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A respected character actor
and occasional leading man of the stage,
screen, and television, Scottish-born Ian
Bannen acted in over 80 productions during
his long career.
Shortly after enrolling at Ratcliffe
College, Bannen, who was born in Airdrie,
Scotland, on June 29, 1928, made his
first stage appearance at Dublin's Gate
Theatre. A year after making his 1955
London theatrical debut, he entered films
with A Private's Progress and Battle
Hell.
A prolific stage actor, Bannen nonetheless
found time for quite a few impressive
film characterisations. One of these,
the cynical Crow in Flight of the Phoenix
(1965), earned him an Academy Award nomination.
His later screen assignments ranged from
a cameo as a policeman in Richard Attenborough's
Gandhi (1982) to the irascible Grandfather
George in John Boorman's Hope and Glory
(1987) to a turn as Robert the Bruce's
leprous father in Braveheart (1995).
It was with the 1998 comedy Waking Ned
that Bannen earned some of his best notices,
playing a loveably crafty Irishman. Sadly,
Bannen's life was cut short the following
year, as he died in an car accident on
November 3, 1999, near Loch Ness, Scotland.
He was survived by his wife of 23 years,
as well as a rich theatrical legacy that
stretched over almost half a century. |