Bio

Ruddy-faced British star Peter Finch was raised by relatives in France, India, and Australia after his parents divorced when he was two. He had several odd jobs during the Depression before working as a comedian's stooge in vaudeville. He began working in the legitimate theater in 1935 then in 1936 debuted onscreen in the Australian film Dad and Dave Come to Town. While sporadically appearing in Australian films over the next decade-plus, Finch continued working on stage and formed his own company; eventually he also became Australia's top radio actor. His work impressed Laurence Olivier, who brought him to London in 1949 where he performed impressively on the stage and landed supporting roles in numerous films. In the mid-'50s he began getting better film roles, becoming one of Britain's leading male stars. Between 1956-71 he won the British Film Academy "Best Actor" award four times. For his portrayal of a gay doctor in Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971) he received a "Best Actor" Oscar nomination. His last film was Network (1976); during a promotional campaign for the film, he died of a massive coronary. That year he was posthumously awarded the Oscar for "Best Actor"--making him the first actor in Academy Award history to do so.

celebrity-postercelebrity-postercelebrity-poster

Peter Finch
September 28, 1916 - January 14, 1977 (aged 60)
London, England, UK

Bio

Ruddy-faced British star Peter Finch was raised by relatives in France, India, and Australia after his parents divorced when he was two. He had several odd jobs during the Depression before working as a comedian's stooge in vaudeville. He began working in the legitimate theater in 1935 then in 1936 debuted onscreen in the Australian film Dad and Dave Come to Town. While sporadically appearing in Australian films over the next decade-plus, Finch continued working on stage and formed his own company; eventually he also became Australia's top radio actor. His work impressed Laurence Olivier, who brought him to London in 1949 where he performed impressively on the stage and landed supporting roles in numerous films. In the mid-'50s he began getting better film roles, becoming one of Britain's leading male stars. Between 1956-71 he won the British Film Academy "Best Actor" award four times. For his portrayal of a gay doctor in Sunday Bloody Sunday (1971) he received a "Best Actor" Oscar nomination. His last film was Network (1976); during a promotional campaign for the film, he died of a massive coronary. That year he was posthumously awarded the Oscar for "Best Actor"--making him the first actor in Academy Award history to do so.

Appears In

Scroll Left
Scroll Right
Network poster art
The Flight of the Phoenix poster art
The Nun's Story poster art
Far From the Madding Crowd poster art
The Pumpkin Eater poster art
A Town Like Alice poster art
The Trials of Oscar Wilde poster art
The Red Tent poster art
Sunday, Bloody Sunday poster art
Girl With Green Eyes poster art
The Wooden Horse poster art
The Great Gilbert and Sullivan poster art
Raid on Entebbe poster art
No Love for Johnnie poster art
The Heart of the Matter poster art
The Shiralee poster art
The Detective poster art
The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men poster art
First Men in the Moon poster art
Kidnapped poster art
COMPANY

AboutPrivacy PolicyTerms of Service