Richard Harris
Harris in 1985
Born
Richard St John Francis Harris

(1930-10-01)1 October 1930
Limerick, Ireland
Died25 October 2002(2002-10-25) (aged 72)
Bloomsbury, London, England
Resting placeCremated; ashes scattered in The Bahamas
Alma materLondon Academy of Music and Dramatic Art
Occupation(s)Actor, singer
Years active1956–2002
Spouses
  • Elizabeth Rees-Williams
    (m. 1957; div. 1969)
  • (m. 1974; div. 1982)
Children
RelativesAnnabelle Wallis (great-niece)
Signature

Richard St John Francis Harris (1 October 1930 – 25 October 2002)[1] was an Irish actor and singer. Having studied at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art, he rose to prominence as an icon of the British New Wave. He received numerous accolades including the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actor, and a Grammy Award. In 2020, he was listed at number 3 on The Irish Times's list of Ireland's greatest film actors.[2]

Harris received two Academy Award for Best Actor nominations for his performances in This Sporting Life (1963), and The Field (1991). Other notable roles include in The Guns of Navarone (1961), Red Desert (1964), A Man Called Horse (1970), Cromwell (1970), Unforgiven (1992), Gladiator (2000), and The Count of Monte Cristo (2002). He gained cross generational acclaim for his role as Albus Dumbledore in the first two Harry Potter films: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (2001) and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002), the latter of which was his final film role.

He portrayed King Arthur in the 1967 film Camelot based on the Lerner and Loewe musical of the same name. For his performance he received the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. He reprised the role in the 1981 Broadway musical revival. He received a Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actor for his role in Pirandello's Henry IV.(1991).

Harris received a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie nomination for his role in The Snow Goose (1971). Harris had a number-one singing hit in Australia, Jamaica and Canada, and a top-ten hit in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the United States with his 1968 recording of Jimmy Webb's song "MacArthur Park". He received a Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance nomination for the song.

Early life

Harris was born on 1 October 1930, at Overdale, 8 Landsdown Villas, Ennis Road, Limerick,[3][4][5] and was the fifth in a family of eight children, (six boys & two girls), to flour merchant Ivan Harris and Mildred (née Harty).[1] Overdale was "a tall, elegant, early 19th-century redbrick" house with nine bedrooms, in a wealthy part of Limerick, the houses "built at the turn of the 20th century for Limerick's burgeoning middle class... people who could afford properly grand drawing rooms, a bedroom each for the children and one for the pot, plus space for a few servants".[6][7] He was educated by the Jesuits at Crescent College. A talented rugby player, he appeared on several Munster Junior and Senior Cup teams for Crescent, and played for Garryowen.[8] Harris's athletic career was cut short when he caught tuberculosis in his teens. He remained an ardent fan of the Munster Rugby and Young Munster teams until his death, attending many of their matches, and there are numerous stories of japes at rugby matches with actors and fellow rugby fans Peter O'Toole and Richard Burton.

After recovering from tuberculosis, Harris moved to Great Britain, wanting to become a director. He could not find any suitable training courses, and enrolled in the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art to learn acting. He had failed an audition at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and had been rejected by the Central School of Speech and Drama, because they felt he was too old at 24.[9] While still a student, he rented the tiny "off-West End" Irving Theatre, and there directed his own production of Clifford Odets's play Winter Journey (The Country Girl).

After completing his studies at the academy, he joined Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop. He began getting roles in West End theatre productions, starting with The Quare Fellow in 1956, a transfer from the Theatre Workshop. He spent nearly a decade in obscurity, learning his profession on stages throughout the UK.[10]

Career

1959–1963: Early roles and breakthrough

Harris made his film debut in 1959 in the film Alive and Kicking, and played the lead role in The Ginger Man in the West End in 1959. In his second film he had a small role as an IRA Volunteer in Shake Hands with the Devil (1959), supporting James Cagney. The film was shot in Ireland and directed by Michael Anderson who offered Harris a role in his next movie, The Wreck of the Mary Deare (1959), shot in Hollywood.

Harris played another IRA Volunteer in A Terrible Beauty (1960), alongside Robert Mitchum. He had a memorable bit part in the film The Guns of Navarone (1961) as a Royal Australian Air Force pilot who reports that blowing up the "bloody guns" of the island of Navarone is impossible by an air raid. He had a larger part in The Long and the Short and the Tall (1961), playing a British soldier; Harris clashed with Laurence Harvey and Richard Todd during filming. For his role in the film Mutiny on the Bounty (1962), despite being virtually unknown to film audiences, Harris reportedly insisted on third billing, behind Trevor Howard and Marlon Brando, an actor he greatly admired. However, Harris fell out with Brando over the latter's behaviour during the film's production.

Harris's first starring role was in the film This Sporting Life (1963), as a bitter young coal miner, Frank Machin, who becomes an acclaimed rugby league football player. It was based on the novel by David Storey and directed by Lindsay Anderson. For his role, Harris won Best Actor in 1963 at the Cannes Film Festival and an Academy Award nomination. Harris followed this with a leading role in the Italian film, Michelangelo Antonioni's Il Deserto Rosso (Red Desert, 1964). This won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival.

Harris received an offer to support Kirk Douglas in a British war film, The Heroes of Telemark (1965), directed by Anthony Mann, playing a Norwegian resistance leader. He then went to Hollywood to support Charlton Heston in Sam Peckinpah's Major Dundee (1965), as an Irish immigrant who became a Confederate cavalryman during the American Civil War. He played Cain in John Huston's film The Bible: In the Beginning... (1966). More successful at the box office was Hawaii (1966), in which Harris starred alongside Julie Andrews and Max von Sydow.

1967–1971: Rise to prominence

As a change of pace, he was the romantic lead in a Doris Day spy spoof comedy, Caprice (1967), directed by Frank Tashlin. Harris next performed the role of King Arthur in the film adaptation of the musical play Camelot (1967). Critic Roger Ebert described the casting of Harris and Vanessa Redgrave as "about the best King Arthur and Queen Guenevere I can imagine".[11] Harris revived the role in a Broadway revival at the Winter Garden Theatre from 15 November 1981, to 2 January 1982, and broadcast on HBO a year later. Starring Meg Bussert as Guenevere, Richard Muenz as Lancelot and Thor Fields as Tom of Warwick. Harris, who had starred in the film, and Muenz also took the show on tour nationwide.[12]

In The Molly Maguires (1970), he played James McParland, the detective who infiltrates the title organisation, headed by Sean Connery. It was a box office flop. However A Man Called Horse (1970), with Harris in the title role, an 1825 English aristocrat who is captured by Native Americans, was a major success. He played the title role in the film Cromwell in 1970 opposite Alec Guinness as King Charles I of England. That year British exhibitors voted him the 9th-most popular star at the UK box office.[13]

In 1971 Harris starred in a BBC TV film adaptation The Snow Goose, from a screenplay by Paul Gallico. It won a Golden Globe for Best Movie made for TV and was nominated for both a BAFTA and an Emmy.[14] and was shown in the U.S. as part of the Hallmark Hall of Fame. He made his directorial debut with Bloomfield (1971) and starred in Man in the Wilderness (1971), a revisionist Western based on the Hugh Glass story.

1973–1981: Established actor

Harris in Orca

Harris starred in a Western for Samuel Fuller, Riata, which stopped production several weeks into filming. The project was re-assembled with a new director and cast, except for Harris, who returned: The Deadly Trackers (1973). In 1973, Harris published a book of poetry, I, In the Membership of My Days, which was later reissued in part in an audio LP format, augmented by self-penned songs such as "I Don't Know".

Harris starred in two thrillers: 99 and 44/100% Dead (1974), for John Frankenheimer, and Juggernaut (1974), for Richard Lester. In Echoes of a Summer (1976) he played the father of a young girl with a terminal illness. He had a cameo as Richard the Lionheart in Robin and Marian (1976), for Lester, then was in The Return of a Man Called Horse (1976). Harris led the all-star cast in the train disaster film The Cassandra Crossing (1976). He played Gulliver in the part-animated Gulliver's Travels (1977) and was reunited with Michael Anderson in Orca (1977), battling a killer whale.

Harris and Jenny Agutter in The Snow Goose (1971)

He appeared in another action film, Golden Rendezvous (1977), based on a novel by Alistair Maclean, shot in South Africa. Harris was sued by the film's producer for his drinking; Harris counter-sued for defamation and the matter was settled out of court.[15] Golden Rendezvous was a flop but The Wild Geese (1978), where Harris played one of several mercenaries, was a big success outside America.[16] Ravagers (1979) was more action, set in a post-apocalyptic world. Game for Vultures (1979) was set in Rhodesia and shot in South Africa.

In Hollywood he appeared in The Last Word (1979), then supported Bo Derek in Tarzan, the Ape Man (1981). He made a film in Canada, Your Ticket Is No Longer Valid (1981), a drama about impotence. He followed it with another Canadian film, Highpoint, a movie so bad it was not released for several years.

1980–1988: Continued success

For a while in the 1980s, Harris went into semi-retirement on Paradise Island, in the Bahamas, where he kicked his drinking habit and embraced a healthier lifestyle. It had a beneficial effect. Harris's career was revived by his success on stage in Camelot, and powerful performance in the West End run of Pirandello's Henry IV.[17]

He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1990, when he was surprised by Michael Aspel during the curtain call of the Pirandello's play Henry IV at the Wyndham's Theatre in London. Over several years in the late 1980s, Harris worked with Irish author Michael Feeney Callan on his biography, which was published by Sidgwick & Jackson in 1990. His film work during this period included: Triumphs of a Man Called Horse (1983), Martin's Day (1985), Strike Commando 2 (1988), King of the Wind (1990) and Mack the Knife (1990) (a film version of The Threepenny Opera in which he played J.J. Peachum ) plus the TV film version of Maigret, opposite Barbara Shelley. This indicated declining popularity which Harris told his biographer, Michael Feeney Callan, he was "utterly reconciled to".

1989–2002: Stardom and final roles

In June 1989, director Jim Sheridan cast Harris in the lead role in The Field, written by the esteemed Irish playwright John B. Keane. The lead role of "Bull" McCabe was to be played by former Abbey Theatre actor Ray McAnally. When McAnally died suddenly on 15 June 1989, Harris was offered the McCabe role. The Field was released in 1990 and earned Harris his second Academy Award nomination for Best Actor. He lost to Jeremy Irons for Reversal of Fortune. In 1992, Harris had a supporting role in the film Patriot Games. He had good roles in Unforgiven (1992), Wrestling Ernest Hemingway (1993) and Silent Tongue (1994). He played the title role in Abraham (1994) and had the lead in Cry, the Beloved Country (1995).

A lifelong supporter of Jesuit education principles,[18] Harris established a friendship with University of Scranton President Rev. J. A. Panuska[19][20] and raised funds for a scholarship for Irish students established in honour of his brother and manager, Dermot, who had died the previous year of a heart attack.[19][20] He chaired acting workshops and cast the university's production of Julius Caesar in November 1987.

Harris appeared in two films which won the Academy Award for Best Picture: firstly as the gunfighter "English Bob" in the revisionist Western Unforgiven (1992); secondly as the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius in Ridley Scott's Gladiator (2000). He also played a lead role alongside James Earl Jones in the Darrell Roodt film adaptation of Cry, the Beloved Country (1995). In 1999, Harris starred in the film To Walk with Lions. After Gladiator, Harris played the supporting role of Albus Dumbledore in the first two of the Harry Potter films, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (2001) and Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002),[21] the latter of which was his final film role.[22] Harris portrayed Abbé Faria in Kevin Reynolds' film adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo (2002). The film Kaena: The Prophecy (2003) was dedicated to him posthumously as he had voiced the character Opaz before his death.

Harris hesitated to take the role of Dumbledore in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (2001) owing to the multi-film commitment and his declining health, but he ultimately accepted because, according to his account of the story, his 11-year-old granddaughter threatened never to speak to him again if he did not take it.[23] In an interview with the Toronto Star in 2001, Harris expressed his concern that his association with the Harry Potter films would outshine the rest of his career. He explained, "Because, you see, I don't just want to be remembered for being in those bloody films, and I'm afraid that's what's going to happen to me."[24]

Harris also made part of the Bible TV movie project filmed as a cinema production for the TV, a project produced by Lux Vide Italy with the collaboration of RAI and Channel 5 of France,[25] and premiered in the United States in the channel TNT in the 1990s. He portrayed the main and title character in the production Abraham (1993) as well as Saint John of Patmos in the 2000 TV film production Apocalypse.

Singing career

Harris recorded several albums of music, one of which, A Tramp Shining, included the seven-minute hit song "MacArthur Park" (Harris insisted on singing the lyric as "MacArthur's Park").[26] This song was written by Jimmy Webb, and it reached number 2 on the American Billboard Hot 100 chart. It also topped several music sales charts in Europe during the summer of 1968. "MacArthur Park" sold over one million copies and was awarded a gold disc.[27] A second album, also consisting entirely of music composed by Webb, The Yard Went on Forever, was released in 1969.[28] In the 1973 TV special "Burt Bacharach in Shangri-La", after singing Webb's "Didn't We", Harris tells Bacharach that since he was not a trained singer he approached songs as an actor concerned with words and emotions, acting the song with the sort of honesty the song is trying to convey. Then he proceeds to sing "If I Could Go Back", from the Lost Horizon soundtrack.

Personal life

Richard Harris and Ann Turkel in 1977

In 1957, Harris married Elizabeth Rees-Williams, daughter of David Rees-Williams, 1st Baron Ogmore. They had three children: actor Jared Harris, actor Jamie Harris, and director Damian Harris. Harris and Rees-Williams divorced in 1969, after which Elizabeth married Rex Harrison. Harris's second marriage was to the American actress Ann Turkel in 1974, they divorced in 1982.[29]

Harris was a member of the Knights of Malta.[30]

Harris paid £75,000 for William Burges' Tower House in Holland Park in 1968, after discovering that the American entertainer Liberace had arranged to buy the house but had not yet put down a deposit.[31][32] Harris employed the original decorators, Campbell Smith & Company Ltd., to carry out extensive restoration work on the interior.[32]

Harris was a vocal supporter of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) from 1973 until 1984.[33] In January 1984, remarks he made on the previous month's Harrods bombing caused great controversy, after which he discontinued his support for the PIRA.[34][35][33]

At the height of his stardom in the 1960s and early 1970s, Harris was almost as well known for his hellraiser lifestyle and heavy drinking as he was for his acting career. He was a longtime alcoholic until he became a teetotaller in 1981. Nevertheless, he did resume drinking Guinness a decade later.[36] He gave up drugs after almost dying from a cocaine overdose in 1978.

Illness and death

Harris was diagnosed with Hodgkin's disease in August 2002, reportedly after being hospitalised with pneumonia.[37] He died at University College Hospital in Bloomsbury, London, on 25 October 2002, aged 72.[38] Harris had quipped that "It was the food!" as he was wheeled out of the Savoy Hotel for the last time.[39] Harris spent his final three days in a coma.[40] Harris's body was cremated, and his ashes were scattered in The Bahamas, where he owned a home.[41]

Harris was a lifelong friend of actor Peter O'Toole, and his family reportedly hoped that O'Toole would replace Harris as Dumbledore in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004). There were, however, concerns about insuring O'Toole for the six remaining films in the series.[42] Harris was ultimately succeeded as Dumbledore by Michael Gambon.[43] Chris Columbus, director of the first two Harry Potter films, had visited Harris during his last days and had promised not to recast Dumbledore, confident of his eventual recovery. In a 2021 interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Columbus revealed that Harris was writing an autobiography during his stay at the hospital, but it has not been published since.[44]

Memorials and legacy

A statue in Kilkee, Ireland, of the young Harris playing racket ball

On 30 September 2006, Manuel Di Lucia, of Kilkee, County Clare, a longtime friend, organised the placement in Kilkee of a bronze life-size statue of Richard Harris. It shows Harris at the age of eighteen playing the sport of Racquetball. (He had won the local competition three or four times in a row during the late 1940s.) The sculptor was Seamus Connolly and the work was unveiled by Russell Crowe.[45] Harris was an accomplished squash racquets player, winning the Tivoli Cup in Kilkee four years in a row from 1948 to 1951, a record unsurpassed to this day.[46]

Another life-size statue of Richard Harris, as King Arthur from his film Camelot, has been erected in Bedford Row, in the centre of his home town of Limerick. The sculptor of this statue was the Irish sculptor Jim Connolly, a graduate of the Limerick School of Art and Design.

At the 2009 BAFTAs, Mickey Rourke dedicated his Best Actor award to Harris, calling him a "good friend and great actor".

In 2013, Rob Gill and Zeb Moore founded the annual Richard Harris International Film Festival.[47] The Richard Harris Film Festival is one of Ireland's fastest-growing film festivals, growing from just ten films in 2013 to over 115 films in 2017. Each year, one of Harris's sons attends the festival in Limerick.

In 2015, the Limerick Writers' Centre unveiled a commemorative plaque outside Charlie St George's pub on Parnell Street. The pub was a favourite drinking place of Harris on his visits to Limerick. The plaque, celebrating Harris's literary output as part of a Literary Walking Tour of Limerick, was unveiled by his son Jared Harris.[48]

In 1996, Harris was honoured with a commemorative Irish postage stamp for the "Centenary of Irish Cinema", a four-stamp set featuring twelve Irish actors in four Irish films.[49][50] He was again honoured in ‘Irish Abroad’ stamps in 2020.[51]

Filmography

Film

Year Title Role Notes
1959 Alive and KickingLover
1959 Shake Hands with the DevilTerence O'Brien
1959 The Wreck of the Mary DeareHiggens
1960 A Terrible BeautySean Reilly
1961 The Guns of NavaroneSquadron Leader Barnsby RAAF
1961 The Long and the Short and the TallCorporal Edward "Johnno" Johnstone
1962 Mutiny on the BountySeaman John Mills
1963 This Sporting LifeFrank Machin
1964 Red DesertCorrado Zeller
1965 The Heroes of TelemarkKnut Straud
1965 Major DundeeCapt. Benjamin Tyreen
1966 The Bible: In The BeginningCain
1966 HawaiiRafer Hoxworth
1967 Caprice Christopher White
1967 CamelotKing Arthur
1970 The Molly MaguiresDetective James McParlan
1970 A Man Called HorseJohn Morgan
1970 CromwellOliver Cromwell[52]
1971 BloomfieldEitanAlso director and additional writer
1971 Man in the WildernessZachary Bass
1973 The Deadly TrackersSheriff Sean Kilpatrick
1974 99 and 44/100% DeadHarry Crown
1974 JuggernautLt. Cmdr. Anthony Fallon
1976 Echoes of a SummerEugene StridenAlso executive producer
1976 Robin and MarianRichard the Lionheart
1976 The Return of a Man Called HorseLord John MorganAlso executive producer
1976 The Cassandra CrossingDr. Jonathan Chamberlain
1977 Gulliver's TravelsGulliver
1977 Orca: The Killer WhaleCaptain Nolan
1977 Golden RendezvousJohn Carter
1978 The Wild GeeseCapt. Rafer Janders
1979 RavagersFalk
1979 Game for VulturesDavid Swansey
1980 The Last WordDanny Travis
1981 Tarzan, the Ape ManJames Parker
1981 Your Ticket Is No Longer ValidJason
1982 Triumphs of a Man Called HorseJohn Morgan
1984 HighpointLewis Kinney
1985 Martin's DayMartin Steckert
1988 Strike Commando 2Vic Jenkins
1990 King of the WindKing George II
1990 Mack the KnifeMr. Peachum
1990 The Field'Bull' McCabe
1992 Patriot GamesPaddy O'Neil
1992 UnforgivenEnglish Bob
1993 Wrestling Ernest HemingwayFrank
1994 Silent TonguePrescott Roe
1995 Cry, the Beloved CountryJames Jarvis
1996 Trojan EddieJohn Power
1997 Savage HeartsSir Roger Foxley
1997 Smilla's Sense of SnowDr. Andreas Tork
1997 This Is the SeaOld Man Jacobs
1998 The Barber of SiberiaDouglas McCraken
1999 To Walk with LionsGeorge Adamson
1999 Grizzly FallsOld Harry
2000 GladiatorMarcus Aurelius
2001 The PearlDr. Karl
2001 My KingdomSandeman
2001 Harry Potter and the Philosopher's StoneProfessor Albus Dumbledore
2002 The Count of Monte CristoAbbé Faria
2002 Harry Potter and the Chamber of SecretsProfessor Albus DumbledorePosthumous release
2004 Kaena: The ProphecyOpazVoice; Posthumous release

Television

Year Title Role Venue
1958ITV Play of the WeekMichael O'RiordanEpisode: "The Iron Harp"
1958ITV Television PlayhouseDan GalvinEpisode: "Rest in Violence"
1958The DuPont Show of the MonthPerformerEpisode: "The Hasty Heart"
1960Armchair TheatreMajor GaylordEpisode: "Come in Razor Red"
1960The Art Carney SpecialPerformerEpisode: "Victory"
1971The Snow GoosePhilip RhayaderTelevision movie
1982CamelotKing ArthurTelevision movie
1985MaigretJules MaigretTelevision movie
1993AbrahamAbrahamTelevision movie
1995The Great KandinskyErnest KandinskyTelevision movie
1997The HunchbackDom FrolloTelevision movie
2000The ApocalypseJohnTelevision movie
2003Julius CaesarLucius Cornelius Sulla2 episodes
Posthumous release

Theatre

Year Title Role Venue
early 1970sBecketUnsureHaymarket Theatre, London
1981–1985CamelotKing ArthurOld Vic Theatre, London
Winter Garden Theatre, Broadway
National Tour
1990Henry IVHenry IVWyndham's Theatre, London

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Nominated work Result Ref.
1963Academy AwardsBest Actor in a Leading RoleThis Sporting LifeNominated
1991The FieldNominated
1968Golden Globe AwardsBest Motion Picture Actor – Musical/ComedyCamelotWon
1991Best Actor in a Motion Picture – DramaThe FieldNominated
1968Grammy AwardsAlbum of the YearA Tramp ShiningNominated
1968Contemporary Pop Male VocalistMacArthur ParkNominated
1973Best Spoken Word RecordingJonathan Livingston SeagullWon
1975The ProphetNominated
1963Cannes Film FestivalBest Actor AwardThis Sporting LifeWon
1964British Academy Film AwardBest British ActorThis Sporting LifeNominated
1971Berlin International Film FestivalGolden Berlin BearBloomfieldNominated
1971Moscow Film FestivalBest ActorCromwellWon[52][53]
1972Primetime Emmy AwardOutstanding Single Performance by an ActorThe Snow GooseNominated
1990Evening Standard Theatre AwardsBest ActorHenry IVWon
1991Laurence Olivier AwardsBest ActorHenry IVNominated
2000European Film AwardsLifetime Achievement AwardWon
2001Empire AwardsLifetime Achievement AwardWon
2001London Film Critics Circle AwardsDilys Powell AwardWon
2001Screen Actors Guild AwardsOutstanding Cast in a Motion PictureGladiatorNominated
2002British Independent Film AwardsBest ActorMy KingdomNominated
2002Outstanding Contribution by an ActorWon
2003Phoenix Film Critics Society AwardsBest Acting EnsembleHarry Potter and the Chamber of SecretsNominated

Discography

Albums

  • Camelot (Motion Picture Soundtrack) (1967)
  • A Tramp Shining (1968)
  • The Yard Went On Forever (1968)
  • The Richard Harris Love Album (1970)
  • My Boy (1971)
  • Slides (1972)
  • Tommy (1972)
  • His Greatest Performances (1973)
  • The Prophet (1974) (music by Arif Mardin, based on The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran)
  • I, in the Membership of My Days (1974)
  • Gulliver Travels (1977)
  • Camelot (Original 1982 London Cast recording) (1982)
  • Mack The Knife (Original Soundtrack) (1989)
  • Little Tramp (Musical) (1992)
  • The Apocalypse (The Story of John the Apostle on an Island named Patmos) (2004)

Singles

Soundtracks

  • Camelot (Original 1982 London Cast Recording) (1988)
  • Mack the Knife (Motion Picture Soundtrack) (1989)
  • Tommy (studio recording) (1990)
  • Camelot (Motion Picture Soundtrack) (1993)

Compilations

  • A Tramp Shining (1993)
  • The Prophet (1995)
  • The Webb Sessions 1968–1969 (1996)
  • MacArthur Park (1997)
  • Slides/My Boy (2-CD Set) (2005)
  • My Boy (2006)
  • Man of Words Man of Music The Anthology 1968–1974 (2008)

References

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  2. Clarke, Donald; Brady, Tara (13 June 2020). "The 50 greatest Irish film actors of all time – in order". The Irish Times. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  3. "Overdale, 8 Landsdown Villas, Ennis Road, LIMERICK MUNICIPAL BOROUGH, Limerick, LIMERICK". Buildings of Ireland.
  4. "He was one of the most outstanding film stars of his time". Irish Independent. 27 October 2002. Retrieved 10 December 2007.
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  8. "Limerick rugby full of heroes". Wesclark.com. 24 May 2002. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
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  10. "Camelot movie review". rogerebert.com. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  11. "Richard Harris, King Arthur of Camelot on Stage and Screen, Dead at 72". Playbill.com. 25 October 2002. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  12. "Paul Newman Britain's favourite star". The Times. London, England. 31 December 1970. p. 9 via The Times Digital Archive.
  13. The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present. Ballantine Books. 2003. p. 1422. ISBN 0-345-45542-8.
  14. "Actor Harris linked to scandal in South Africa". Chicago Tribune. 22 November 1978. p. a6.
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  22. The Late Show With David Letterman interview, 2001
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  24. "Bible Project for TV". Archived from the original on 17 March 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  25. Fresh Air interview with Jimmy Webb by Terry Gross on NPR, 2004
  26. Murrells, Joseph (1978). The Book of Golden Discs (2nd ed.). London: Barrie and Jenkins Ltd. p. 241. ISBN 978-0-214-20512-5. Retrieved 8 November 2011.
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  31. 1 2 Caroline Dakers (11 December 1999). The Holland Park Circle: Artists and Victorian Society. Yale University Press. pp. 276–. ISBN 978-0-300-08164-0. Retrieved 28 June 2012.
  32. 1 2 Michael Feeney Callan (2004). "Richard Harris: Sex, Death and the Movies". Pavilion Books. p. 267. ISBN 978-1-86105-766-2.
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  34. "Richard Harris ducking IRA "bombs"". The Gettysburg Times. 25 November 1988. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  35. Cripps, Ed (1 September 2016). "The Glory Days of the Hellraiser". The Rake. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
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Further reading

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