Paying homage to Lord Richard Attenborough Kt, CBE

Posted: 29 Aug 2023

Filmmaker and former BAFTA President, Lord Richard Attenborough Kt, CBE (29 August 1923 – 24 August 2014) was a passionate supporter of BAFTA for more than 50 years and was integral in shaping the Academy.

On 29 August 2023, we celebrated 100 years since his birth with an overview of his career, a gallery of archive photography and tributes from BAFTA members…

Attenborough in focus

An esteemed and profoundly committed filmmaker, Richard Attenborough was a tireless supporter of BAFTA’s charitable and educational causes for several decades.

“Lord A”, as he was affectionately called by BAFTA staff, or “Dickie” to his friends, Richard Attenborough (29 August 1923 – 24 August 2014) was integral to countless BAFTA occasions and key moments in its prestigious history. From the international scope and very British style of our early Awards ceremonies to the opening of our 195 Piccadilly headquarters in 1976 and the presentation of a Film Fellowship to co-collaborator and friend Sir Anthony Hopkins in 2008. He also served as Chairman of the Academy between 1969 and 1971 and as First Vice President of SFTA/BAFTA, before taking on the role of President in 2001. In recognition of his work behind and in front of the camera Attenborough was made an Academy Fellow in 1983.

Behind the scenes and in his role as President between 2002 and 2010, Lord Attenborough’s contribution to the financial stability and effective leadership of BAFTA was invaluable.

Throughout his career, whenever something important happened at BAFTA, Lord Attenborough was part of it. As Amanda Berry, BAFTA’s CEO from 2000 to 2022, said on the occasion of his 80th birthday, he is: “A wonderful man, a talented actor, producer and director, an inspiration to all who meet him, an icon of the British Film Industry and passionate about BAFTA.”

A wonderful man, a talented actor, producer and director, an inspiration and an icon..

Biography

Lord Attenborough was born in Cambridge, England in 1923. He later attended the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) to study theatre. On stage he had the distinction of being – along with his beloved wife, Sheila Sim – part of the original cast of Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap in 1952, appearing in the first of more than 24,500 performances of the longest running play in the theatre.

Meanwhile, he made his feature film debut in 1942 with In Which We Serve, followed shortly after by a breakthrough role as a young hood in Brighton Rock (1947). In the 1950s, Attenborough appeared in successful comedies for John and Roy Boulting.

In the late 1950s, Attenborough formed a production company, Beaver Films, with Bryan Forbes and began to produce projects including The League of Gentlemen (1959), The Angry Silence (1960) and Whistle Down the Wind (1961). Over the next ten years he expanded his range of character roles in films such as Seance on a Wet Afternoon (1964) and Guns at Batasi (1964), for which he won the BAFTA for Best Actor. In 1963, he appeared in the ensemble cast of The Great Escape. In 1967 and 1968, Attenborough won two Golden Globes as Best Supporting Actor. He would win another Globe for Best Director, for Gandhi, in 1983.

 

His directorial debut was a screen version of the hit musical Oh! What a Lovely War (1969), and thus his acting roles became less frequent – the most notable being his portrayal of a serial killer in 10 Rillington Place (1971). Attenborough later directed two epic period films: Young Winston (1972) and A Bridge Too Far (1977). He won two BAFTAs and two Oscars in 1982 for producing and directing the historical epic, Gandhi, his life’s ambition; it remains BAFTA’s most nominated film with 16, of which it won five. He received a BAFTA Fellowship in 1983.

He took no acting roles after 1978, until his appearance in Spielberg’s Jurassic Park (1993). The following year he starred in the remake of Miracle on 34th Street. Since then he has made appearances in supporting film roles.

More recent films as director and producer include Chaplin (1992) and Shadowlands (1993). Both films starred Anthony Hopkins, who appeared in another three films for Attenborough. He also directed the screen version of musical A Chorus Line (1985) and the apartheid drama Cry Freedom (1987). He was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Director for both films. He has since directed Grey Owl (1999) and Closing The Ring (2007).

In 1967, he was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE). He was knighted in 1976 and in 1993 made a life peer as Baron Attenborough, of Richmond upon Thames. He has received too many other Awards, honours and accolades to mention.

Attenborough died at the age of 90 on 24 August 2014. His remarkable career spanned six decades.

A passionate filmmaker, a man of principle and – in contradiction of sometimes lachrymose image – possessing the kind of dogged determination that sees films get made after decades of toil, and serve on committees for the greater good of an industry he loved. A titan of British cinema, to say he embodied its finest qualities is to have it backwards. British film would do well to live up to the example of industry, skill and compassion set by Richard, Lord Attenborough.

Tributes and memories from BAFTA members

Read what our members had to say about the late, great Lord Richard Attenborough Kt, CBE…

Sophie Turner Laing:

“A true legend, both on and off screen, who’s passion and enthusiasm knew no bounds. Lord Attenborough’s leadership and vision for BAFTA are the bedrock of how the Academy operates today. The world will be a very much quieter place without him.”

Christopher Nupen:

“What other big shot – even half so big as Richard Attenborough – would sit in the middle of the main BAFTA staircase with a young director who had just won the BAFTA International Award (in the only year that the award was ever granted) to engage in a really serious and quite lengthy conversation about the future of the BBC?

“But that is what happened. I was seriously affected and have been grateful for the generosity of that gesture ever since. He remembered me forever after, gave me his home telephone number and was always ready to talk and to try and help. Richard Attenborough was a rare fellow and the finest of human beings – as we all so well know.

“That event was a defining moment in my career and I have cherished it ever since – more for what the Maestro gave me than for the award itself.

“We are all the poorer for his going and his absence has darkened every moment since he left us.

Brian Harris:

In 1962 I was working on The L Shaped Room as Douglas Slocombe’s 2nd Camera Assistant – Clapper/Loader. I was engaged to be married and was putting all my earnings into a joint account with my fiancée. After a few weeks my personal life became complicated. My fiancée and I decided to part and before I knew it, she closed our joint account and withdrew all the money. I was on £12 a week and after tax and deductions, I started to find it difficult to make ends meet. After living expenses and payment on my car, I was left with very little to get by.

I told my immediate superior (the Focus Puller) that I was thinking of giving notice, so that I could go back on daily rate to rebuild my finances. That filtered all the way to the front office. I was on set when the Producer, Richard Attenborough asked me to see him. He walked me around the studio lot with his arm around my shoulder. It wasn’t long before he drew out all of my problems. He set me at my ease and talked me out of leaving. He was kindness itself and insightful, because as a Clapper Boy, I would have ruined my chances of continuing to work on Douglas’ crew. That Friday I received my wage packet as usual – my money had been increased to £19 a week and my problems disappeared. Our crew went on to work on Joseph Losey’s The Servant and I owe my wonderful time in the camera department to that understanding and brilliant man and the walk around the Shepperton Lot.

Michael Flint:

“I would spend most mornings at the law firm and join Richard Attenborough at the Dorchester Hotel for lunch, which was almost invariably a dover sole with half a bottle of Chablis. We would then walk over to the temporary Capital Radio offices on Park Lane next to the Dorchester.

“We found a suitable building for the Capital Radio studios in the Euston Tower on Marylebone Road. We had to take more space than we wanted including two shop spaces. The terms of our lease were duly agreed and a date set with the landlords for a press conference to announce that Capital Radio had taken prestigious offices. On the morning of the day when we were to sign the lease and make the announcement, the landlords rang to say that they had decided that morning that we would have to take three more shop spaces. I reached Richard on the phone and told him what had happened.

“He was wonderfully cool. “Ring up the landlords, darling, and tell them that we will not sign but we are not cancelling the press conference as I would like to tell the public how our great property companies behave.” I rang the landlords and so advised them. They backed down.

“Richard Attenborough was not only a superb actor and director but he was also an extraordinarily good and successful business man.”

Johnny Goodman:

“During my own term as Academy Chairman (87/89) I had the great pleasure on many occasions of being in Lord Attenborough’s company. You could not find a kinder, generous or more supportive colleague.

“One evening, at his request, I was required to host a small private dinner party in the Run Run Shaw Theatre for Dickie to pay tribute to the late John Mills and his wife Mary Haley Bell who were among his lifelong friends. Some other members of Council were also invited. Before the guests of honour arrived, Dickie warned me that somewhere in his short tribute speech he would probably start shedding some tears. Sure enough, as he became more emotional, he did indeed start to weep. Nothing could have been more genuine or more moving. In simple terms, he was a great human being and a sad loss is shared by all who knew him.”

Maureen Murray
Producer:

“I was working as Line Producer on a show at Twickenham Studios in 1998 and happened to have a production office across the corridor from Lord Attenborough’s. He was working towards Grey Owl at the time and I often saw him as he arrived. We fell into a routine. I would invariably greet him with “Good Morning, Sir!” and he would invariably incline his head slightly in acknowledgement and give me a little smile and return my greeting. Occasionally he was pre-occupied, sometimes he was positively chirpy, other times he would seem worried, but whatever his mood he never failed to treat me politely. The memory of his example has sustained me through many subsequent ups and downs in the film world…”

Baroness Floella Benjamin, OBE:

“When I first met Dickie he made me feel like a long lost friend and embraced me with spiritual joy. He believed in giving everyone opportunities to aspire, and cultural diversity was dear to his heart. We often talked about how to make change and how to get people to see the bigger picture when it came to embracing diversity.

“I last met him twelve years ago when I filmed him at his home. I had asked him to appear in a programme I was producing entitled Statues & Monuments, as the programme was featuring the Nelson Mandela statue. He was instrumental in the long campaign for a statue of Mandela to be put up in London and was behind the successful fundraising drive to make it a reality.

“Dickie was a ‘benevolent force for good’ who didn’t believe in giving up if it would pave the way to change the world for others to benefit. His legacy will last forever as an inspiration of what can be achieved during our time on earth.

“It was a privilege to have known him and to be greeted with that warm engaging smile of his.”

Paul Balmer:

“What I admired most with Richard was his complete unpretentiousness. I sat with him at BAFTA and shared a bacon buttie discussing Gandhi and how he thought he could do it better! He will be sorely missed.”

Stan Fishman, CBE:

“During my time as Booking and Marketing Director of Odeon cinemas, I had the privilege and honour of working closely with Dickie on many of his films which played the Odeon chain of cinemas across that period. A Bridge Too Far, Magic, Gandhi, Cry Freedom, A Chorus Line, Shadowlands, Chaplin, to name a few. As an actor, producer, and director, Dickie had an unparalleled understanding of every link in a film’s complex route to the audience which were, and still are, production, distribution, marketing, cinema exhibition, and then on to the audience, or as he’d say, “the customers”. Dickie understood it all, standing beside everything he created, with knowledge, great skill, and a persuasive charm throughout. I know that all of us in Odeon at that time, its directors and management, had the highest regard for him, both as legendary craftsman, and most importantly, as a good friend to many of us. I can also say from my time as president of the Cinema Exhibitors’ Association that these sentiments were shared by both the major circuits and independent cinemas alike. He will always be remembered with gratitude and affection.”

Vic Armstrong
Director, Sunday Horse, Atlanta Georgia:

“I first worked with Sir Richard as a young stuntman on Young Winston for months in the Moroccan desert and he asked for me again when he directed A Bridge Too Far in Holland a few years later. He was always so enthusiastic and encouraging and grateful. It was many years later that I had the tremendous honour and pleasure to be presented with a lifetime achievement BAFTA by the great man himself where he recounted a couple of lovely anecdotes from Young Winston. Sir Richard has influenced so many aspects of filmmaking including the action side of it. Sincerely Vic Armstrong.”

John Higgins:

“Although I didn’t know him personally, I do have fond memories of him during the NFT season of his films some years back. I said hello to him and he was in fine form talking to guests and friends after the Oh, What A Lovely War screening. The late Sir John Mills was there too. On speaking to Lord Attenborough briefly, he laughed after I told him I saw him in The Great Escape on the big screen in the same season. Incidentally, my father was in the Queen’s Colour Squadron based at RAF Uxbridge in 1963 and he attended the London Premiere of ‘Escape’ at the Odeon Leicester Square. The ticket still takes pride of place in a frame in the family home.

“There was of course the memory of him and Sir Ben Kingsley talking about Gandhi after the 70mm screening in the same season.

“I was also lucky enough to attend the Royal Film Performance of Chaplin in 1992 and remember Lord Attenborough’s tearful reaction at the end of the film. The other touching moment was his tribute to the young Robert Downey Jr, who had overcome so much adversity in his life and has now become one of the best actors working in the business.

“In the NFT season previously mentioned, I also saw alongside The Great Escape, a 70mm print of A Bridge Too Far. Now, people often talk about the sterling visuals of Saving Private Ryan, but there are moments in this film that are on a par with that, shot two decades before.

“His biography Entirely Up To You, Darling should also be mentioned as well, a terrific memoir about the challenges he faced with Gandhi and the magical night in 1983 when his film triumphed over the odds in LA, even though by his own admission, he felt after seeing it in the summer of 1982 that E.T should have got the Oscar.

“As a BAFTA member, we are always indebted to his contribution to both the organisation and the films that he made.”

Verity Wislocki:

“I post production supervised Lord Attenborough’s last film Closing The Ring and he was absolutely charming and lovely and great fun. I still remember him kissing my tummy one day (I was pregnant with my first child at the time!)

“I didn’t know him as much as the many people who worked with him lots of times and (quite rightly) loved and adored him, but it was an honour to work for him.”

Simon Relph CBE:

“I have the fondest memories of Dickie. I first met him when I was a teenager and he was appearing in my father’s film The Ship That Died of Shame and I guess that was 60 years ago. Then I worked for him as a Producer, as 2nd Assistant on Séance on a Wet Afternoon. Of course he won his first BAFTA for his performance in that film.

“Thereafter I served as a Trustee of the Academy under his Chairmanship, as a Governor of the BFI also under his Chairmanship and frequently alongside him in our continued endeavour to get the best support we could for our industry. He and I made keynote speeches at Mrs Thatcher’s famous Downing Street Film Seminar. He and Bryan Forbes were partners with my father and Basil Dearden amongst others in Allied Film Makers. The accompanying photograph is of them all at an early British Film Academy Awards ceremony.

“He always made me feel as if I was “family” and was continuously supportive and encouraging. When Ann Skinner, another lifelong friend of his, and I, were making our first film and the money fell apart he dropped everything – he was in the middle of editing Ghandi – to help us.

“He had many outstanding qualities but this constant generosity with himself and his time to so many was for me his most special quality. I am sure that for him his passing was something of a release after so much discomfort and ill health over the last few years but for those of us left behind it leaves a yawning gap and one that I doubt will be filled again. He was an outstanding actor, an accomplished and prolific filmmaker, he should be in the Guinness Book of records for the amazing amounts of money that he raised for so many good causes and of course he was a consummate politician in the very best sense of the word. He will be warmly remembered by so many of us. He was truly a great man!”

Wayne Drew:

“With “Dick” Attenborough’s death an era passes too. He was one of the “old school” – a fine actor, director and producer with a true knowledge of all aspects of the film and theatre and an intuitive understanding of both his fellow performers and his audiences. His commitment to cinema was legendary as was his endless support of good causes and charities.

“I knew him for over 30 years and the support, help and sophisticated advice he gave me was invaluable and extraordinary. Having worked closely with him for over a decade at The British Film Institute, we still kept in touch when I became Director of Communications for HRH The Prince of Wales – someone he knew extremely well indeed. Then, when I was made CEO of the IVCA, at The House of Lords – alongside David Frost, Ridley Scott, Kevin Spacey and Bob Geldof – he received one of our first Fellowship Awards for his ‘outstanding contribution to the media industries’ and made a typically memorable and heartfelt speech.

“I saw little of him over the last few years, after his accident and associated illness restricted him considerably. When he and his lovely and talented wife Sheila entered a retirement home for actors, the distance between us became even greater, although his legendary Christmas cards still came – each with those few personal words that made them distinctly his own. The last thing I received from him was a typically generous letter about my new play that I had dedicated to our close friend, the wonderful Antony Smith, the former director of the BFI. His intuitive understanding of what I was seeking to achieve, and enthusiasm for the piece, brought me more joy than one may believe. You see Dick always went that extra mile and knew exactly how to treat people – he made them feel special – a rare quality few have anymore.

“My personal recollections of him are many and appropriately spectacular: visiting him on the sets of some of his biggest films; creating for him, and then producing, the televised British Film Institute Award shows that he hosted for many years at the NFT; and then directing the Centenary of Cinema commemoration event with HRH the Prince of Wales at The Museum of The Moving Image – and laughing, and sometimes crying, together in the process!

“Oh yes – one must not forget those suppers he held too – what occasions they were! His guests included the likes of Dirk Bogarde, Bette Davis, Maureen O’Hara, John Mills, Alec Guinness, Deborah Kerr, Julie Andrews, Michael Powell, Orson Wells, Graham Greene, Douglas Fairbanks Jnr., The Princess of Wales, Gerard Depardieu, Catherine Deneuve, Clint Eastward – the list goes on and on – for he knew everyone and everyone knew him.

“His loss will be great indeed to film culture as a whole – as his work was respected throughout the world. But his loss to humanity will be just as profound – as his kindness was legendary and his generosity of spirit, boundless. As Dietrich says at the end of Touch of Evil – “He was some kind of a man”.

On a personal level I feel I have lost something of my own life too –a ‘certain magic’ has gone with him.”

Clive Kay:

“I had the pleasure of working with his Lordship in 2001 on a TV film made at great expense by the Jim Henson Company called Jack And The Beanstalk, The Real Story! It was filmed mainly at Elstree and Pinewood. The film had in its cast Matthew Modine, Mia Sara and a very young James Corden

I was employed to fit all the relevant actors with coloured contact lenses and to remain on set to look after my charges. I have been doing this in the movies since the late 70’s.

“Lord A was a charming gentleman who became a great friend as we had mutual friends in Tony and Sarah Havelock Allen. Tony was a wonderful man and I was lucky to be at his celebration memoir at Bafta presented by Lord A.”