Paul Ryan Rudd was an American actor, director, and a professor, he died from pancreatic cancer he was , 70.[2] He appeared as the title character in a 1976 production of Shakespeare's Henry V, opposite Meryl Streep as his love interest. Though best known for his live theatre performances, such as those on Broadway and the New York Shakespeare Festival, he also appeared in the 1978 film The Betsy and on television in the 1975 short-lived series Beacon Hill as Brian Mallory, the scheming Irish chauffeur.[1]
(born Paul Kenneth Rudd; May 15, 1940 – August 12, 2010[1]) |
Biography
Early life
He was born in Boston, Massachusetts on May 15, 1940.[3] He attended Boston Latin School and later Assumption Preparatory School,[4] graduating in 1958.[5] He obtained a degree in psychology from Fairfield University.[1]Originally named Paul Kenneth Rudd, he adopted Ryan as his middle name from his mother’s maiden name, whose name had become Kathryn Rudd after marriage. He studied for the Roman Catholic priesthood but parted with mutual consent from his seminary. At some point, he married Joan Mannion, who he later divorced.[1]
Acting career
Rudd worked in entertainment from 1967 through 1986, variously as actor or as director, both on and off-Broadway.[4] He landed his first significant Broadway role in 1974 as Ken, the lobotomized motorcyclist, in The National Health by Peter Nichols.[1] His name was in the credits of the 1975 revival of The Glass Menagerie as the Gentleman Caller. In 1976, he starred as Billy, the tortured young soldier, in David Rabe's Streamers in the original theatre cast. That year, he also played the title role of Henry V with the New York Shakespeare Festival opposite of Meryl Streep as Katherine, who he marries in the play.[1] He played in Theodore Mann's Romeo and Juliet[6] in the part of Romeo, with Pamela Payton-Wright as Juliet in 1977.[1]In 1975, he played Brian Mallory in the short-lived television series Beacon Hill.[1] In 1977, he portrayed John F. Kennedy in the NBC TV movie Johnny, We Hardly Knew Ye. He went on to appear in The Betsy, the 1978 film based on the Harold Robbins novel.[1]
Rudd married his second wife, Martha Bannerman, in 1983. They eventually had three children: Graeme, Kathryn and Eliza. During this time, Rudd held guest roles in several television shows, including Hart to Hart, Moonlighting, Knots Landing and Murder, She Wrote.[1][7] In 1986, Rudd retired early from acting to raise his children,[4] moving his family from Los Angeles to Greenwich, Connecticut.[7]
Later years
Later in life, Rudd taught[2] at local middle schools and high schools – on the subjects of theater, especially Shakespeare, and poetry.[4] He was part of the theatre faculty at Sarah Lawrence College[8] from 1999 to 2006.[7]Rudd came briefly out of retirement for a 2000 production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, playing the double role of Oberon and Theseus–perhaps inspired by a production of the same play he saw at Shakespeare's Globe Theatre while visiting London.[7]
Starting in 2004, Rudd was also a teaching faculty member and associate director of the MFA drama program at the New School for Drama until his death.[7]
He died in his home in Greenwich, Connecticut at the age of 70 from pancreatic cancer.[9]
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