John Edward Hawkins Net Worth

John Edward Hawkins Net Worth is
$1.6 Million

John Edward Hawkins Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

In Britain, special Christmas plays called pantomimes are produced for children. Jack Hawkins made his London theatrical debut at age 12, playing the elf king in "Where The Rainbow Ends". At 17, he got the lead role of St. George in the same play. At 18, he made his debut on Broadway in "Journey's End". At 21, he was back in London playing a young...

Date Of BirthSeptember 14, 1910
Died1973-07-18
Place Of BirthWood Green, Middlesex, England, UK
Height5' 11" (1.8 m)
ProfessionActor, Producer
SpouseDoreen Lawrence children
ChildrenAndrew Hawkins, Nicholas Hawkins, Caroline Hawkins, Susan Hawkins
Star SignVirgo
#Trademark
1Often played friendly World War II officers
TitleSalary
Poppies Are Also Flowers (1966)£1
To Bury Caesar (1963)£10,000
The Lodger (1932)£8 a day
#Quote
1[asked why he risked his reputation on the TV series The Four Just Men (1959)] I risk my reputation every time, why not on TV?
2[replying to criticism of his portrayal of Gen. Sir Edmund Allenby in Lawrence of Arabia (1962)] I agree that the character has been slanted slightly, but Lady Allenby must remember that this is a film about Lawrence - not the Field Marshall.
3[on Lafayette (1961)] A totally forgettable film . . . the only bit of acting I have ever done solely for the money.
4All of us in the film were sure that we were making something quite unusual, and a long way removed from the Errol Flynn-taking-Burma-single-handed syndrome. This was the period of some very indifferent American war movies, whereas The Cruel Sea (1953) contained no false heroics. That is why we all felt that we were making a genuine example of the way in which a group of men went to war.
5Every time an army, navy or air force part comes up they throw it at me. There is nothing left now but the women's services! (1956)
6I think that no actor should take Hollywood too seriously; but at the same time it would be wrong to underestimate its professionalism. Really, Hollywood is a caricature of itself, and in particular this is true of the front-office types at the studios. Their enthusiasm towards you is measured precisely to match the success of your last film.
7Above all, I was taught to love and respect words. Each word had to be the right word; and each had to be spoken in a way that its weight and importance demanded.
8I adored it from the first moment. The excitement, the thrill, the smell of the theatre went right down to one's toes.
#Fact
1He appeared in three Best Picture Academy Award winners: The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), Ben-Hur (1959) and Lawrence of Arabia (1962). Alec Guinness also appeared in both The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) and Lawrence of Arabia (1962).
2Provided the official celebrity opening of the Aldersley Municipal Sports Stadium, Wolverhampton on 9 June 1956. The stadium now forms part of Aldersley Leisure Village.
3He was a student at the Italia Conti Drama School in London, England.
4He had a daughter, Susan with Jessica Tandy and two sons, Nicholas & Andrew, with Doreen Lawrence.
5His memorial service took place on what would have been his sixty-third birthday on 14 September 1973 at St. Martin-in-the-Fields, London. The address was read by Kenneth More and Richard Attenborough read the lesson.
6In his will published on September 20 1973 he left just £13,019 gross but the net amount was shown as nil. This was a result of high UK taxes and a reduction in his income following the surgery in 1966 which resulted in the loss of his voice. The family home at 34 Ennismore Gardens, South Kensington was left to his wife and his three children were provided for through a trust fund.
7He was awarded the CBE (Commander of the Order of the British Empire) in the 1958 Queen's Birthday Honours List for his services to drama.
8Hawkins joined the Royal Welch Fusiliers in 1940, was commissioned and served with the Second British Division in India. In 1944 he was seconded to GHQ India and soon afterwards succeeded to the command, as a colonel, of ENSA administration in India and South East Asia. He was demobilized in 1946.
9Made Guns at Batasi (1964), Judith (1966), Masquerade (1965) and The Poppy Is Also a Flower (1966) while suffering from cancer of the larynx. By the time he started filming The Wednesday Play: The Trial and Torture of Sir John Rampayne (1965), Hawkins had begun to cough up blood. His final role using his own voice was in a few episodes of Dr. Kildare (1961), where he managed to give a very accurate performance as a man who had just suffered a heart attack.
10Resented the idea that he was typecast in war movies, pointing out in his 1973 autobiography "Anything for a Quiet Life" that he had in fact played fewer military roles than John Mills, Trevor Howard and Richard Attenborough.
11Initially sought for the role of Melville Farr in Victim (1961), Hawkins turned the role down because he thought the part might compromise his masculine screen image. Dirk Bogarde, who eventually played Farr, opined that Hawkins feared the role of a gay barrister would "prejudice his chances of a knighthood.".
12He was voted Number 1 star at the British Box Office in 1954.
13Underwent cobalt treatment for a secondary condition of the larynx in 1959 after making The League of Gentlemen (1960). Afterwards he took voice coaching and reduced the number of cigarettes he smoked each day from about sixty to five. However, while filming Guns at Batasi (1964) five years later his voice began to fail. It was not until Christmas 1965 that he was diagnosed with throat cancer, by which time the only possible treatment was a total laryngectomy in January of the following year. Ever since, with his approval, his performances were dubbed, often by Robert Rietty or Charles Gray. Hawkins continued to smoke after losing his voice. In the completely restored edition of Lawrence of Arabia (1962) in 1989, Gray also dubbed Hawkins's voice for the sound restoration in scenes which had been deleted from previous editions of the film. In the same film, Retry had also dubbed Gamil Ratib's voice at first place.
14He died three months after an operation to insert an artificial voice box in April 1973.

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Four Just Men1959-1960TV SeriesBen Manfred
The League of Gentlemen1960Col. Norman Hyde
Ben-Hur1959Quintus Arrius
The DuPont Show of the Month1959TV SeriesBaines
The Two-Headed Spy1958Gen. Alex Schottland
Gideon of Scotland Yard1958Gideon
The World Our Stage1958TV SeriesNarrator / Actor (About Dance)
The Bridge on the River Kwai1957Major Warden
BBC Sunday-Night Theatre1953-1957TV SeriesKing Magnus Fouquier-Tinville
She Played with Fire1957Oliver Branwell
Decision Against Time1957John Mitchell
The Third Key1956Detective-Superintendent Tom Halliday
Producers' Showcase1956TV SeriesRufio
Touch and Go1955Fletcher
Land of the Pharaohs1955Pharaoh Khufu
The Prisoner1955The Interrogator
Land of Fury1954Phillip Wayne
Front Page Story1954Grant
The Intruder1953Wolf Merton
Twice Upon a Time1953Dr. Mathews
Malta Story1953Air CO Frank
The Cruel Sea1953Ericson
Outpost in Malaya1952Jim Frazer
Crash of Silence1952Searle
Angels One Five1952Group Capt. 'Tiger' Small
Murder on Monday1952Dr. Sparling
No Highway in the Sky1951Dennis Scott
Fortune in Diamonds1951Pieter Brandt
The Fighting Pimpernel1950Prince of Wales / Footpad attacking Lord Anthony
The Black Rose1950Tristram Griffin
The Great Manhunt1950Colonel Galcon
The Will1949TV MoviePhilip Ross
Hour of Glory1949R.B. Waring
Bonnie Prince Charlie1948Lord George Murray
The Fallen Idol1948Detective Ames
The Next of Kin1942Brigade Major Harcourt (as 2nd Lieut Jack Hawkins)
The Flying Squad1940Mark McGill
Murder Will Out1939Stamp
A Royal Divorce1938Capt. Charles
Who Goes Next?1938Capt. Beck
The Frog1937Capt. Gordon
Beauty and the Barge1937Lt. Seton Boyne
Peg of Old Drury1935Michael O'Taffe
Lorna Doone1934Member of the Court (uncredited)
Death at a Broadcast1934Herbert Evans
Autumn Crocus1934Alaric
Shot in the Dark1933Norman Paull
The Jewel1933Peter Roberts
I Lived with You1933Mort
The Lost Chord1933Sr. Jim Selby
The Good Companions1933Albert
The Phantom Fiend1932John Martin
The Perfect Alibi1930Alfred
QB VII1974TV Mini-SeriesJustice Gilroy
Tales That Witness Madness1973Dr. Nicholas
Theatre of Blood1973Solomon Psaltery
Escape to the Sun1972Baburin
Young Winston1972Mr. Welldon
The Last Lion1972Ryk Mannering
Kidnapped1971Captain Hoseason
Nicholas and Alexandra1971Count Fredericks
When Eight Bells Toll1971Sir Anthony Skouras
The Beloved1971Father Nicholas
Jane Eyre1970TV MovieMr. Brocklehurst
Waterloo1970/IGeneral Sir Thomas Picton
The Adventures of Gerard1970Marshal Millefleurs (Renegade English Officer)
Lola1970Judge Millington-Draper
Those Daring Young Men in Their Jaunty Jalopies1969Count Levinovitch
Oh! What a Lovely War1969Emperor Franz Joseph
The Father1969ShortCaptain Bill
Great Catherine1968The British Ambassador
Shalako1968Sir Charles Daggett
Stalked1968ShortThe Man
The Poppy Is Also a Flower1966General Bahar
Mystery and Imagination1966TV SeriesColonel Mortimer
Judith1966Major Lawton
Dr. Kildare1966TV SeriesJustin Post
The Wednesday Play1965TV SeriesSir John Rampayne
Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre1965TV SeriesSilcox
Masquerade1965Colonel Drexel
Armchair Theatre1965TV SeriesLen Driver
Lord Jim1965Marlow
Guns at Batasi1964Colonel Deal
The Third Secret1964Sir Frederick Belline
Zulu1964Otto Witt
Rampage1963Otto Abbot
ITV Television Playhouse1963TV SeriesAdam Hilderson
The DuPont Show of the Week1963TV SeriesAdam Hilderson
Lawrence of Arabia1962General Allenby
Five Finger Exercise1962Stanley Harrington
Two Loves1961William W.J. Abercrombie
Lafayette1961General Cornwallis

Producer

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Ruling Class1972producer
The Party's Over1965executive producer - uncredited

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Film Night1972TV SeriesHimself
The Dick Cavett Show1971TV SeriesHimself
The Merv Griffin Show1962TV SeriesHimself
Here's Hollywood1961TV SeriesHimself
The International Variety Show1961TV SeriesHimself
I've Got a Secret1959TV SeriesHimself
The World Our Stage1958TV SeriesHimself
The Rise and Fall of a Jungle Giant1958Documentary shortHimself
Hancock's Half Hour1957TV SeriesHimself
This Is Show Business1955TV SeriesHimself
Stage by Stage1955TV SeriesHimself - Introduction
This Little Ship1953Documentary shortNarrator (voice)

Archive Footage

TitleYearStatusCharacter
20 to 12010TV Series documentaryQuintus Arrius
The Naked Archaeologist2008TV Series documentaryQuintus Arrius
A Real Summer2007TV MovieHimself (uncredited)
Best of British1999TV SeriesHimself
Northern Exposure1995TV SeriesQuintus Arrius
The 1950's: Music, Memories & Milestones1988Video documentaryHimself
The Golden Gong1985TV Movie documentary
The British Greats1980TV SeriesHimself
Zwischen Glück und Krone1959DocumentaryHimself

Won Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
1960Zulueta PrizeSan Sebastián International Film FestivalBest ActorThe League of Gentlemen (1960)

Nominated Awards

YearAwardCeremonyNominationMovie
1975Primetime EmmyPrimetime Emmy AwardsOutstanding Single Performance by a Supporting Actor in a Comedy or Drama SpecialQB VII (1974)
1957BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest British ActorThe Long Arm (1956)
1956BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest British ActorThe Prisoner (1955)
1954BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest British ActorThe Cruel Sea (1953)
1953BAFTA Film AwardBAFTA AwardsBest British ActorMandy (1952)

Known for movies

Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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