The Irish actor, Milo O'Shea, has died after a short
illness, his son has confirmed. He was 86.
The Dubliner, who had a long career on the stage and
screen, died in a New York hospital on Tuesday night.
He is best remembered for his role in Franco Zeffirelli's
film, Romeo and Juliet, the 1968 film Barbarella, and for his performance as
Leopold Bloom in an adaptation of James Joyce's Ulysses.
He also appeared in several hit US TV shows, including
Frasier and Cheers.
He played a chief justice in The West Wing TV series, and
also had a brief role in the Golden Girls in the 1980s.
In 1982, he starred alongside Paul Newman in the legal
drama, The Verdict, and he also worked alongside Irish director Neil Jordan in
the Butcher Boy.
He played a villain, Durand-Durand, in Roger Vadim's
futuristic fantasy film, Barbarella, and years later, his character inspired
the name of the 1980s pop group, Duran Duran.
In 2003, O'Shea starred in Puckoon, a movie based on a
comic novel by Spike Milligan.
The satire, set in a village divided in two by the
partition of Ireland, was mostly filmed in Northern Ireland and the border
counties of the Irish Republic.
O'Shea began his acting career as a schoolboy in Dublin.
He moved to New York in the 1970s and lived there until
his death.
Born: 6/2/1926, Dublin, Ireland
Died: 4/2/2013, New York, U.S.A.
Milo O’Shea’s western – actor:
Peter Lundy and the Medicine Hat Stallion (TV) – 1977
(Brisly)
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