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Acting
April 14, 1904
May 21, 2000
London, England
Sir Arthur John Gielgud, OM, CH, was an English actor, director, and producer. A descendant of the renowned Terry acting family, he achieved early international acclaim for his youthful, emotionally expressive Hamlet which broke box office records on Broadway in 1937. He was known for his beautiful speaking of verse and particularly for his warm and expressive voice, which his colleague Sir Alec Guinness likened to a silver trumpet muffled in silk. Gielgud is one of the few entertainers who have won an Oscar, Emmy, Grammy, and Tony Award.

Self (archive footage)
2018

Self
2016

Hogarth (archive footage) (uncredited)
2014

King Hamlet's Ghost (archive footage)
2011

2009

Self (archive footage)
2005

The Protagonist
2001

Cockburn
1999

The Pope
1998

Merlin (voice)
1998

as Self (archive footage)

as Self

as Hogarth (archive footage) (uncredited)

as King Hamlet's Ghost (archive footage)


as Self (archive footage)

as The Protagonist

as Cockburn

as The Pope

as Merlin (voice)

as King Constant


as St. John Clarke

as Stimme Gottes

as Priam

as Mr. Touchett

as Self - Interviewee

as Narrator

as Cecil Parkes

as King Arthur (voice) (uncredited)

as Professor of Light

as Dr Henry Doyle
as Grandpa

as Oswald

as Self (Voice)

as Pierre Robillard

as Self

as St. John

as Sunflower
as Prospero
as Svetlovidov

as Drechsler

as Self (archive footage)

as Stephen Dawlish

as Prospero

as Virgil (voice)

as Drechsler

as Sydney Cockerell

as Self
as Narrator (voice)

as Virgil

as Herbert Dreuther

as Barbablù

as Haverford Downs

as Sir Gordon Munday

as Cardinal Wolsey

as Aaron Jastrow

as Self

as Hobson

as Colonel Carbury

as British Lord

as Eddie Loomis

as Lord Hinksey

as Sir Simon de Canterville

as Sir Adrian Chappie

as Tiresias

as Tieresias

as Jasper Swift

as Lord Wakering

as Sir Leonard Darwin

as John Middleton Murry

as Theodore Woodward

as Cornelius Cardew

as Self


as Duke de Charles

as De Lacey

as Self - Presenter

as Cavagnari

as Lord Durrisdeer

as Uncle Willie

as Self - on the set of 'The Shooting Party' (uncredited)

as Pfistermeister

as Hogarth

as Pope Pius XII


as Doge di Venezia

as Lord Irwin

as Self
as Lord Burleigh

as Albert Speer Sr.

as Charmolue

as Edward 'Ned' Ryder

as Herbert G. Muskett

as Hobson

as Master of Trinity

as Sharif El Gariani

as Marquis of Caterhan

as Abdu-Hamdi

as Dr. Abraham Esau

as Carr Gomm

as Reverend Jones

as John Lasocki

as Brigadier Tomlinson

as Nerva

as Jelks

as Cyril Boggis

as Prime Minister

as Gillenormand

as John of Gaunt

as Chorus

as Spooner

as The Preacher

as Captain Shotover
as Inquisitor

as The Doctor

as Clive Langham

as Narrator

as Self

as Lord Henry Wotton

as Headmaster

as The Old Cardinal

as Mr. Beddoes

as Meecham

as Chief Constable

as Farrell

as Clinton-Meek

as Chief Constable

as Chang

as Various

as Various Roles

as Harold L. Streeter

as Lord Sissal

as Harry

as Self

as Harry

as Julius Caesar

as Count Leopold Von Berchtold

as The Elder Pope

as Self - Guest

as Rich Man

as Curt Valayan

as Lord Raglan
as Anton Chekhov

as Head of Intelligence

as Self

as Narrator (voice)

as Chorus

as Mock Turtle
as Gabriel Quantara

as Rich Man

as Nikolai ivanov


as Henry IV

as Chorus

as The Inquisitor

as Charles II

as Lord Henry 'Harry' Wotton

as Capt. Shotover

as Lord Burleigh

as Sir Francis Hinsley

as Gabriel Quantara

as Ghost (voice)

as King Louis VII of France

as Narrator (English version) (voice)

as Gaev
as Self

as Self
as Self

as Earl of Warwick

as Edward Moulton-Barrett

as Foster

as George, Duke of Clarence
as John Worthing, JP

as Chorus

as Self

as Cassius

as Narrator

as The Ghost

as Charmolue

as Lord Durrisdeer

as Duke

as Self

as Hamlet
as Narrator

as Disraeli

as Self

as Richard Ashenden / Edgar Brodie

as Inigo Jollifant

as Henri Dubois
as Rex Trasmere
as Daniel