Peter Wyngarde
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| Peter Wyngarde | |
|---|---|
| Born | Peter Paul Wyngarde August 23, 1933 Marseille, France |
| Years active | 1953 - 1994 |
Peter Paul Wyngarde (born August 23, 1933) is a British actor best known for playing the character Jason King in two television series in the late 1960s and early 1970s: Department S (1969–70) and Jason King (1971–72).
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[edit] Biography
He was born in Marseille, France, the son of an English father and a French mother. His father worked for the British Diplomatic Service, and as a result his childhood was spent in a number of different countries. In 1941, while his parents were away in India, he went to stay with a Swiss family in Shanghai. When the Imperial Japanese Army invaded the city, they were captured and placed in the Lunghua concentration camp. Conditions in the camp were sometimes harsh. On one occasion Peter had both his feet broken and spent two weeks in solitary confinement after being caught taking messages between camp huts. According to J. G. Ballard's recently published biography Miracles of Life, "Cyril Goldbert, the future Peter Wyngarde" was a fellow internee at Lunghua Camp and "He was four years older than me...". Ballard was born in November 1930 so this would place Wyngarde's birth year as 1926.
As a young man he went into acting and from the mid-1950s had various roles acting in feature films, television plays and television series guest appearances. In the late 1960s, he was a regular guest star on many of the popular UK series of the day — many of which were espionage adventure series — including The Avengers, The Saint, The Baron, The Champions, The Troubleshooters, Love Story, I Spy and The Man in Room 17. He also played the rotating guest-star role of the villainous Number Two in the episode "Checkmate" of the cult series The Prisoner, which took place in a community of spies who had retired… or been retired.
Wyngarde became a British household name through his starring role in the espionage series Department S (1969). After that series ended, his character, the suave womaniser Jason King, was spun-off into a new action espionage series entitled Jason King (1971), which ran for one season (26 one-hour episodes). The series was sold overseas and Wyngarde briefly became an international celebrity, memorably being mobbed by adoring female fans in Australia.
In 1975, he was arrested and convicted for an act of "gross indecency" with a truck driver in the toilets of Gloucester bus station. His homosexuality was well known in acting circles, where he was known as 'the Major'[1], because of a ten-year-long relationship he had from 1956 with fellow actor Alan Bates.[2], [3] This conviction, which by today's standards is not very substantial, then probably ruined his career.
After losing his TV celebrity status, Wyngarde worked in Austria, acting and directing at the English Theatre in Vienna, and in South Africa and Germany. He also landed the role of General Klytus in the film version of Flash Gordon.
During the 1980s and 1990s he made a number of TV appearances, including the Doctor Who serial Planet of Fire (1984), Hammer House Of Horror & Suspense (1986), The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes (1994) and the film Tank Malling (1989).
In recent years he has been a regular, warmly welcomed guest at Memorabilia, a cult, science fiction and sporting memorabilia fair at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham, UK.[citation needed] His most recent television appearance was as a guest of Simon Dee in the Channel Four one-off revival of his chat show Dee Time in 2003.
A number of published references state that Wyngarde's real name is Cyril Louis (or Lovis) Goldbert.[4], [5], [6][7], [8]. However, the now-defunct Hellfire Club official website described this as a myth that developed from his jokingly giving his uncle's name, Louis Jouvet, in an interview in the 1970s.[9]
[edit] In other media
In the X-Men comics, the character of Jason Wyngarde (aka Mastermind) was partially inspired by Jason King and Peter Wyngarde. Mastermind had first appeared in the 1960s, but took on the appearance and identity of Jason Wyngarde in the build-up to the X-Men's first confrontation with the Hellfire Club in the late 1970s. Wyngarde had played the leader of another Hellfire club in "A Touch of Brimstone", an episode of the popular TV series The Avengers starring Patrick Macnee and Diana Rigg who appeared in a leather costume that Jean Grey would adopt as the Hellfire Club's Black Queen[1].
[edit] Music
In 1970, Wyngarde recorded an album for RCA Victor entitled simply Peter Wyngarde and a single, La Ronde De L'Amour / The Way I Cry Over You. The album was reissued on CD as When Sex Leers Its Inquisitive Head. Unusually, Wyngarde did not deliver a set of easy listening standards but a most unusual collection of spoken word / musical arrangements.
The LP is believed to have been quickly withdrawn after its release, but has gained cult status in the intervening years.[10] Selections are often played on XM Radio's Internet-only retro-lounge channel 79, On the Rocks.
Track Listing
- Come In
- You Wonder how these Things Begin
- Rape
- La Ronde de L'amour
- Jenny Kissed Me
- Way I Cry over You
- Unknown Citizen
- It's when I Touch You
- Hippie and the Skinhead
- Try to Remember to Forget (Riviera Cowboy)
- Jenny Kissed Me and it Was…
- Widdecombe Fair
- Neville Thumbcatch
- Once Again (Flight Number Ten)
- Pay No Attention
- April
[edit] References
- ^ Roger Lewis reviews Otherwise Engaged: the Life of Alan Bates by Donald Spoto, The Daily Telegraph June 28, 2007
- ^ Alan Bates's secret gay affair with ice skater John Curry, Donald Spoto, Daily Mail, London, 19 May 2007
- ^ Otherwise Engaged: The Life of Alan Bates, Donald Spoto, Hutchinson, 2007
- ^ The regeneration game — TV repeats, The Times, London, November 30, 1991
- ^ TV Review: Walking On The Wilde Side, Evening Standard, London, July 17, 2001
- ^ Mr Showbiz Byline Chris Young, Evening Times, Glasgow, April 6, 2002
- ^ Television: TV Heroes, The Independent, London, January 23, 2003
- ^ Crime Through Time: The Black Museum, Stephen Richards, 2003, Mirage Publishing, ISBN 1902578171
- ^ FAQ, Hellfire Club website (via Internet Archive).
- ^ Peter Wyngarde Album on "Jason King's Groovy Pad"

