Richard Burton

Richard Burton net worth is $50 Million. Also know about Richard Burton bio, salary, height, age weight, relationship and more …

Richard Burton Wiki Biography

Richard Walter Jenkins was born on the 10th November 1925, in Pontrhydyfen, Wales, and was an actor, considered one of the most important English-speaking stage actors, but became more widely known through films, as he participated in numerous feature films, and gained international stardom in the 1960s, eventually being nominated for an Oscar seven times. Richard was active in the entertainment industry from 1943 to 1984.

How rich was the actor? It has been estimated by authoritative sources that the overall size of Richard Burton’s net worth was as much as $50 million, as of the data converted to the present, 2016. Acting was the main source of Burton’s wealth.

To begin with, Richard Burton’s mother died when he was two years old; he was one of thirteen children, and as his father’s life was marked by alcoholism, the large family lived in poverty. After the death of his mother Burton was raised by his sister Cecilia. He studied in Oxford and played in the student theatre, then served in the RAF for three years as a navigator, still pursuing his acting career when possible.. He was considered a good actor for Shakespearean plays, and at 19 made his debut in London’s West End. In 1949, he made his breakthrough at the Globe Theatre in a production directed by Sir John Gielgud.

In 1952, he played in his first Hollywood film, “My Cousin Rachel”, opposite Olivia de Haviland, after which he was nominated for an Oscar for the first time. During the decade, his reputation grew through a variety of films ranging from war to romantic dramas.

In 1963, he starred in the film “Cleopatra” (1963) with Elizabeth Taylor, after which they became the best known couple of actors, and the highest paid actor in the sector in 1960s. Then followed “The Sandpiper” (1965), and “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” (1966) among others. Without the participation of Taylor, Burton landed significant roles in the films “Becket” (1964), “The Night of the Iguana” (1964) and “The Spy Who Came in from the Cold” (1965). In the 1970s, Burton stepped increasingly into films that were commercial and earned him higher salary. In 1983, he starred the last time together with Elizabeth Taylor in the theatre comedy “Private Lives of Noel Coward”.

His last film “Ellis Island” was released in 1984; it was based on the novel written by George Orwell. Shortly after completion of filming he suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and died.

It is worth saying that although he was nominated for an Oscar seven times, unfortunately he did not win any. In the summer of 1970, he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II.

Finally, in the personal life of the actor, he was married to Sybil Williams (1949 – 1963), with whom he had two daughters, one of whom is Kate Burton, also an actress. After a very public relationship with the actress Elizabeth Taylor, to whom he was married from 1964-1974 and 1975-1976, he was married to Suzy Miller (1976 – 1982). Burton’s fourth wife was the publicist Sally Hay, whom he was married with from 1983 until his death. He had two more daughters whom he adopted, one from Taylor’s previous marriage, and one with her. He died on the 5th August 1984 in Celigny, Geneva Switzerland – he had been suffering from several medical problems for many years, brought about by his intemperate consumption of alcohol and smoking. His grave is in the old cemetery of Céligny.

IMDB Wikipedia “Ellis Island” (1984) “Private Lives of Noel Coward” (1983) “The Sandpiper” (1965) $50 million 1925 1925-11-10 1984 1984-08-05 Becket (1964) Céligny Cleopatra (1963) Composer died August 5 Elizabeth Taylor (1964-1976) Exeter College George Orwell in Pontrhydyfen Jessica Burton John Gielgud Liza Todd Burton Maria Burton November 10 Olivia de Haviland Oxford Pontrhydyfen Port Talbot Secondary School Port Talbot Squadron Richard Burton Richard Burton Net Worth Royal Air Force (RAF) Sally Hay Sally Hay (1983-1984) Suzy Miller (1976 – 1982) Switzerland Sybil Christopher Sybil Williams (1949 – 1963) The Night of the Iguana (1964) The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965) UK Wales Welsh Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966)

Richard Burton Quick Info

Full Name Richard Burton
Net Worth $50 Million
Date Of Birth November 10, 1925, in Pontrhydyfen, Wales, UK
Died August 5, 1984, Céligny, Switzerland
Height 1.78 m
Profession Cinema Actor
Education Port Talbot Secondary School, Port Talbot Squadron, Royal Air Force (RAF), Exeter College, Oxford
Nationality British
Spouse Sybil Williams (1949 – 1963), Elizabeth Taylor (1964-1976), Suzy Miller (1976 – 1982), Sally Hay (1983-1984)
Children Maria Burton, Jessica Burton, Liza Todd Burton, Kate Burton
Parents Edith Maude Jenkins, Richard Walter Jenkins
Siblings Cecilia Jenkins, Tom Jenkins, Verdun Jenkins, Graham Jenkins, David Jenkins, Ifor Jenkins
Twitter https://twitter.com/burtondiaries
IMDB www.imdb.com/name/nm0000009
Allmusic http://www.allmusic.com/artist/richard-burton-mn0000851158
Awards Commander of the Order of the British Empire, Academy Award (Oscars), BAFTA, Golden Globe, Tony Awards for Best Actor
Nominations Academy Award for Best Actor, Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, Golden Globe Henrietta Award for World Film Favorites, Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, Tony Award for Best Lead A…
Movies “Cleopatra” (1963), “The Sandpiper” (1965), “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” (1966), “Becket” (1964), “The Night of the Iguana” (1964), “The Spy Who Came in from the Cold” (1965), “Ellis Island” (1984)
TV Shows “Private Lives of Noel Coward” (1983)

Richard Burton Trademarks

  1. Gravelly voice
  2. Frequently played self-loathing characters, particularly in his later career.

Richard Burton Quotes

  • I gave it a try once … Intimacy with a man. How can you know you don’t like caviar if you never tried it?
  • In the course of preparing myself … I realized afresh that I hate Churchill and all of his kind. I hate them virulently. They have stalked down the corridors of endless power all through history … What man of sanity would say on hearing of the atrocities committed by the Japanese against British and Anzac prisoners of war, ‘We shall wipe them out, every one of them, men, women, and children. There shall not be a Japanese left on the face of the earth.’? Such simple-minded cravings for revenge leave me with a horrified but reluctant awe for such single-minded and merciless ferocity.
  • I have achieved a sort of diabolical fame.
  • Stripped, I am monstrous.
  • Having discovered sex, I began looting and plundering it with great delight.
  • Actors are poor, abject, disagreeable, perverse, ill-minded, slightly malicious creatures. And of that august company of idiots, I’m afraid I’m a member.
  • I’m more aware than I used to be of the tedium of acting. (1984)
  • The learned doctors told me if I continued to booze I should be prepared to welcome the end.
  • You reach the top of the heap, but it’s a circle, and you slip on the down side; maybe for years. You get scared. (1982)
  • If I had a chance for another life, I would certainly choose a better complexion.
  • [on Geneviève Bujold]: I’d hate to be her next director or leading man. I think she firmly believes herself to be the legitimate heir to Rachelle or Bernhardt or Duse. She has all the power of a gnat. A dying one. I could whisper louder than her screams.
  • [on Marlon Brando, July, 1970]: He really is a smugly pompous little bastard and is cavalier about everybody except Black Panthers and Indians.
  • [on Marlon Brando, November, 1966]: He is a genuinely good man, I suspect, and he is intelligent. He has depth. It’s no accident that he is such a compelling actor. He puts on acts, of course, and pretends to be vaguer than he is. Very little misses him, as I’ve noticed.
  • Everywhere you go, there’s somewhere shoving a chair under your bum, and if you take out a cigarette there are eighty-four people jumping up to light it and tell you how wonderful you are. And you know it’s not true.
  • Generally if you mention the word Shakespeare in Hollywood, everybody leaves the room.
  • Shakespeare [is] the best way to learn English.
  • Marc Antony is one of the great roles because it combines some of the best dialogue Shakespeare ever wrote and action; Antony was a man of action.
  • You haven’t heard the real beauty of the Bible until you have heard it in Welsh.
  • I got away from the valley and proceeded to drink myself to death elsewhere.
  • Marlon Brando has yet to learn to speak. He should have been born two generations before and acted in silent films.
  • I have always felt that the camera hasn’t liked me. I’m a stage animal. I have to be big and loud, and the camera needs you to be small and naturalistic and subtle; much more naturalistic. I’m as subtle as a buffalo stampede.
  • I drank too much, smoked too much and made love too much.
  • Although I like to be thought of as a tough rugby-playing Welsh miner’s son, able to take on the world, the reality is that this image is just superficial. I am the reverse of what people think.
  • None of my films has done me any good. I know all epics are awful, but I thought Alexander the Great (1956) might be the first good one. I was wrong. They cut it about – played down to the audience. I say if the audience doesn’t understand, let ’em stay ignorant.
  • I have a fair choice of women myself if I wish. But I don’t wish it. Since Elizabeth, I have seen two. I’ve a fundamental and basic loyalty. Next year I’ll be fifty and I’ve only been married twice. Yes, I betrayed them both a couple of times, but not mentally, only physically. You see, I may fall in love and it may last six months, but then the affair breaks up. (1974)
  • The Robe (1953) was lousy, but an almighty hit. I was dull as ditchwater and an almighty flop. My next film, Prince of Players (1955), was Hollywood’s first turkey in CinemaScope – when CinemaScope was new and hotter than a pistol. If I’d been able to buttonhole a couple of relatives and persuade a few of the deluded girls I’d done favours for, I’d still have struggled to rustle up nine lost souls to form a fan club.
  • You can’t be at the mercy of fate, you’ve got to invest so you don’t ever need to work again.
  • My friends are not actors, they are scientists, they are writers. My real gift is writing.
  • Last Tango in Paris [Ultimo tango a Parigi (1972)] so absolutely revolted and embarrassed me that I didn’t know where to look … I said, ‘I’m sorry, I can’t stand it, I have to go. It did not turn me on, it turned me off. For a month I was asexual.
  • As Lee Marvin says, who gives a shit? We’re born, we come staggering out the womb, we come searching for death. My father was a Welsh miner, a remarkable man. Tough, powerful. Obese. Short. I come from an enormous family – thirteen children. My eldest sister was having a baby. I didn’t understand it. I said, ‘Will she be all right? Will she live?’ My father – he was massively drunk – was worried too. ‘Never mind,’ he said, ‘we’re all dying.’ He talked like an angel. ‘Even your growing pains are reaching into oblivion.’
  • I’ve been in trouble all my life, I’ve done the most unutterable rubbish, all because of money. I didn’t need it – I’ve never needed money, even as a child, though I came from a very poor family. But there have been times when the lure of the zeros was simply too great.
  • Actors go through cycles – remarkable, weird cycles. There was one period from 1956 to 1961 or so when I couldn’t do anything right. My voice went foul, my luck was bad, I chose badly. I thought I had lost what I had, and I nearly retired right then and there.
  • My real interest in life is the theatre, and I think I’ve shot my bolt in London as far as the classical roles are concerned. I’ve played all the parts I think I can play, and one or two that I should have given a miss. But there is nothing left until I’m older and can play parts like Lear. (1957)
  • One big picture is worth ten small ones. The actor who is fortunate enough to get two or possibly three big subjects a year benefits from their long runs. He’s never absent long from public view.
  • I get increasingly disenchanted with acting … as the years totter past I find it ludicrous, learning some idiot’s lines in the small hours of the night so I can stay a millionaire. (1972)
  • I’m not dedicated, I never was. In a sense I’m totally alienated from the craft that I employ so superficially and successfully. (1970)
  • It seems fairly ridiculous for someone of forty-five or fifty to be learning words written by other people, most of which are bad, to make a few dollars.
  • As the seventh son of a Welsh miner I knew hardship first hand. I come from the lower depths of the working class. It’s true that I now earn one and a quarter of a million dollars per picture, and it sounds strange to say that at heart I am a Communist, but there is no contradiction because I don’t exploit others.
  • Rubbish … tastelessly sentimental and badly acted by me. – On The Robe (1953)
  • If you’re going to make rubbish, be the best rubbish in it. I keep telling Larry Olivier that. I chided Olivier for playing a minor role in an epic like Spartacus (1960), which he’s just done. Larry had a dressing room half the size of Tony Curtis’ in that film. And he got about half Curtis’ money. Well, that’s ridiculous. You’ve got to swank in Hollywood. When I go there I demand two Cadillacs – one for my family – and the best dressing room in the studio. Of course I’m not worth it, but it impresses them.
  • I am the son of a Welsh miner and one would expect me to be at my happiest playing peasants, people of the earth. But in actual fact I’m much happier playing princes and kings. Now whether this is a kind of sublimation of what I would like to be, or something like that, I don’t know, but certainly I’m never really very comfortable playing people from the working class. (1967)
  • The unfortunate thing is that everyone wants me to play a prince or a king … I’m always wearing a nightdress or a short skirt or something odd. I don’t want to do them, I don’t like them, I hate getting made up for them, I hate my hair being curled in the mornings, I hate tights, I hate boots, I hate everything. I’d like to be in a lounge suit, I’d like to be a sort of Welsh Rex Harrison and do nothing except lounge against a bar with a gin and tonic in my hand. (1963)
  • Once you have a drink problem, you always have one. Once an alcoholic, always an alcoholic. But, er, I’m not quite sure whether I am one or not. I think I’m within striking distance of being one. (1977)
  • God put me on this earth to raise sheer hell.
  • [on Alexander the Great (1956)] I knew all epics are crap but I felt this one could be different. How could I have been so wrong?
  • Albert Finney is the greatest actor in the world. Then Peter O’Toole. [Marlon Brando]. [Laurence Olivier] and [John Gielgud] belong to another time and place. They’re immortal, but remote from the rest of us. Sean Connery is vastly underrated. I would like to do a play with Michael Caine, whom I respect. I like Alan Bates. Frank Finlay is a hard man to follow in the second act. Unbeatable self-discipline.
  • I played a sex-drenched doctor in The Bramble Bush (1960). It was the worst picture I ever made, if you don’t count Ice Palace (1960). That one was based upon a very weak novel by Edna Ferber. Both pictures for Warner Brothers. Jack L. Warner told the press I had no sex appeal. Then Elizabeth came along. All changed after that. Suddenly, Eddie Fisher didn’t have sex appeal. And I did. It’s a crazy world for a Welsh coal miner’s son born in November 1925.
  • I’m a reader, you know. I was corrupted by Faust. And [William Shakespeare]. And Marcel Proust]. And ]Ernest Hemingway]. But mostly I was corrupted by Dylan Thomas. Most people see me as a rake, womanizer, boozer and purchaser of large baubles. I’m all those things depending on the prism and the light. But mostly I’m a reader. Give me Agatha Christie for an hour and I’m happy as a clam. The house in Celigny some day will cave in under its own weight from the books. I hope I’m there when it does. One hundred six years old. Investigating the newest thriller from [John le Carré] or a new play from Tennessee Williams.
  • I almost replaced Sean Connery as James Bond in Thunderball (1965). This was before Sean played Bond. My friend, the Irish producer Kevin McClory, wanted me. Kevin worked for Michael Todd on Around the World in Eighty Days (1956) and I was impressed with his Irish rebelliousness. We Welsh have that, too, but not quite like the Irish, who transfuse it into their blood on the same day they are born. McClory promised [Alfred Hitchcock] would direct and I had great hopes for the project. It fell through, of course – and later Kevin made a bloody fortune, when Sean was Bond. I wonder sometimes how it might all have turned out. [Ian Fleming] was big on me for the role. Stewart Granger was next in line.
  • (on Julie Andrews, his co-star in “Camelot”] Every man I know who knows her is a little bit in love with her.
  • [in 1984] I still smoke too much. I think it gives my voice an edge.
  • [on Sophia Loren] She is as beautiful as an erotic dream. Tall and extremely large-bosomed. Tremendously long legs. They go up to her shoulders, practically. Beautiful brown eyes, set in a marvelously vulpine, almost satanic, face.
  • [on Elizabeth Taylor] I love her, not for her breasts, her buttocks or her knees but for her mind. It is inscrutable. She is like a poem.
  • [in 1962] And I’m too old. I’m now thirty-six. And I look about 5’2″. I’m 5’10” but I look smaller. It’s because I’m so wide or my head’s too big or something.
  • [on Staircase (1969)] I believe in this film absolutely. It is a kick against the system.
  • [on Frankie Howerd] If I had his talent, I’d drop Shakespeare tomorrow.
  • [on Elizabeth Taylor] The most astonishingly self-contained, pulchritudinous, remote, removed, inaccessible woman I had ever seen.
  • [in 1974] I was up to, I’m told, because, of course, you don’t remember if you drink that much, about two-and-a-half to three bottles of hard liquor a day. Fascinating idea, of course, drink on that scale. It’s rather nice to have gone through it and to have survived.
  • Certainly most movie executives were making love to the starlets. But then, so were most of us actors.
  • An actor is something less than a man, while an actress is something more than a woman.
  • Richard Burton is now my epitaph, my cross, my title, my image. I have achieved a kind of diabolical fame. It has nothing to do with my talents as an actor. That counts for little now. I am the diabolically famous Richard Burton.
  • A man that hoards up riches and enjoys them not, is like an ass that carries gold and eats thistles.
  • [on Elizabeth Taylor] At thirty-four she is an extremely beautiful woman, lavishly endowed by nature with a few flaws in the masterpiece: She has an insipid double chin, her legs are too short and she has a slight potbelly. She has a wonderful bosom, though.
  • [on Elizabeth Taylor] I might run from her for a thousand years and she is still my baby child. Our love is so furious that we burn each other out.
  • [about being hired to play Marc Antony opposite Elizabeth Taylor in Cleopatra (1963)] Well, I suppose I must don a breastplate once more to play opposite Miss Tits.
  • [about his love of reading] Home is where the books are.
  • [about Elizabeth Taylor] Elizabeth has great worries about becoming a cripple because her feet sometimes have no feeling in them. She asked if I would stop loving her if she had to spend the rest of her life in a wheelchair. I told her that I didn’t care if her legs, bum and bosoms fell off and her teeth turned yellow. And she went bald. I love that woman so much sometimes that I cannot believe my luck. She has given me so much.
  • All great art comes from people who are either ugly or have a terrible inferiority complex. I know no one who is beautiful and produces art.
  • All I wanted to do was to live, pick up a new Jag, and act at the Old Vic.
  • The only thing in life is language. Not love. Not anything else.
  • [asked why he refused to see his performance in Cleopatra (1963)] Well, I don’t want to kill myself.
  • You may be as vicious about me as you please. You will only do me justice.
  • I rather like my reputation, actually, that of a spoiled genius from the Welsh gutter, a drunk, a womanizer; it’s rather an attractive image.
  • My father said all actors were homosexuals. That is nonsense, of course. But perhaps most actors are latent homosexuals and we cover it with drink. I was a homosexual once, but not for long. But I tried it. It didn’t work so I gave it up. (1975)
  • I have to think hard to name an interesting man who does not drink.
  • I’ve played the lot: a homosexual, a sadistic gangster, kings, princes, a saint, the lot. All that’s left is a Carry On film. My last ambition.
  • [in 1963, about adultery] The minute you start fiddling around outside the idea of monogamy, nothing satisfies anymore.
  • My father considered that anyone who went to chapel and didn’t drink alcohol was not to be tolerated. I grew up in that belief.
  • I’ve done the most awful rubbish in order to have somewhere to go in the morning.
  • [replying to a cable from Laurence Olivier at the height of the Cleopatra (1963) scandal: “Make up your mind, dear heart. Do you want to be a great actor or a household word?”] Both.
  • When I played drunks I had to remain sober because I didn’t know how to play them when I was drunk.

Richard Burton Important Facts

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  • By 1967 he had bursitis, arthritis and dermatitis.
  • His film performances were often criticized for lacking emotion.
  • According to his listing in Quinlan’s Film Stars published 2000 the film Lovespell aka Tristan and Isolte was made in 1979 and was unreleased.
  • In Italy for the filming of Cleopatra (1963), he became so frustrated with the numerous delays during its production, he begged Darryl F. Zanuck for a part in the Longest Day just so he could do some work.and was given a cameo role of an RAF pilot. Roddy McDowall who was also filming Cleopatra did the same and ended up with a small role as an American soldier.
  • He had an excellent memory and had no difficulty remembering lines until he was fifty. However when he starred in “Equus” on Broadway in 1976 he had great difficulty learning the lines. Burton had not acted on stage for twelve years. He turned down offers to play “King Lear” on stage in Canada in 1978 and 1983 because he said he could no longer remember lines.
  • Mentioned in the song “GMF” by John Grant: “Half of the time I think I’m in some movie, I play the underdog of course / I wonder who they’ll get to play me, maybe they could dig up Richard Burton’s corpse”.
  • Where Eagles Dare (1968) was his last major hit at the box office. The Wild Geese (1978) was successful in Europe but completely flopped in North America.
  • He always wore built up shoes in films and in real life.
  • In a 1977 interview with Vincent Kane, describing a five-year period which he barely remembers because of his heavy drinking, Burton recounts introducing himself to ‘a very distinguished actor… an American’ at a party and the other actor replying, ‘Kid, we did a film together! Lasted four months!’ The gravelly voice he puts on sounds very like that of Lee Marvin, with whom he made Klansman (1974) shortly before drying out.
  • His last surviving sibling, younger brother Graham Jenkins, died in December 2015 aged 88.
  • He was accused of racism over remarks he made during a visit to South Africa.
  • According to his younger brother Graham Jenkins, Burton smoked at least 100 cigarettes a day, although Penny Junor’s biography said he habitually smoked around 60 cigarettes a day. He gave up smoking for a time in 1980 after encouragement from his third wife.
  • Is one of 13 actors who have received an Academy Award nomination for his portrayal of a real-life king. The others in chronological order are Charles Laughton for The Private Life of Henry VIII. (1933), Robert Morley for Marie Antoinette (1938), Basil Rathbone for If I Were King (1938), Laurence Olivier for Henry V (1944) and Richard III (1955), José Ferrer for Joan of Arc (1948), Yul Brynner for The King and I (1956), John Gielgud for Becket (1964), Peter O’Toole for Becket (1964) and The Lion in Winter (1968), Robert Shaw for A Man for All Seasons (1966), Kenneth Branagh for Henry V (1989), Nigel Hawthorne for The Madness of King George (1994), and Colin Firth for The King’s Speech (2010).
  • He has two roles in common with Sidney James: (1) Burton played Mark Antony in Cleopatra (1963) while James played him in Carry on Cleo (1964) and (2) Burton played King Henry VIII of England in Anne of the Thousand Days (1969) while James played him in Carry on Henry VIII (1971). In both cases, James wore the costume which had originally been worn by Burton.
  • Has appeared in six films that were nominated for the Best Picture Oscar: The Robe (1953), The Longest Day (1962), Cleopatra (1963), Becket (1964), Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) and Anne of the Thousand Days (1969).
  • Although his death was sudden, it was not much of a surprise to those who knew him. Burton’s health had been declining for several years prior to his death, and he suffered from constant and severe neck pain. He had been warned that his liver was enlarged as early as March 1970, and had been diagnosed with cirrhosis of the liver and kidney disease in April 1981 due to alcoholism. He had a brush with death during the shooting of Klansman (1974) when he nearly drank himself to death. Burton was dried out at Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, California.
  • According to his listing in Quinlan’s Film Stars published 2000, the film Lovespell (1981) aka Tristan and Isolte was made in 1979 and was unreleased.
  • He was passionate about books and was a voracious reader.
  • Guy Masterson was his great nephew.
  • Had a brother Ivor.
  • Received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on March 1, 2013 at 6336 Hollywood Boulevard, next to Elizabeth Taylor’s star.
  • He was well-known for his many acts of extraordinary generosity. For example, during the filming of crowd scenes for “Wagner”, he noted that one of the extras would, during breaks in shooting, be in constant floods of tears. He discreetly inquired the reason for this and was told that she was newly-widowed and penniless and had taken the job as an extra in a desperate bid to raise money to pay her mortgage. That same week, she found that her mortgage had been paid off in full by Burton, to whom she had never even spoken.
  • His attack on Sir Winston Churchill in 1974 was widely thought to have been occasioned by the fact that he was, at the time, engaged to Princess Elizabeth of Yugoslavia – who was, of course, a princess in exile. She blamed Churchill and other western leaders for giving away her country to the Communists at the end of World War II. Burton’s engagement to her was soon broken off.
  • According to his biography “And God Created Burton”, he was a notorious womanizer; during his marriage to Sybil Williams he had affairs with Claire Bloom, Jean Simmons, Maggie McNamara, Lee Remick, Lana Turner and Mary Ure, and during his marriage to Elizabeth Taylor he had affairs with Geneviève Bujold, Nathalie Delon and Raquel Welch.
  • Like many Welshmen, where the game is more a national religion than a sport, Burton played rugby. He continued to play well into his early career, mainly at wing-forward. He only hung up his boots when contractual obligations to film and theatre producers forced him to do so.
  • Was at one point going to star in The Public Eye (1972) with Elizabeth Taylor.
  • Was named “The Worst Actor of All Time” in Harry Medved and Michael Medved’s 1980 book “The Golden Turkey Awards”, beating out Victor Mature, John Agar, and Tony Curtis. In so naming Burton, the Medveds cited the preponderance of big-budget film flops he starred in, and the overall squandering of his acting potential for much of his career. Burton’s The Assassination of Trotsky (1972) had been listed among “The Fifty Worst Films of All Time,” and Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977) was named the second-worst film of all time (behind Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959)) in the 1978 book of the same name by Harry Medved and Randy Lowell.
  • His younger brother Graham Jenkins worked for the BBC and was responsible for getting Burton the job of narrating the Royal Wedding of ‘Prince Charles’ and Princess Diana for BBC Radio on 29 July 1981. There had been some concern that Burton would say something controversial, given his past attacks on Churchill. However, as it turned out he made only one mistake during the five hour broadcast.
  • In 1981 he accepted a contract reported to be worth nearly $1 million over three years to use his voice in a series of commercials for an American magazine, “Geo”.
  • He would often tell interviewers that he had played Hamlet on the London stage when he was 23. He was in fact nearly 28 at the time.
  • In the last seven years of his life he constantly resisted offers to play Lear on stage, instead preferring to make films like Absolution (1978).
  • Was offered the role of Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons (1966), but he turned the part down. Paul Scofield, who went on to win a Best Actor Oscar for his performance, was cast instead.
  • After being forced to drop out of the touring production of “Camelot” in April 1981 in order to undergo major spinal surgery – during which his entire spinal column was found to be coated in crystallized alcohol – Burton contemplated retiring completely from acting, but later agreed to star in Wagner (1981).
  • Producer Dino De Laurentiis wanted Burton to play Napoleon Bonaparte in Waterloo (1970), but the role went to Rod Steiger instead.
  • Met with Josip Broz Tito, whom he greatly admired, before starring in Sutjeska (1973).
  • Underwent treatment for alcoholism at a clinic in America after filming Klansman (1974).
  • While playing Dr. Dysart in “Equus” on Broadway in 1976, Burton was so impressed by co-star Peter Firth that he offered to play the Friar with Firth as Romeo. Firth did play Romeo on stage, but Burton was not cast.
  • While filming Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984), he suffered from a terrible pain in his neck and had to wear a neck brace during rehearsals. He had to wear heavy make up in the film, since the director felt he looked twenty years older than his age. He minimized his famous voice for the part of O’Brien, although he had great difficulty remembering the lines and would sometimes require nearly forty takes to get a scene right. The result was one of his most critically acclaimed performances, and well as his most underplayed.
  • He was a close friend of Humphrey Bogart.
  • He refused to attend his father’s funeral in 1957.
  • Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) ran over schedule, causing Burton to pull out of Robbery (1967), which instead went to Stanley Baker.
  • While starring as King Arthur in the musical “Camelot” in 1961, Burton told his co-star Julie Andrews that she was his only leading lady he had not slept with.
  • An article Burton wrote in memory of his longtime friend, Sir Stanley Baker, following the actor’s death in June 1976, caused so much offence that Baker’s widow, Lady Ellen Martin, considered suing Burton. However, shortly afterwards, she recalled standing near the tree where Baker’s ashes had been scattered and hearing his voice saying, “You know what Rich is like when he’s in his cups”.
  • He had smoked since he was eight, reaching five packs of cigarettes a day in middle age.
  • He was a close friend of fellow Welsh actor Sir Stanley Baker from childhood, and provided the narration for Baker’s epic film Zulu (1964).
  • In November 1974, Burton was asked to write an article about Sir Winston Churchill for “The New York Times”. Since Burton had just played the wartime leader in The Gathering Storm (1974), the newspaper expected a laudatory piece. Instead they were presented with a rant about Churchill the right-wing politician, whom Burton wrote, “to know him is to hate him”.
  • Following the release of The Robe (1953), his first Hollywood production, the critics would accuse Burton of being a wooden film actor, a charge that would stay with him throughout his career. It was not until The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965) that critics would be unanimous in their praise of his performance, yet after an excellent five years his mastery of film technique had seemingly deserted him and much of his later work, such as Villain (1971) and Equus (1977), would be dismissed by many as overacting.
  • Recorded his sessions for the Jeff Wayne’s musical version of “The War of the Worlds” in two afternoon sessions in New York between film making.
  • According to Burton’s diaries, when he and Elizabeth Taylor appeared on the Here’s Lucy (1968) (episode: “Lucy Meets the Burtons”), he was appalled by the tedium of shooting the show. He found Lucille Ball’s meticulous professionalism to be ludicrous as he felt it was out of place on a TV show. Lucy was entirely focused on making the show work, and Burton — who thought it would be a lark — didn’t have any fun on the set. He was quite impressed by Ball’s co-star Gale Gordon, but was dismayed that Lucy, personally, directed him to play his “part” — which was himself, after all — very broad so that he was shouting. When he did shout, she told him that he was finally playing comedy as it should be played. The episode featured Lucy meeting Burton, who was fleeing the press and hid in her office, and then Liz, and putting on Liz’s 69-carat, pear-shaped stone diamond, which became stuck to her her finger.
  • Marlon Brando became quite friendly with Burton’s wife Elizabeth Taylor while shooting Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967). Marlon Brando agreed to pick up her Best Actress Award for Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) from the New York Film Critics Circle. When Marlon Brando made his appearance at the NYFCC Award ceremony at Sardi’s on January 29, 1967, he hectored the critics, querying them as to why they hadn’t recognized Elizabeth Taylor before. He then flew to Dahomey, Africa where Elizabeth Taylor was shooting The Comedians (1967) with Burton to personally deliver the award, a development Burton thought odd. Later in the 1960s, Marlon Brando’ socialised with the Burtons, visiting them on their famous yacht the Kalizma, while they plied the Mediterreanean. Marlon Brando’s ex-wife Anna Kashfi, in her book “Brando for Breakfast” (1979), claimed that Marlon Brando and Burton got into a fist-fight aboard the yacht, probably over Elizabeth Taylor, but nothing of the incident appears in Burton’s voluminous diaries. In his diaries, Burton found Marlon Brando to be quite intelligent but believed he suffered, like Elizabeth Taylor did, from becoming too famous too early in his life and believed their affinity for one another was based on this. (Both Elizabeth Taylor and Marlon Brando would later befriend Michael Jackson, another superstar-cum-legend who had become too famous too soon.) Burton recognized Marlon Brando as a great actor, but felt he would have been more suited to silent films due to the deficiency in his voice (the famous “mumble”). As a silent film star, Burton believed Marlon Brando would have been the greatest motion picture actor ever.
  • In 1969, Richard Burton bought his second wife Elizabeth Taylor one of the world’s largest diamonds from the jeweller Cartier after losing an auction for the 69-carat, pear-shaped stone to the jeweller, which was won with a $1 million bid. Aristotle Onassis also failed in his bid to win the diamond, which he intended to give his wife Jacqueline Kennedy. The rough diamond that would yield the prized stone weighed 244 carats and was found in 1966 at South Africa’s Premier mine. Harry Winston cut and polished the diamond, which was put up for auction in 1969. Burton purchased the diamond from Cartier the next day for $1,069,000 (approximately $6 million in 2005 dollars) to give to Elizabeth Taylor. The small premium Cartier charged Burton was in recognition of the great publicity the jewellery garnered from selling the stone, which was dubbed the “Burton-Cartier Diamond”, to the then-“world’s most famous couple”. Ten years later, the twice-divorced-from-Burton Elizabeth Taylor herself auctioned off the “Burton-Taylor Diamond” to fund a hospital in Botswana. The last recorded sale of the “Burton-Taylor Diamond” was in 1979 for nearly $3,000,000 to an anonymous buyer in Saudi Arabia. The ring was the centre of the classic Here’s Lucy (1968) episode “Lucy Meets the Burtons” in 1970, in which Lucy Carter, played by Lucille Ball, gets the famous ring stuck on her finger. The actual ring was used and the episode was the highest rated episode of the very popular series.
  • Burton and Warren Mitchell were Royal Air Force cadets together at Oxford in 1944. In the years 1944-1947, when both were demobilized, they were stationed together at times in Canada and back in England. Later, they appeared together in The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965).
  • Frankly told the press that he appeared in the movies Breakthrough (1979), Circle of Two (1981) and Lovespell (1981) (generally considered by critics to be three of his worse films, all of them critical and box office disasters that eroded the reputation he had recently fought back to reclaim with his appearance on stage and screen in Equus (1977)) for the money. Burton, who had effectively been cleaned out financially by his two divorces from second wife Elizabeth Taylor, was paid $750,000 for each picture (approximately $2.25 million in 2005 terms). Conversely, he was willing to appear in Absolution (1978) at the same time for one-sixth his fee as he believed in the project very strongly.
  • His divorce from third wife Susan Hunt, whom he was married to from 1976 to 1982, entailed a settlement of $1 million (approximately $2 million in 2005 terms) and a house he owned in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico (his first house in Puerto Vallarta was lost to second wife Elizabeth Taylor during his first divorce from her).
  • According to his long-time friend Brook Williams, the son of the man who had given Burton his first professional break Emlyn Williams, Burton turned down a role in The Sea Wolves: The Last Charge of the Calcutta Light Horse in 1980, which reunited The Wild Geese (1978) director Andrew V. McLaglen, screenwriter Reginald Rose and co-star Roger Moore. The Wild Geese (1978) had been a big hit (Burton was always popular and a box office draw in military roles) and Andrew V. McLaglen had directed Burton’s post-The Wild Geese (1978) film Breakthrough (1979), but Burton turned it down. Brook Williams believed that Burton’s third wife, Susan Hunt, didn’t want Burton away on a lark with his old friends (and drinking companions) as he was in frail health and battling alcoholism at the time.
  • At the time of his death in 1984, he was slated to reprise his role as Colonel Allen Faulkner in Wild Geese II (1985) and had signed on to star as the English journalist Thomas Fowler in a remake of Graham Greene’s The Quiet American (1958). Wild Geese II (1985) went ahead with Edward Fox taking over his part (the film is dedicated to Burton), but the production of “The Quiet American” was canceled.
  • Loved to do crossword puzzles and was dismayed that American newspapers’ crosswords were more geared towards encyclopedic information rather than puns and wordplay.
  • Planned on going back to the stage to appear in William Shakespeare’s “Richard III” and “King Lear”. His staging of “Richard III” would have been based on the ideas of his step-father, Philip Burton, to bring together all of William Shakespeare’s dramatization of Richard, Duke of Glouster (later Richard III) from the “Henry VI” trilogy. Burton had planned on visiting his step-father in Florida in early 1985 to work on the project.
  • According to Melvyn Bragg’s biography (that was based on Burton’s own diaries) in 1959, he turned down an offer of $350,000 (approximately $2.25 million in 2005 terms) to star as “Christ” in Nicholas Ray’s remake of King of Kings (1961) due to superstition. A Welsh-Irish drunkard had read the palms of Burton and some friends, including Dylan Thomas, who were performing poetry on B.B.C. Radio’s “Third Programme” and were waiting for show-time in a local pub. The drunk predicted the friends’ deaths, which in the case of Dylan Thomas, was accurate. After two other friends died within their prescribed time frames, Burton (who had been told he would die at the age of 33) decided to take the year 1959 off so as not to tempt fate. Although he thought Nicholas Ray might make a good film and was keen to shoot on location in Spain, Burton, who already was a millionaire and did not need the money, turned the offer down. For the same reason, he also turned down the role played by Audie Murphy in John Huston’s The Unforgiven (1960), which was shot in Durango, Mexico.
  • Was actively pursued for the role of “The Pilot” in the proposed film of The Little Prince (1974). Burton had had a huge success on Broadway with Lerner & Lowe’s (Alan Jay Lerner & Frederick Loewe) Camelot (1967), but had turned down that film as he did The Little Prince (1974). The role of “The Pilot” subsequently was played by Richard Kiley.
  • After his second wife Elizabeth Taylor’s close friend Montgomery Clift died before shooting began on Reflections in a Golden Eye (1967), Burton briefly considered taking over the vacated role of the closeted homosexual Major Weldon Penderton that had been slated for Montgomery Clift. Though Burton would later play homosexual parts in Staircase (1969) and Villain (1971), it was thought that he would not be a good fit for the role of an American soldier. The part subsequently went to Marlon Brando, who gave what critics now believe was one of his greatest performances. Marlon Brando and Elizabeth Taylor became friends, giving Burton a chance to socialize with America’s greatest actor.
  • In addition to being honored with a Special Tony Award in 1976 for his triumphant return to Broadway after 12 years in Equus (1977), he was nominated three times for a Tony, winning once, in 1961 for Best Actor in a Musical for “Camelot”. His other nominations were in 1958 (for Best Actor in Play) for “Time Remembered” and in 1964 (for Best Actor in Play) for Hamlet (1964).
  • The producers of the film Equus (1977), who envisioned either Marlon Brando or Jack Nicholson in the role of the psychiatrist “Martin Dysart” in the film version, would only consider Burton for the role if he agreed to undertake a screen-test of sorts by playing the role on Broadway. Though considered one of the most brilliant theatre actors of his generation, Burton had not been on the professional stage in a dozen years (though he had appeared in an Oxford Undergradate Dramatic Society production of Doctor Faustus (which subsequently was filmed as Doctor Faustus (1967)) in 1966. Having suffered a slew of failures since 1970 that had undermined his bankability as a movie star, Burton agreed to take on the grueling role for a 12-week run. Though he was scheduled for his Broadway debut on a Sunday, he took over a Saturday matinée for the departing Anthony Perkins (who had received excellent notices after taking over for Anthony Hopkins, Burton’s fellow Welshman who had grown up in his neighborhood in Wales and who had won a 1975 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Actor in a Play for originating Dysart on Broadway). The film producers frankly were worried that Burton’s alcoholism, which had nearly killed him during the production of Klansman (1974), had not only destroyed his powers as an actor but his stamina also. Their fears were borne out the first night when a nervous Burton stumbled during the matinée. However, by Sunday’s show, with the vultures out to see a great actor brought low, Burton wowed the audience with a brilliant performance. Burton astounded theatre-goers and the critics, winning himself a Special Tony Award and the role in the film. (His run was extended another two weeks due to demand to see the legendary thespian and hell-raiser and easily could have gone on for many more weeks had Burton chosen to remain with the play.) Burton’s career was recharged. The momentum of Burton’s professional renaissance nearly brought him an Academy Award in 1978, but sadly, it was reckoned that the performance caught on film by director Sidney Lumet was only a pale shadow of the genius that had been on show on Broadway. (Ironically, this was the charge that had plagued Burton in his early career, that the talent, the genius, did not come through the lens to be caught on film. Burton himself said he did not learn to act on film until he co-starred with Elizabeth Taylor in Cleopatra (1963).) Reverting to his 1970s habit of poor film choices, such as Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977) and The Medusa Touch (1978) tarnished Burton’s newly burnished lustre too and Richard Dreyfuss beat him for the Oscar in his seventh (and last) Oscar nomination. Although he worked steadily until his death, Burton’s post-Equus (1977) career never gained any real traction and he never again was a bankable star.
  • His 1964 performance of “Hamlet” is the longest run of the play in Broadway history with 137 performances. It broke the record held by John Gielgud, who played the part for 132 performances and who directed Burton’s Broadway production.
  • Won a Grammy in the “Best Recording for Children” category for “The Little Prince” (featuring Jonathan Winters and Billy Simpson). [1975]
  • Circa 1970, Burton’s fellow Celt (and cinema superstar) Sean Connery, who had received excellent reviews for his portrayal of the doomed king in a 1960 Canadian television version of “Macbeth”, hoped to launch a big-screen version of the Scottish play. Sean Connery’s plans were foiled when Roman Polanski’s version went into production for Hugh M. Hefner’s Playboy Productions. Burton, who had won a reputation as the best “Hamlet” of his generation, was also interested in launching a film version of “Macbeth” at the same time. He had just had a great cinema success in the period piece Anne of the Thousand Days (1969), for which he won his sixth and penultimate Oscar nomination, and he told his friend Sir Laurence Olivier that he wanted to make a movie of “Macbeth” with himself as the eponymous king and his wife Elizabeth Taylor as Lady Macbeth. Burton’s plans came to naught for the same reason as Sean Connery’s did. A decade earlier, Sir Laurence Olivier – the greatest “Macbeth” of the 20th Century – had also failed to bring the play to the big screen. The future Lord Laurence Olivier had hoped to film his own version of the play in the late 1950s, but the failure of his movie Richard III (1955) to make back its money frustrated his plans. Producer Michael Todd, Elizabeth Taylor’s third husband, told Laurence Olivier in 1958 that he likely would produce the film with Laurence Olivier as “Macbeth” and Laurence Olivier’s real-life wife, Vivien Leigh, as his Lady, but that hope died in the plane crash that claimed Michael Todd’s life. Thus, the famous “Macbeth” curse adversely affected three of the greatest actors of the 20th Century.
  • He was forced to drop out of the Los Angeles run of “Camelot” in April 1981 due to crippling back pain, most likely caused by his chronic bursitis. Doctors at the hospital couldn’t understand how he had managed to entertain live audiences night after night. His entire spinal column was found to be coated in crystallized alcohol. At first the doctors couldn’t operate because Burton was three stone underweight, so he had to remain in bed to build up his strength. His backbone was rebuilt in a delicate operation that could easily have left him paralyzed for life if something had gone wrong. Burton called his friend Richard Harris to replace him as King Arthur, and then returned to his home in Switzerland to recover.
  • He and Elizabeth Taylor starred together in 11 movies: Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966); The V.I.P.s (1963); Under Milk Wood (1972); The Taming of the Shrew (1967); The Sandpiper (1965); Hammersmith Is Out (1972); Doctor Faustus (1967); Divorce His – Divorce Hers (1973); The Comedians (1967); Cleopatra (1963) and Boom! (1968).
  • Since Elizabeth Taylor had been sterilized in 1957 (at age 25, after giving birth to three children), she and Eddie Fisher adopted a German orphan, Maria (born 1961) in 1962. Fisher surrendered his parental rights before they divorced and Richard adopted the girl as his daughter, legally re-naming her Maria Burton.
  • Won the 1951 Theatre World Award for “The Lady’s Not For Burning”.
  • Was nominated for a 1958 Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play for “Time Remembered”. Three years later he won a 1961 Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for “Camelot”, and three years after that, he was again nominated for a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play for his 1964 “Hamlet”, which was directed by his mentor John Gielgud. Burton also received a Special Tony Award in 1976 after appearing as a replacement in “Equus”. Like his friends Laurence Olivier and Peter O’Toole, Burton was an unique and utterly electrifying stage actor whom commanded the rapt attention of his audience.
  • In 1961 he won a Tony Award for playing King Arthur in the original production of Lerner & Loewe’s (Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe) Broadway musical “Camelot”. When the film was in pre-production in the mid-1960s Burton turned down an attractive offer to reprise the role and Richard Harris was cast as The Once & Future King. Burton subsequently appeared in the 1980 Broadway revival of the musical, which played a total of 56 performances on the Great White Way before the production went on the road. During the road tour, Burton was replaced by Richard Harris as he was debilitated by crippling bursitis of the shoulder which eventually prevented him from handling a sword. Pain-killers did not help so he dropped out of the show and he was once again “replaced” by Richard Harris in the role.
  • He was engaged to Princess Elizabeth of Yugoslavia (Serbia & Montenegro) between the time of his two marriages to Elizabeth Taylor. Princess Elizabeth is the mother of Catherine Oxenberg whom he later coached on acting.
  • He and his then wife Elizabeth Taylor were very close friends with the famous president of Yugoslavia (Serbia), Marshall Josip Broz Tito. They spent many vacations with him at his villa on the Yugoslavian Adriatic coast line as well as being a frequent guest at his mansion in Belgrade. He later played his close friend in the 1972 Yugoslavian film Sutjeska (1973) (The Fifth Offensive).
  • Won Broadway’s 1961 Tony Award as Best Actor (Musical) for “Camelot” as well as a Special Award in 1976. He was also twice nominated for Tony Awards as Best Actor (Dramatic): for “Time Remembered” (1954) and for “Hamlet” (1964).
  • Was a great fan of baseball, which he followed avidly when he was in America. Burton thought Pulitzer Prize-winning baseball columnist Red Smith was a brilliant writer. Burton played softball with a team from the Broadway theatre in the 1980s, despite crippling bursitis in his shoulder.
  • He once got into a contest with Robert F. Kennedy, whom he greatly admired, in which they tried to out-do the other by quoting William Shakespeare’s sonnets. Both were word-perfect, and Burton was forced to “win” the contest by quoting one of the sonnets backwards.
  • His friend Laurence Olivier tried to interest him in taking over the National Theatre after his imminent retirement from the post. He declined, feeling that the board of directors had treated the great Laurence Olivier shabbily.
  • Was famous for his high intelligence and for being incredibly well-read. Burton was widely admired for his command and understanding of English poetry, which he taught for a term at Oxford University in the early 1970s.
  • Was the best man at Laurence Olivier’s marriage to Joan Plowright in New York City on March 17, 1961. Both were appearing on Broadway at the time, he in “Camelot” and Laurence Olivier in “Becket”.
  • Had to turn down the lead role of the British Consul in John Huston’s adaptation of Malcolm Lowry’s Under the Volcano (1984) as he was appearing in a touring production of Noël Coward’s “Private Lives” co-starring with Elizabeth Taylor. The role was subsequently played by Albert Finney, who won an Oscar nomination as Best Actor.
  • His movie contracts contained a clause that he did not have to work on the 1st of March, St David’s Day, the day honoring the patron saint of Wales.
  • He, Ray Milland, Anthony Hopkins and Catherine Zeta-Jones all were born within a 10-mile radius in south-western Wales.
  • His mother died when he was two-years old. He was taken in and raised by his older sister, Cis, and her husband in the same Port Talbot, Wales, neighborhood where fellow Welshman Anthony Hopkins later lived in as a child. “I shone in the reflection of her green-eyed, black-haired gypsy beauty,” Burton said of his sister/surrogate mother.
  • During World War II, he was admitted to Exeter College, Oxford to take the “University Short Course” for six months as a Royal Air Force cadet. While at Oxford in 1943-1944, he was a member of the Oxford University Dramatic Society. Cadets were promised that they could return to Oxford to complete their education after the war, but he did not, instead becoming a professional actor after being demobilized in 1947. Almost thirty years later, he was invited back to Oxford to teach poetry to undergraduates for a semester.
  • He was on a flight to California from Mexico, when he ran into a young man interested in acting. Burton encouraged him to pursue it full time during their conversation. That young man was Kevin Costner, who promptly left his marketing job to pursue an acting career.
  • He once bought a complete set of “The Everyman Library” for Elizabeth Taylor as a present.
  • He taught William Shakespeare to future actress Catherine Oxenberg when she was 13 and 14 years old.
  • Died shortly after the filming of Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984) was completed. He was in terrible health during filming from years of alcoholism and heavy smoking, and had to wear a neck brace during rehearsals.
  • Was a drinking partner of Richard Harris and Peter O’Toole until O’Toole was forced to give up drinking after surgery in 1976.
  • Burton received the first retrospective of his work since his death during Bradford Film Festival 2002 – almost 18 years after his death on Sunday, August 5, 1984. Twelve films were screened, among them Look Back in Anger (1959), Becket (1964), Equus (1977) and Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984), his final picture. The festival, which christened its Burton season Lion of the Welsh, also featured a strand on legendary unfinished films that included a clip of Burton in Laughter in the Dark (1969), a movie from which he was allegedly fired by director Tony Richardson. The picture, based on the novel by Vladimir Nabokov, was shut down and eventually made with Nicol Williamson in Burton’s role.
  • Grandfather of Morgan Ritchie.
  • He was awarded the CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the 1970 Queen’s Birthday Honours List for his services to drama. He collected this award on his 45th birthday with his older sister Cis, who raised him as a child, and his wife Elizabeth Taylor.
  • Had two daughters by his first wife, Sybil Williams. Actress Kate Burton (born 1957) and Jessica (born 1961), who was diagnosed as profoundly autistic and would eventually be institutionalized.
  • The twelfth of thirteen children, he insisted that his way out of an impoverished Welsh childhood was due not to acting, but to books.
  • Suffered from acute insomnia.
  • He made his stage debut at Maesteg Town Hall in Wales.
  • He died on Sunday, August 5, 1984, less than a week before he was due to begin shooting Wild Geese II (1985), a sequel to his successful mercenary thriller The Wild Geese (1978), made in 1978. He was the only actor returning for the film and, as Colonel Allen Faulkner, would have led a team of crack mercenaries to spring aged Nazi Rudolf Hess from Spandau Prison in Berlin. Burton’s death caused huge problems for producer Euan Lloyd, the man behind the original The Wild Geese (1978) and its follow-up, Wild Geese II (1985). With the rest of the cast (Scott Glenn, Barbara Carrera and Laurence Olivier (playing Hess)) in place, Euan Lloyd had just a handful of days to find a replacement for Burton. He selected British actor Edward Fox, who joined the cast as Alex Faulkner, Burton’s brother. Burton’s no-show in the film was explained by one character telling Edward Fox that they’d heard his famous warrior brother had died. The film was dedicated to Burton’s memory.
  • Spoke Cymraeg (Welsh-language) as mother tongue.
  • He once shared the record with Peter O’Toole for the most Oscar acting nominations (7) without a single win. In 2007, that record was broken, when O’Toole was nominated and lost yet again for the film Venus (2006).
  • Interred at Protestant Churchyard, Céligny, Switzerland.
  • Father of Kate Burton.
  • He took his professional name from his schoolmaster and tutor, Philip Burton, who took the 17-year old Richard Jenkins and groomed him for success, both academically and as an actor. The two became so close, Burton attempted to adopt him as his son, but was prevented from doing so as he was too young, under the law. Nevertheless, Jenkins, who became known to the world as Richard Burton, considered Philip Burton his adopted father and honored him by taking on his surname. Years later, when Philip Burton met Elizabeth Taylor and she asked Philip Burton how he came to adopt her soon-to-be fifth (and later sixth) husband, Richard piped up, “He didn’t adopt me! I adopted him!”.

Richard Burton Filmography

Title Year Status Character Role
Ellis Island 1984 TV Mini-Series Sen. Phipps Ogden Actor
Nineteen Eighty-Four 1984 O’Brien Actor
Wagner 1981-1983 TV Series Richard Wagner Actor
Great Performances 1983 TV Series White Knight Actor
Lovespell 1981 King Mark of Cornwall Actor
Circle of Two 1981 Ashley St. Clair Actor
Breakthrough 1979 Sgt. Rolf Steiner Actor
Absolution 1978 Father Goddard Actor
The Wild Geese 1978 Colonel Allen Faulkner Actor
The Medusa Touch 1978 Morlar Actor
Equus 1977 Martin Dysart Actor
Exorcist II: The Heretic 1977 Father Philip Lamont Actor
Jackpot 1975 Reid Lawerence Actor
The Gathering Storm 1974 TV Movie Winston Churchill Actor
Brief Encounter 1974 TV Movie Alec Harvey Actor
Klansman 1974 Breck Stancill Actor
The Voyage 1974 Cesare Braggi Actor
Massacre in Rome 1973 Lt. Col. Herbert Kappler Actor
Sutjeska 1973 Josip Broz Tito Actor
Divorce His – Divorce Hers 1973 TV Movie Martin Reynolds Actor
Bluebeard 1972 Kurt Von Sepper Actor
Hammersmith Is Out 1972 Hammersmith Actor
The Assassination of Trotsky 1972 Leon Trotsky Actor
Under Milk Wood 1972 First Man Actor
Mooch Goes to Hollywood 1971 TV Movie Narrator (uncredited) Actor
Villain 1971 Vic Dakin Actor
Raid on Rommel 1971 Foster Actor
Here’s Lucy 1970 TV Series Richard Burton Actor
Anne of the Thousand Days 1969 King Henry VIII Actor
Staircase 1969 Harry Leeds Actor
Laughter in the Dark 1969 Sir Edward More (scenes deleted) Actor
Where Eagles Dare 1968 Maj. Smith Actor
Candy 1968 MacPhisto Actor
Boom! 1968 Chris Flanders Actor
Wir sterben vor 1967 Short Narrator Actor
The Comedians 1967 Brown Actor
Doctor Faustus 1967 Doctor Faustus Actor
The Taming of the Shrew 1967 Petruchio Actor
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? 1966 George Actor
The Sandpiper 1965 Dr. Edward Hewitt Actor
What’s New Pussycat 1965 Man in Strip Club (uncredited) Actor
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 1965 Alec Leamas Actor
The Days of Wilfred Owen 1965 Short Narrator Actor
Hamlet 1964/I Hamlet Actor
The Night of the Iguana 1964 Rev. Dr. T. Lawrence Shannon Actor
Becket 1964 Becket
Thomas Becket
Actor
Zulu 1964 Narration spoken by (voice) Actor
Cleopatra 1963 Mark Antony Actor
The V.I.P.s 1963 Paul Andros Actor
The Longest Day 1962 Flying Officer David Campbell Actor
BBC Sunday-Night Play 1960 TV Mini-Series George Holyoake Actor
The Bramble Bush 1960 Dr. Guy Montford Actor
The Tempest 1960 TV Movie Caliban Actor
Buick-Electra Playhouse 1960 TV Series Philip Rawlings Actor
The Fifth Column 1960 TV Movie Actor
Ice Palace 1960 Zeb Kennedy Actor
Look Back in Anger 1959 Jimmy Porter Actor
A Midsummer Night’s Dream 1959 Narrator Actor
The DuPont Show of the Month 1958 TV Series Heathcliff Actor
Bitter Victory 1957 Captain Leith Actor
Sea Wife 1957 Biscuit Actor
The James Mason Show 1956 TV Series Performer (1956) Actor
Alexander the Great 1956 Alexander Actor
The Rains of Ranchipur 1955 Dr. Major Rama Safti Actor
Prince of Players 1955 Edwin Booth Actor
The Robe 1953 Marcellus Gallio Actor
The Desert Rats 1953 Capt. ‘Tammy’ MacRoberts Actor
My Cousin Rachel 1952 Philip Ashley Actor
Celanese Theatre 1952 TV Series Mat Burke Actor
Green Grow the Rushes 1951 Robert ‘Bob’ Hammond Actor
Michèle and René 1951 TV Series Prince Henry Actor
Her Panelled Door 1950 Nick Chamerd Actor
Waterfront Women 1950 Ben Satterthwaite Actor
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre 1950 TV Series Richard Actor
Now Barabbas 1949 Paddy Actor
Women of Dolwyn 1949 Gareth Actor
The Corn Is Green 1946 TV Movie Morgan Evans Actor
Doctor Faustus 1967 producer Producer
The Guest 1963 associate producer – uncredited Producer
Jackie 2016/V performer: “Camelot”, “Camelot: Finale Ultimo” Soundtrack
Fargo 2015 TV Series performer – 1 episode Soundtrack
Doctor Faustus 1967 Director
The Opening 2009 Short grateful acknowledgment Thanks
Cleopatra: The Film That Changed Hollywood 2001 TV Movie documentary dedicated to the memory of Thanks
Wild Geese II 1985 dedicatee Thanks
Nineteen Eighty-Four 1984 acknowledgment: with love and admiration Thanks
Great Broadway Musical Moments from the Ed Sullivan Show 2015 TV Movie documentary King Arthur Self
The Great Hamlets 1983 TV Mini-Series documentary Himself Self
To the Ends of the Earth 1983 Documentary Narrator Self
All-Star Party for Frank Sinatra 1983 TV Movie Himself Self
The 37th Annual Tony Awards 1983 TV Special Himself – Co-Host Self
I, Leonardo: A Journey of the Mind 1983 TV Movie Himself / Narrator (voice) Self
The Fall Guy 1982 TV Series Himself Self
Star-Studded Spoof of the New TV Season, G-Rated, with Glamour, Glitter and Gags 1982 TV Special Himself Self
The Dick Cavett Show 1980 TV Series Himself – Actor / Himself Self
Live from Lincoln Center 1980 TV Series Himself Self
California Suite 1978 Himself on TV (uncredited) Self
Hollywood’s Diamond Jubilee 1978 TV Special Himself – Interview Self
Wer sagt mir, wer ich bin… 1978 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The 50th Annual Academy Awards 1978 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Leading Role Self
Good Morning America 1977-1978 TV Series Himself Self
AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Henry Fonda 1978 TV Special documentary Himself Self
The People’s Command Performance 1978 TV Special Himself Self
The 35th Annual Golden Globe Awards 1978 TV Movie documentary Himself – Presenter Self
Dinah! 1977 TV Series Himself Self
Hollywood Greats 1977 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Kane on Friday 1977 TV Series Himself Self
CBS Salutes Lucy: The First 25 Years 1976 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The 30th Annual Tony Awards 1976 TV Special Himself – Co-Host, Special Award Recipient & Presenter Self
Volcano: An Inquiry Into the Life and Death of Malcolm Lowry 1976 Documentary Malcolm Lowry (voice) Self
Parkinson 1974 TV Series Himself Self
Film ’72 1974 TV Series Himself – Interviewee Self
Apropos Film 1973 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Cinema 1972 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Bitte umblättern 1972 TV Series Himself Self
The David Frost Show 1970-1972 TV Series Himself Self
A World of Love 1970 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The 42nd Annual Academy Awards 1970 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Actor in a Leading Role Self
60 Minutes 1970 TV Series documentary Himself Self
The Ed Sullivan Show 1961-1969 TV Series Himself Self
Anne Boleyn’s England 1969 Documentary short Himself Self
A Wall in Jerusalem 1968 Documentary Narrator (English version) Self
On Location: Where Eagles Dare 1968 Documentary short Himself Self
Robert Kennedy Remembered 1968 Documentary short Narrator Self
Paris aktuell 1968 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Gala de l’Unicef 1967 TV Series Himself Self
Public Broadcast Laboratory 1967 TV Series Himself Self
The Comedians in Africa 1967 Documentary short Himself (uncredited) Self
The Heart of Show Business 1967 TV Movie Himself – Narrator Self
Per Firenze 1966 TV Movie documentary Himself – Narrator Self
The Sammy Davis, Jr. Show 1966 TV Series Himself Self
The Jack Paar Program 1964-1965 TV Series Himself (on film) / Himself Self
A Statue for ‘The Sandpiper’ 1965 Documentary short Himself Self
The Big Sur 1965 Documentary short Himself / Narrator Self
Eulogy to 5.02 1965 Documentary short Narrator Self
ABC Scope 1964 TV Series documentary Himself Self
Freedom Spectacular 1964 TV Movie Himself Self
The 18th Annual Tony Awards 1964 TV Special Himself – Nominee: Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play and Presenter Self
Hollywood and the Stars 1964 TV Series Himself Self
On the Trail of the Iguana 1964 Short documentary Himself Self
Inheritance 1963 Documentary short Narrator Self
Farewell to the Vic 1963 TV Movie documentary Himself Self
The Broadway of Lerner and Loewe 1962 TV Movie Himself / Arthur Self
Camera Three 1961 TV Series Himself Self
Winston Churchill: The Valiant Years 1960-1961 TV Series documentary Winston Churchill Self
The 15th Annual Tony Awards 1961 TV Special Himself – Winner: Best Actor (Musical) and Accepting Award for Best Conductor Self
A Tribute to Dylan Thomas 1961 Documentary short Himself Self
Borrowed Pasture 1960 TV Movie Himself – Narrator Self
March to Aldermaston 1959 Documentary short Narrator Self
Cerdyn Nadolig – Igymru Gyfan 1958 TV Special documentary Himself Self
Alan Melville Takes You from A-Z 1958 TV Series Himself Self
Film Fanfare 1956 TV Series Himself Self
Thursday’s Children 1954 Documentary short Narrator (voice) Self
Beauty Is Truth 2017 Video Archive Footage
Welcome to the Basement 2012-2015 TV Series George Archive Footage
Colpo di scena 2014 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Kulturzeit 2012 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Elizabeth Taylor: Auction of a Lifetime 2012 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
Elizabeth Taylor: A Tribute 2011 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Jeff Wayne’s Musical Version of the War of the Worlds: Minigame Adventure 2011 Video Game The Journalist: the narrator-protagonist Archive Footage
Moguls & Movie Stars: A History of Hollywood 2010 TV Mini-Series documentary George Archive Footage
Cinemassacre’s Monster Madness 2010 TV Series documentary Father Philip Lamont Archive Footage
Robna kuca 2009 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
John le Carré 2008 Video documentary short Archive Footage
König der Spione – John le Carré 2008 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Duelle 2008 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
20 to 1 2007-2008 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Welsh Greats 2008 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Paris Hilton Inc.: The Selling of Celebrity 2007 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Jeff Wayne’s Musical Version of ‘The War of the Worlds’ 2006 Video George Herbert, The Journalist Archive Footage
Marcello, una vita dolce 2006 Documentary Himself Archive Footage
John Osborne and the Gift of Friendship 2006 Video Himself Archive Footage
La Marató 2005 2005 TV Special Himself Archive Footage
Tage und Nächte in Paris 2004 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Final Cut: The Making and Unmaking of Heaven’s Gate 2004 Documentary Mark Anthony Archive Footage
60 Minutes 2003 TV Series documentary Himself – Actor Archive Footage
Biography 1995-2003 TV Series documentary Himself / Mark Antony / Hamlet Archive Footage
Sendung ohne Namen 2002 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Reputations 2001 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Cleopatra: The Film That Changed Hollywood 2001 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton 2001 TV Short documentary Himself Archive Footage
Hollywood Remembers Lee Marvin 2000 TV Movie documentary Breck Stancill (uncredited) Archive Footage
American Masters 1997-2000 TV Series documentary Himself – Actor / Himself Archive Footage
I Love 1970’s 2000 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Elizabeth Taylor: A Musical Celebration 2000 TV Movie George (trailer of ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf ?’) (uncredited) Archive Footage
Omnibus 2000 TV Series documentary Archive Footage
Hollywood Couples 2000 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Hollywood Screen Tests: Take 1 1999 TV Movie documentary Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage
Best of British 1999 TV Series Mark Antony Archive Footage
E! True Hollywood Story 1998 TV Series documentary Himself Archive Footage
Jeff Wayne’s the War of the Worlds 1998 Video Game The Journalist / Narrator Archive Footage
Great Romances of the 20th Century: Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton 1997 TV Short documentary Himself Archive Footage
Conan 1997 TV Series Crom Archive Footage
Sphinx – Geheimnisse der Geschichte 1994-1997 TV Series documentary Marc Antony Archive Footage
The 50th Annual Tony Awards 1996 TV Special Arthur Archive Footage
Weddings of a Lifetime 1995 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
Great Performances 1988-1995 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Parkinson: The Interviews 1995 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Under Milk Wood 1992 TV Movie First Voice Archive Footage
The Very Best of the Ed Sullivan Show 2 1991 TV Special Himself Archive Footage
Hollywood Sex Symbols 1988 Video documentary short Archive Footage
Happy Birthday, Bob: 50 Stars Salute Your 50 Years with NBC 1988 TV Special Himself Archive Footage
Lerner and Loewe: Broadway’s Last Romantics 1988 TV Movie King Arthur Archive Footage
Jack Paar Comes Home 1986 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
Bob Hope’s Comedy Salute to the Soaps 1985 TV Movie Himself Archive Footage
La nuit des Césars 1985 TV Series documentary In Memoriam Archive Footage
The Rock ‘n’ Roll Years 1985 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Margret Dünser, auf der Suche nach den Besonderen 1981 TV Movie documentary Himself Archive Footage
The Dick Cavett Show 1979 TV Series Himself Archive Footage
Good Old Days Part II 1978 TV Special Himself Archive Footage
PROFILE: Hardy Kruger 1978 TV Short documentary Colonel Allen Faulkner (uncredited) Archive Footage
America at the Movies 1976 Documentary George Archive Footage
Lionpower from MGM 1967 Short uncredited Archive Footage
Mondo Hollywood 1967 Documentary Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner 1967 Short Narrator Archive Footage
The Ed Sullivan Show 1963 TV Series Singer / Scene From Camelot Archive Footage
Hollywood: The Great Stars 1963 TV Movie documentary Himself (uncredited) Archive Footage

Richard Burton Awards

Year Award Ceremony Nomination Movie Category
2013 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Motion Picture On March 1, 2013. At 6336 Hollywood Blvd. Won
1984 Best Actor Valladolid International Film Festival Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984) Won
1978 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Equus (1977) Won
1976 Grammy Grammy Awards Best Recording for Children Won
1973 Best Actor Taormina International Film Festival Rappresaglia (1973) Won
1968 Bambi Bambi Awards Best Actor – International Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) Won
1967 BAFTA Film Award BAFTA Awards Best British Actor Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) Won
1967 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Actor (Migliore Attore Straniero) The Taming of the Shrew (1967) Won
1967 Golden Laurel Laurel Awards Male Dramatic Performance Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) Won
1966 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Actor (Migliore Attore Straniero) The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965) Won
1966 Golden Laurel Laurel Awards Dramatic Performance, Male The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965) Won
1965 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Performer (Mejor intérprete de cine extranjero) Becket (1964) Won
1965 Golden Laurel Laurel Awards Dramatic Performance, Male Becket (1964) Won
1953 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Most Promising Newcomer – Male My Cousin Rachel (1952) Won
2013 Star on the Walk of Fame Walk of Fame Motion Picture On March 1, 2013. At 6336 Hollywood Blvd. Nominated
1984 Best Actor Valladolid International Film Festival Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984) Nominated
1978 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Equus (1977) Nominated
1976 Grammy Grammy Awards Best Recording for Children Nominated
1973 Best Actor Taormina International Film Festival Rappresaglia (1973) Nominated
1968 Bambi Bambi Awards Best Actor – International Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) Nominated
1967 BAFTA Film Award BAFTA Awards Best British Actor Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) Nominated
1967 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Actor (Migliore Attore Straniero) The Taming of the Shrew (1967) Nominated
1967 Golden Laurel Laurel Awards Male Dramatic Performance Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966) Nominated
1966 David David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Actor (Migliore Attore Straniero) The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965) Nominated
1966 Golden Laurel Laurel Awards Dramatic Performance, Male The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965) Nominated
1965 Fotogramas de Plata Fotogramas de Plata Best Foreign Performer (Mejor intérprete de cine extranjero) Becket (1964) Nominated
1965 Golden Laurel Laurel Awards Dramatic Performance, Male Becket (1964) Nominated
1953 Golden Globe Golden Globes, USA Most Promising Newcomer – Male My Cousin Rachel (1952) Nominated