Peter o' toole actor 2013 gravestone prices
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Irish Independent, 28 January 2007. His funeral was held at Golders Green Crematorium in London on 21 December 2013, where he was cremated in a wicker coffin.[4]
Census
In the 1939 register, Peter J O'Toole (age 7), at school, was at 18 Preston Street, Leeds, Leeds C.B., Yorkshire (West Riding), England.[5]
- Closed Record
- Constance J O'Toole Married F 14 Sep 1902 Unpaid Domestic Duties
- Patricia R O'Toole Single F 14 Oct 1930 At School
- Peter J O'Toole Single M 02 Aug 1932 At School
Sources
- ↑Birth: "England and Wales Birth Registration Index, 1837-2008", database
citing Birth Registration, Leeds North, Yorkshire, England, citing General Register Office, Southport, England
(FamilySearch Record: QVQ4-HC4B : accessed 2 August 2024)
Peter J O'Toole birth registered Jul-Aug-Sep 1932 in Leeds North, child of Ferguson.O’Toole appeared in the second season of Showtime’s successful drama series The Tudors (2008), portraying Pope Paul III, who excommunicates King Henry VIII from the church; an act which leads to a showdown between the two men in seven of the ten episodes.
- ↑ * Memorial: Find a Grave (no image)
Find A Grave: Memorial #121765443 (accessed 3 June 2025)
Memorial page for Peter O'Toole (2 Aug 1932-14 Dec 2013), citing St.Paul's Churchyard, Covent Garden, London Borough of Camden, Greater London, England; Maintained by Find a Grave.
- ↑1939 Register: "1939 Register"
Reference: RG101/3482J/007/19; Piece number: 3482J; Schedule: 90
FindMyPast Image - FindMyPast Transcription (accessed 4 August 2025)
Peter J O'Toole (born 2 Aug 1932), single, At School, at 18 Preston Street, Leeds, Leeds C.B., Yorkshire (West Riding), England.We were all considered dotty.”
O’Toole began working in the theatre, gaining recognition as a Shakespearean actor at the Bristol Old Vic and with the English Stage Company, before making his television debut in 1954. O’Toole has never won the award, but has received an honorary Oscar for lifetime achievement.
In 1980, O’Toole starred as Tiberius in the Penthouse-funded biopic, Caligula. He was reportedly offered a knighthood in 1987, but turned it down for personal and political reasons.
In an interview with National Public Radio in December 2006, O’Toole revealed that he knew all 154 of Shakespeare’s sonnets. In Venus, he recites Sonnet 18 (“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”).
“I used to be scared stiff of the nuns: their whole denial of womanhood – the black dresses and the shaving of the hair – was so horrible, so terrifying,” he later commented. His funeral was held at Golders Green Crematorium in London on 21 December 2013, where he was cremated in a wicker coffin. He also appeared in Seán O’Casey’s Juno and the Paycock at Dublin’s Gaiety Theatre.
O’Toole fulfilled a lifetime ambition in 1970 when he performed on stage in Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, alongside Donal McCann, at the Irish capital’s Abbey Theatre.
In 1972, he played both Miguel de Cervantes and his fictional creation Don Quixote in Man of La Mancha, the motion picture adaptation of the 1965 hit Broadway musical, opposite Sophia Loren. Loitering With Intent: The Child.
Finally, he made his home solely in London for professional reasons. O’Toole was nominated for another Oscar for My Favorite Year (1982), a light romantic comedy about the behind-the-scenes at a 1950s TV variety-comedy show, in which O’Toole plays an ageing swashbuckling film star reminiscent of Errol Flynn. He resided on the Sky Road, just outside Clifden in Connemara in County Galway, Ireland, from 1963, and at the height of his career maintained homes in Dublin, London and Paris (at the Ritz, which was where his character supposedly lived in the film How to Steal a Million).
In 1959, he married Welsh actress Siân Phillips, with whom he had two daughters: actress Kate and Patricia. It was performing as part of the Bristol Old Vic at the Theatre Royal in King Street in the 1950s that O’Toole won his early acclaim.
O’Toole was interviewed at least three times by Charlie Rose on his eponymous talk show.
He demonstrated his comedic abilities alongside Peter Sellers in the Woody Allen-scripted comedy What’s New Pussycat? They were divorced in 1979.