Terence Stamp

Terence Stamp

Active - 1962 - 2022  |   Born - Jul 22, 1938 in London, England  |   Genres - Action, Drama, Romance

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Biography by AllMovie

Rough-hewn and soulful, Terence Stamp was one of the most recognizable faces of 1960s British cinema. During that decade, he became immortalized on the screen and off, his working-class charisma and battered good looks making him both a natural for leading man roles and a poster boy for the swinging Sixties lifestyle.

Born in Stepney, London on July 22, 1939, Stamp made his film debut in 1962 as the martyred hero in Peter Ustinov's adaptation of Herman Melville's Billy Budd. He turned in a star-making performance that earned him an Oscar nomination and established him as part of a new wave of talent in British cinema. Stamp next made his mark in William Wyler's The Collector (1965), winning a Best Actor award at the Cannes Film Festival for his portrayal of a warped recluse who kidnaps an art student he has lusted after from afar.

Stamp spent the rest of the decade earning recognition for both his work and real-life exploits. On the screen, he worked with the likes of John Schlesinger (Far From the Maddening Crowd), Joseph Losey (Modesty Blaise), Ken Loach (Poor Cow), Pier Paolo Pasolini (Teorema), and, for Tre Passi nel Delirio, Federico Fellini, Roger Vadim, and Louis Malle. Off the screen, Stamp was known for his friendships with the likes of Michael Caine and his relationships with such preeminent beauties as Julie Christie and model Jean Shrimpton. He and Christie were immortalized in Ray Davies's song "Waterloo Sunset" in the lines, "Terry and Julie cross over the river, where they feel safe and sound."

Despite the promise of his early career, Stamp spent much of the next couple of decades in relative obscurity. He popped up in a number of fairly forgettable films and was cast as a villain in the first two Superman movies. He also appeared in such disparate projects as Legal Eagles (1986), Wall Street (1987), and Young Guns (1988). In 1994, Stamp truly re-entered the filmgoing consciousness, going delightfully against type to play a world-weary transsexual in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. The film was a surprise success, and Stamp's portrayal was singled out for particular notice. Once one of the cinema's most reliable hard men, Stamp revived his career with a poignent portrayal of a character who wore more make-up than most of the screen's actresses put together.

Stamp followed this success with a turn as a mysterious tantric sex therapist in Bliss (1996). In 1999, he could be seen doing supporting work in Bowfinger, in which he had a hilarious turn as a L. Ron Hubbard-esque "guru;" and Star Wars: Episode I-The Phantom Menace. That same year, he starred in Steven Soderbergh's The Limey, back in top form as a grizzled ex-con bent on avenging his daughter's death. One of the film's highlights was the inclusion of footage from the 1968 Poor Cow, which allowed Stamp to appear as a younger version of himself.

Building off the best buzz he'd had in quite some time, Stamp began the 21st century in Red Planet, and voiced Jor-El on the television series Smallville, before appearing in Get Smart, Valkyrie, Yes Man, The Adjustment Bureau, and Song for Marion.

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Factsheet

  • Decided to become an actor after his mother took him to see Gary Cooper in 1939's Beau Geste.
  • Made his film debut with an Oscar-nominated performance in the title role of Billy Budd (1962).
  • Turned down the chance to reprise his role in a big-screen adaptation of the Broadway production Alfie; the part earned Stamp's onetime roommate, Michael Caine, an Oscar nomination.
  • Romance with Julie Christie during the filming of 1967's Far From the Madding Crowd inspired the Kinks song "Waterloo Sunset."
  • Following his split from model Jean Shrimpton in the late '60s, spent 10 years roaming the world, working sporadically and living in places like an organic farm in Ibiza and an ashram in India.
  • Played Superman's foe, General Zod, in 1978's big-screen smash Superman; later provided the voice of Superman's father, Jor-El, for the TV series Smallville.
  • Lived for a time in the 1990s in a converted windmill on Long Island, NY, that was once owned by Marilyn Monroe and Arthur Miller.
  • Has published several memoirs, as well as The Wheat-Free and Dairy-Free Cookbook and the 1992 novel The Night.