Tim Curry
Tim Curry was born in Grappenhall, England, United Kingdom on April 19th, 1946 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 78, Tim Curry biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, songs, movies, TV shows, and networth are available.
At 78 years old, Tim Curry physical status not available right now. We will update Tim Curry's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Timothy James Curry (born 19 April 1946) is an English actor and singer.
He is best known for his work in a variety of theatre, film, and television, with the majority of times depicting villainous characters.
Curry came to fame with his portrayal of Dr. John Kerry.
Frank-N-Furter in The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), reliving the role he played in the 1973 London and the 1974 Los Angeles stage performances of The Rocky Horror Show, reprising the role he played in the 1973 London and 1975 Los Angeles performances. In the 1982 West End production of Hair, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart as the concierge in the mystery film Legend (1985), as Rooster Hannigan in the Broadway production of My Favourite Year (1990), and Long John Silver in Muppet Treasure Island (1992). Curry has also gained acclaim as a voice actor.
Captain Hook of the Fox series Peter Pan & the Pirates (1990–1991), Hexxus in the fantasy film FernGully (1992), and Sir Nigel Thornberry on Star Wars: The Clone Wars (1999–2014).
Early life
Timothy James Curry was born in Grappenhall, Cheshire, on April 19th, the son of school secretary Patricia (died June 1999) and Royal Navy chaplain James Curry. In 1958, his father died of pneumonia, although Curry was 12 years old. Judith, his elder sister, died of a brain tumor in 2001. Curry spent the bulk of his childhood in Plymouth. Following his father's death, his family moved to South London, where he went to boarding school before attending Kingswood School in Bath, Somerset. He rose from a humble boy soprano to a dazzling boy soprano (treble). He graduated from the University of Birmingham with a combined BA in English and drama in 1968, dedeciding to concentrate on acting.
Personal life
Curry has been residing in Los Angeles since 1988.
Since suffering a major stroke in July 2012, Curry has used a wheelchair. However, he has continued to perform as a singer and appear at fan conventions, mainly because his acting has shifted to voice acting.
Tim Curry revived his role as Dr. Frank-N-Furter in a live table reading of The Rocky Horror Picture Show in October 2020 to raise funds for Joe Biden's presidential campaign.
Career
Curry's first full-time appearance was in the original London cast of the musical Hair in 1968, where he met Richard O'Brien, who went on to write Curry's next full-time role, Dr. Frank-N-Furter in The Rocky Horror Show (1973). Curry recalled his first encounter with the scheme: the first time he encountered it.
Curry rehearsed the story with a German accent and perspienced hair, then, with an American accent. In an interview with Terry Gross of NPR's Fresh Air, he reveals that after hearing an English woman say, "Do you have a house or a house in the country," he says, "Yes, [Dr. Frank-N-Furter] should sound like the Queen."
Curry had the intention of being merely a laboratory scientist dressed in a white lab coat at the time. However, the character developed into the diabolical mad scientist and transvestite with an upper-class Belgravia accent at the suggestion of director Sharman. Curry appears as the ambisextrous doctor in a snap at the premiere in London in June 1973. This evolution carried over to Curry's 1975 film version, The Rocky Horror Picture Show, which gave him a household name and a cult following. He continued to perform the role in London, Los Angeles, and New York City until 1975.
Curry called Rocky Horror a "rite of passage" in an interview with NPR, and added that the film is "a promised weekend party to which you will go with or without a date and probably find one if you don't have one, and that it also gives people the opportunity to try on a few roles for size. Figure out how to help them figure out their own sexuality.
In 2016, Curry played The Criminologist in the Rocky Horror Picture Show's television film reimagining.
Curry returned to Broadway with Tom Stoppard's Travesties, which appeared in London and New York from 1975 to 1976, just short of the end of Rocky Horror's run on Broadway. Travesties was a Broadway hit. It received two Tony Awards (Best Performance by an Actor and Best Comedy), as well as the New York Drama Critics Circle Award (Best Play), and Tristan Tzara's appearance as the famous father of Tristan Tzara received rave reviews.
Curry appeared in the original cast of Broadway's Amadeus in 1981, portraying Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, the title character. For this role, he was nominated for his first Tony Award (Best Actor in a Play), but he lost out to his co-star Ian McKellen, who played Antonio Salieri. Curry performed in 1982 as the Pirate King in Drury Lane's version of The Pirates of Penzance opposite George Cole, receiving raving reviews.
Curry appeared in The Rivals and in several productions with the Royal National Theatre of Great Britain, including The Threepenny Opera, Dalliance, and Love For Love in the mid-1980s. Bill Snibson, the lead role in Me and My Girl in 1988, was revived on Broadway by Robert Lindsay and Jim Dale. Curry returned to New York in 1989-90 in The Art of Rewarding, and in 1993, he received his second Tony Award nomination, this time for Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Musical. In 2001, he appeared as Scrooge in the musical version of A Christmas Carol that appeared at Madison Square Garden.
Curry began playing King Arthur in Spamalot, Chicago, in 2004. In February 2005, Monty Python member Eric Idle and the Holy Grail were based on Monty Python and the Holy Grail. In the first 24 hours, it sold more than $1 million worth of tickets. His role earned him his third Tony Award, and he received the same award for Best Actor in a Musical. Curry revived his appearance at the Palace Theatre in London's West End, where Spamalot first opened on October 16, 2006. His last appearance on January 6, 2007, was on January 6, 2007. He was nominated for a Laurence Olivier Award as the Best Actor in a Musical for the role, as well as the Theatregoers' Choice Award for Best Actor in a Musical (getting 39% of the vote cast by over 12,000 theatregoers).
Curry was supposed to appear in a Trevor Nunn stage production of Tom Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead from May to August 2011, first in Chichester and then in London. On May 27, he resigned from the production, citing poor health as the reason. Tim Curry appeared in Eric Idle's play What About Dick? from 26 to 29 April 2012. At the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles, Irma Wrenn spoke with her. He appeared in the play back in 2007 when it was still a work in progress.
Curry's career in theatre was honoured at the Actors Fund's 19th annual Tony Awards Viewing Party, where he was given an Artistic Achievement Award.
Curry appeared in many films after The Rocky Horror Picture Show, including Robert Graves in The Shout, as Johnny LaGuardia in Times Square, as Daniel Francis "Rooster" Hannigan in Annie's 1982 film version, and in the political film The Ploughman's Lunch.
Curry appeared in The Lord of Darkness, a fantasy film from 1985. After seeing him in Rocky Horror, director Ridley Scott thought he was meant to play Darkness, he was in the film. It took five and a half hours to apply the makeup for Darkness to Curry, but at the end of the day, he'd spend an hour in a bath to liquefy the soluble spirit gum. Wadsworth the butler appeared in the comedy thriller Clue the previous year.
Curry began to appear in more comedies in the late 1980s and 1990s, such as Rev. In Home Alone 2: Ray Porter, Dr. Thornton Poole in Oscar, the obnoxious Plaza Hotel concierge, was missing in New York, Jigsaw, with Loaded Weapon 1 and as Long John Silver in Muppet Treasure Island. Despite being involved in mainly comedies in the 1990s, he appeared in some action films, including the 1993 version of The Hunt for Redemption as Cardinal Richelieu, as Farley Claymore, and as Herkerman Homolka in the 1995 action adventure Congo. Gomez Addams appeared in the 1998 direct-to-video film Addams Family Reunion, as Gomez Addams.
Curry appeared in Charlie's Angels' film version as Roger Corwin, as well as in the parody film Scary Movie 2 as Professor Oldman. Curry went on to appear Thurman Rice, a supporting role in Kinsey's biographical film. Curry has mainly appeared in animated films and television series in recent years. Alexander Monro, his last film onscreen role to date, appeared in Burke & Hare's British black comedy.
Curry began his career with small roles in television series, including Eugene in Napoleon and Love, as well as guest appearances in Armchair Theatre and Play for Today, including as 'Glen' in Dennis Potter's "Schmoedipus'.
Winston Newquay appeared in the television series "Dead Dog Records" storyline of the television series crime drama Wisey. He appeared on the short-lived science fiction television series Earth 2 and the sitcom Rude Awakening.
He has appeared on other shows, including The Tracey Ullman Show, Roseanne, Tales from the Crypt (which received him an Emmy award nomination), The Naked Truth, Lexx, Monk, Will & Grace, Agatha Christie's Poirot, and Criminal Minds.
Curry appeared in numerous television shows and miniseries, including Three Men in a Boat, Will Shakespeare's tumultuous role in a television adaptation of Oliver Twist, Blue Money, The Worst Witch, Titanic, Terry Pratchett's The Colour of Magic, Alice, Return to Cranford, and many more.
Although Curry has appeared in many television shows throughout his career, he has only appeared in two live-action films: Over the Top, a sitcom that he also produced, and Family Affair's revival. After one season, both were dropped.
Pennywise the Clown is one of Curry's best-known television appearances (and most well-known roles overall) in the 1990 horror film It's Stephen King's It. Curry never confirmed his participation in it until an interview with Moviefone in 2015, where he praised Pennywise "a wonderful part" in the remake, but Poulter was supposed to play the character in the film, but he was later disqualified. Bill Skarsgrd was fired from Poulter, and Curry later agreed, saying, "I like [Bill] Skarsgrd" while being interviewed at Fan Expo Canada. He seems to be quite intelligent. It'll be amusing to see what sort of clown face he has. [.] Because it's not a familiar clown face at all. So I'm excited to see it.
Curry has appeared in animated television series and films, beginning with the appearance of the Serpent in The Greatest Adventure: Stories from the Bible. Curry received a Daytime Emmy Award for his role as Captain Hook in the Fox animated film Peter Pan and the Pirates. In The Wild Thornberrys, his longest-running animated appearance was as Nigel Thornberry, which lasted for five seasons on Nickelodeon.
In In The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, Curry was best known for villainous roles in animated series such as Konk, MAL in Captain Planet and the Planeteers, Skullmaster in Canon, The Little Mermaid, Dr Anton Sevarius, Master Genius of Birds, Taurus Bullba in The Magna Tower, Elder Rogers, Dr. Matthew Bullba in The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, as various characters, including a young boy named as Grandfather 'King in 'King's, a,'s,'s, a in el in the In Captain Planet and the Sor eer, and the Scrieer in Captain Planeteer in The Sorueers, in Black in Bino in The Apprentices, e, Captain es, in The Adventures, Dr. In The Adventures, Taurus Bullba in Magna in Dragon's, e, Professor in The Adventures, in the Cruel, Dr. in The Adventures, Professor In The Snakes, Makin Young Justice, Mr. In Star Wars: The Clone Wars, he also played the voice of Chancellor Palpatine/Darth Sidious. The cause of Ian Abercrombie's death was also revealed by the author.
He appeared in many animated films, including FernGully: The Last Rainforest, The Pebble and the Penguin, which play all three Rugrats films as side characters (excepting Rugrats Go Wild, in which he reprises his role as Nigel Thornberry). Barbie in the Nutcracker, The Wild Thornberrys Movie, The Cat Returns, Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties, and many more.
Curry has also lent his voice to numerous video games, including those involving the titular character in Gabriel Knight: Blood of the Damned, Toonstruck, Sacrifice, Brütal Legend, and Dragon Age: Origins. A clipscene of Curry in Red Alert 3, depicting Soviet Premier Chedenko, has gone viral as a meme.
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortune Events, Geraldine McCaughrean's Peter Pan in Scarlet, Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, Bram Stoker's Dracula, and Garth Nix's Abhorsen trilogy are among his audiobook collections.
Curry has performed well for various commercials for companies and organizations, including Smirnoff, Cravendale, and Smirnoff, Cravendale, and Curry has been known for several advertisements, including Smirnoff, Cravendale, and Paraphrased
Curry has had some success as a solo musician in spite of his appearances on various soundtrack albums. Curry began classical vocal lessons as a youth. Billie Holiday and Louis Armstrong, among jazz singers, have influenced the Beatles and the Rolling Stones as a child, and he has praised the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. Curry's debut solo album Read My Lips was released in 1978 by A&M Records. The album featured an eclectic collection of songs (mostly covers) performed in a variety of genres. The album's highlights include a reggae version of "I Will," a reimagining of "Wake Nicodemus" starring the 48th Highlanders of Canada's Pipes and Drums, as well as a bar-room ballad "Alan," composed by Canadian singer-songwriter Tony Kosinec. He received a hit with "I do the Rock" in 1979.
Curry's second and best album Fearless debuted in the United States this year. The collection was more punk-oriented than Read My Lips and it mainly featured original songs rather than cover versions. "I Do the Rock" and "Paradise Garage" were Curry's only US charting hits on the album: "I Do the Rock" and "Paradise Garage."
Simplicity, Curry's third and final album, was released in 1981 by A&M Records, which later became A&M Records. This collection, although it did not sell as well as the previous ones, featured both original songs and cover versions. Nonetheless, it was the first Curry album to reach the top of the charts in Canada, peaking at No. 1. On the album chart, it ranks at 45. Curry's solo albums featured an impressive list of collaborators, including Bob Ezrin, Dick Wagner, and David Sanborn.
Tim Curry's The Best of Tim Curry (1989) on CD and cassette, including songs from his albums (including a live version of "Alan") and a previously unveiled song, a live coverage of Bob Dylan's "Simple Twist of Fate."
Curry's band appeared in North America and several European countries between 1978 and 1980.
In 1990, Curry appeared as the Prosecutor in Roger Waters' production of The Wall – Live in Berlin.
Although Curry's debut album was released in 1978, he had already recorded a nine-track album for Lou Adler's Ode Records in 1976. However, the album was not released in entirety until February 2010, when it was made available as a legal download called...From the Vaults (although four tracks from these sessions were included on a 1990 Rocky Horror box set). Curry's interpretation of The Supremes' hit "Baby Love" was included on the album, which was produced by Adler.