, a pattern that would continue until his
premature death. His lifestyle would often dictate working on less
worthy projects for the sake of a paycheck.His film debut came in
House of Darkness (1948), and
he was soon signed by Associated British Studios. His early film roles
proved underwhelming, and his attempt to become a stage star was
disastrous - his debut in the revival of "Hassan" was a notorious flop.
After failing in the commercial theater in London's West End, Harvey
joined the company of the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre at
Stratford-upon-Avon for the 1952 season. Regularly panned by critics
during his stint on the boards in the Bard's works, he built up his
reputation as a personality by becoming combative, telling the press
that he was a great actor despite the... bad reviews. Someone was
listening, as Romulus Pictures signed him in 1953 and began building
him up as a star.Harvey was cast as Romeo in
Romeo i Julia (1954), a film
that exemplified the main problem that kept Harvey from major stardom
(but subsequently would serve him quite well in a handful of roles):
his screen persona was emotionally aloof if not downright frigid.
Despite his icy portrayal of the great romantic hero Romeo, Harvey
attracted enough attention in Hollywood to be brought over by Warner
Bros. and given a lead role in
Ryszard Lwie Serce i krzyżowcy (1954).In Old Blighty with Romulus after his Hollywood adventure, Harvey met
his future wife Margaret Leighton on
the set of
The Good Die Young (1954).
Other film appearances included
I Am a Camera (1955) and
Trzech panów w łódce (1956),
the latter becoming his first certified hit, and even greater success
was to come. The colorful Harvey, a press favorite, became notorious
for his high-spending, high-living ways. He found himself frequently in
debt, his travails faithfully reported by entertainment columnists.
More fame was to come.After making three flops in a row, Harvey began a brief reign as the
Jack the Lad of British cinema with the great success of
Miejsce na górze (1958). That film
and Miłość i gniew (1959),
which was also released that year, inaugurated the "kitchen sink"
school of British cinema that revolutionized the country's film
industry and that of its cousin, Hollywood, in the 1960s.Harvey was born to play Joe Lampton, if not in kin, then in kind.
Lampton was a working-class bloke who dreams of escaping his social
strata for something better. It was a perfect match of actor and role,
as the icy Harvey persona made Joe's ruthless ambition to climb the
greasy pole of success fittingly chilling. In bringing Joe to life on
the screen, Harvey was more successful than
Richard Burton (a far better
actor) had been in limning the theater's Jimmy Porter in the film
adaptation of John Osborne's
seminal "Look Back in Anger," despite Burton's own working-class
background. Burton's volcanic use of his mellifluous voice, a great
instrument, is much too hot for the the small universe on the screen, a
case of projection that is so intense that it overwhelms the character
and the film (it took Burton another half-decade to learn to act on
film, and a half-decade more to lose that gift). Whereas Burton had to
learn to rein it in, Harvey's already tightly controlled persona made
the social-climbing Lampton resonate. Harvey fits the skin of the
character much better than does Burton. Despite not being an authentic
specimen, the success of his performance as a working-class
man-on-the-make proved to be the vanguard of a new generation of screen
characters that would be played by the real thing:
Albert Finney,
Tom Courtenay,
Terence Stamp and
Michael Caine, among others. "Room
at the Top" signaled the appearance of the New Wave of British cinema.
For his role as Joe, Harvey received his first (and only) Academy Award
nomination.While historically significant, "Room at the Top" is no longer ranked
at the summit of other, more contemporary kitchen-sink dramas, such as
Karel Reisz's
Z soboty na niedzielę (1960),
Tony Richardson's
Smak miodu (1961) and
Lindsay Anderson's
Sportowe życie (1963), or
even John Schlesinger's
provincial comedy Billy kłamca (1963),
films that made stars out of the authentic working-class/provincial
actors Finney, Alan Bates,
Richard Harris and Courtenay,
respectively. The virtue of the film is its emotional honesty about the
manipulation of personal relationships for social gain in postwar
Britain, a system that after a decade under the Conservatives had
become self-satisfied and complacent. In its portrayal of class
warfare, the film offers the most intense critique of the British class
system offered by any film from the British New Wave, including
"Saturday Night and Sunday Morning," which never leaves the confines of
the working-class strata its main character, Arthur Seaton, is stuck in
and ultimately reconciled to.That Joe chooses a woman other than the one he really loves in order to
gain social mobility, engaging in emotional manipulation of other human
beings, is a brutal indictment of the class structure of postwar
Britain. Joe, on his way to his wedding and his great chance, has lost
his humanity. His failure is symbolic of Britain's failure as well. It
is the haughtiness and narcissism of the actor Harvey (qualities his
screen persona engenders in film after film) that elucidates Lampton's
weakness. A further irony of Harvey's effective, if ersatz, portrayal
of working-class Joe is that it made him such a success - he soon went
off to Hollywood to play opposite box-office titan
Elizabeth Taylor in
Butterfield 8 (1960), thus losing
out on further opportunities to appear in the British New Wave he
helped introduce. As well as supporting Taylor in her Oscar-winning
turn in "Butterfield 8" (the two became close friends), a badly miscast
Harvey also co-starred as Texas hero Col. James Travis in
John Wayne's bloated budget-buster
Alamo (1960).With the exception of the lead in the British
The Long and the Short and the Tall (1961)-
a war picture that was decidedly NOT New Wave - Harvey did not appear
again in a major British film until 1965, when he returned to the other
side of the pond to reprise Joe in the "Room" sequel
Life at the Top (1965). However,
if he had never gone Hollywood, he might never have been cast in his
other signature role: Raymond Shaw, the eponymous
Przeżyliśmy wojnę (1962).
Once again, the match of actor and character was ideal, as Harvey's
coldness and affect-free acting perfectly embodied the persona of the
programmed assassin. The film, and Harvey's performance in it, are
classic.In this Hollywood interlude, Harvey also appeared in the screen
adaptations of Tennessee Williams'
Lato i dym (1961) opposite
the great Geraldine Page, Oscar-nominated
for her role, and the artistically less successful
Walk on the Wild Side (1962),
supported by the legendary
Barbara Stanwyck, French beauty
Capucine and a young
Jane Fonda. The critics were less kind to his
acting in these outings, and, indeed, the rather elegant Harvey does
seem miscast as Dove Linkhorn, the wandering Texan created by
hardboiled Nelson Algren, reduced to
working in an automotive garage by the exigencies of the Great
Depression. Critics were even less kind when Harvey tried to follow in
Leslie Howard's footsteps in the
remake of
W niewoli uczuć (1964).Although he could not know it then, Harvey had reached the zenith of
his career. In 1962 he won the Best Actor prize at the Munich film
festival in 1962 for his role in
Wspaniały świat braci Grimm (1962).
Honors for Harvey were few after this point. He co-starred with
Paul Newman and
Claire Bloom in
Martin Ritt's film version of the
Broadway re-envisioning of
Akira Kurosawa's cinematic masterpiece
Rashomon (1950). The result,
Prawda przeciw prawdzie (1964), in which Newman
played a murderous Mexican bandit and Harvey his victim, was an
unqualified flop that still boggles the mind of viewers unfortunate
enough to stumble upon it, so outrageous is the idea of casting Newman
as a Mexican killer (a role originated by
Rod Steiger on the Broadway stage). Harvey,
very often a wooden presence in his less inspired performances, was
appropriately upstaged by the tree he remained tied to throughout most
of the film.Along with "Life at the Top," Harvey appeared in support of
Oscar-winner Julie Christie in
John Schlesinger's Darling (1965), an
allegedly "mod" look at the jaded and superficial existence of what was
then termed the "jet set." Despite its "New Wave"-like cutting and
visual sense, "Darling" - which was embraced wholeheartedly by
Hollywood and originally had been envisioned as a vehicle for
Shirley MacLaine - was, at its heart,
an old-fashioned Hollywood-style morality play, a warning that the
wages of sin lead to emotional emptiness, hardy a revolutionary idea in
1965. Christie was excellent - particularly as she metamorphosed from
Dolly-bird to a more mature sort of hustler - and first-male lead
Dirk Bogarde always proved an interesting
actor, but it was Harvey who most clearly embodied the zeitgeist of the
picture. Once again, his coldness did him well as he limned the
executive who manipulates and is manipulated by Christie's Diana
character.Harvey had become at this point a kind of good-luck charm for actresses
with whom he appeared. Simone Signoret,
Elizabeth Taylor and Christie won Best Actress Oscars after appearing
in films with him, and Geraldine Page and "Room at the Top" co-star
Hermione Baddeley were both
Oscar-nominated in the period after appearing opposite Harvey. Alas, no
one else collected kudos in a Harvey picture: he reached the high-water
mark of his career in 1962, and his star was already in in decline to a
murkier, less-lustrous part of the Hollywood/international cinema
firmament.Another irony of Harvey's career is that, despite ushering in the
British New Wave and a cinema more independent of the meat-grinder
ethos of the Hollywood and British studios catering to popular taste,
he would have been better served in the 1930s and 1940s as a contract
player at a major studio. Like
Michael Wilding (who also became the
third husband of Harvey's first wife, Margaret Leighton), another
handsome man of limited gifts who nonetheless could be quite affecting
in the right role, Harvey's career likely would have thrived under the
studio system, with an interested boss to guide him. Like Minniver
Cheever, however, he was unfortunate to have been born after his time.As it was, the next (and last) decade of Harvey's screen life was a
disappointment, with the actor relegated to less and less prestigious
pictures and international co-productions that needed a "star" name. In
the 1970s, Harvey became largely irrelevant as a player in the motion
picture industry. His luck had run out. Good friend Liz Taylor, whose
string of motion picture successes had also run its course, had him
cast in Nocne widma (1973), and he
directed the last picture in which he appeared,
Welcome to Arrow Beach (1973).
If he had lived, he might have made the transition to director (he had
earlier directed The Ceremony (1963)
and finished directing
A Dandy in Aspic (1968) after
the death of original director
Anthony Mann).Laurence Harvey died on November 25, 1973, from stomach cancer. He
publicly revealed that he was dismayed by being afflicted with the
fatal disease, as he had always been careful with the way he ate.
Sadly, his personal luck, just as capricious as his professional
career, had also gone into eclipse. One of the more colorful characters
to grace the screen was dead at the age of 45, exiting the stage far
too soon for the legions of fans that still admired him despite the
downturn in his fortunes.show more