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Born to British parents in Malaya, Michael Gough received classical training at the Old Vic Theater, where he made his stage debut in 1936. He acted on Broadway the following year, inaugurating a distinguished stage career on both sides of the Atlantic. Gough did not enter films until after WWII, first performing in the striking Technicolor noir melodrama, done up in period dress, "Blanche Fury" (1947). For the next decade his appearances were intermittent and primarily in historical drama, ranging from "Anna Karenina" (1948) to Laurence Olivier's adaptation of "Richard III" (1956), with Gough as one of the murderers....

Filmography

Caravaggio - ( Cardinal Del Monte / 2002 / Released / Gelfand Films )
The Cherry Orchard - ( Feers / 2002 / Released / )
St. Ives - ( The Count / 2001 / Released / )
Lady and the Tramp II: Scamp's Adventure - ( Song Performer / 2000 / Released / )
Sleepy Hollow - ( Notary Hardenbrook / 1999 / Released / )
What Rats Won't Do - ( / 1998 / Released / )
Batman & Robin - ( Alfred Pennyworth / 1997 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Batman Forever - ( Alfred the Butler / 1995 / Released / )
Uncovered - ( Don Manuel / 1995 / Released / )
Nostradamus - ( Jean De Remy / 1994 / Released / Ascot Elite Films )
The Advocate - ( Magistrate Boniface / 1994 / Released / )
The Age of Innocence - ( Henry Van Der Luyden / 1993 / Released / )
Wittgenstein - ( Bertrand Russell / 1993 / Released / Uplink Co )
Batman Returns - ( Alfred The Butler / 1992 / Released / )
Strapless - ( Douglas Brodie / 1990 / Released / Nurit Shani )
The Garden - ( -overs / 1990 / Released / Argus Film )
Batman - ( Alfred the Butler / 1989 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Blackeyes - ( Morris Kingsley / 1989 / Released / )
Rarg - ( / 1989 / Released / )
The Serpent and the Rainbow - ( Schoonbacher / 1988 / Released / )
Maschenka - ( Vater / 1987 / Released / )
Memed My Hawk - ( Kerimoglu / 1987 / Released / Focus Films )
The Fourth Protocol - ( Sir Bernard Hemmings / 1987 / Released / Hoyts Distribution )
Out of Africa - ( Lord Delamere / 1985 / Released / )
Stranger Than Fiction - ( / 1985 / Released / British Film Institute )
Oxford Blues - ( Dr Ambrose / 1984 / Released / Toho-Towa Company )
Top Secret! - ( Dr Flammond / 1984 / Released / )
The Dresser - ( Frank Carrington / 1983 / Released / Columbia-EMI-Warner )
Venom - ( David Ball / 1981 / Released / )
L' Amour en Question - ( Sir Baldwin / 1978 / Released / EFC )
The Boys From Brazil - ( Mr Harrington / 1978 / Released / )
Satan's Slave - ( Alexander Yorke / 1976 / Released / )
The Legend of Hell House - ( / 1973 / Released / )
Savage Messiah - ( Mr Gaudier / 1972 / Released / )
Julius Caesar - ( Metellus Cimber / 1971 / Released / )
Trog - ( Sam Murdock / 1970 / Released / Warner Bros. Pictures Distribution )
A Walk With Love and Death - ( Mad Monk / 1969 / Released / )
Women in Love - ( Tom Brangwen / 1969 / Released / )
Berserk - ( Dorando / 1967 / Released / )
The Skull - ( Auctioneer / 1965 / Released / )
The Go-Between - ( Mr Maudsley / 1963 / Released / MGM Distribution Company )
The Phantom of the Opera - ( Lord Ambrose D'Arcy / 1962 / Released / )
I Like Money - ( Tamise / 1961 / Released / )
Horrors of the Black Museum - ( Edmond Bancroft / 1959 / Released / AIP )
Horror of Dracula - ( Arthur Holmwood / 1958 / Released / Universal-International )
Night Ambush - ( Andoni Aoidakis / 1958 / Released / )
The Horse's Mouth - ( Abel--the sculptor / 1958 / Released / )
Reach For the Sky - ( Flying Instructor / 1956 / Released / )
Richard III - ( Dighton--Murderer / 1955 / Released / Lopert Films )
Rob Roy, the Highland Rogue - ( Duke of Montrose / 1954 / Released / )
Galileo - ( Sagredo / 1953 / Released / American Film Theatre )
The Man in the White Suit - ( Michael Corland / 1951 / Released / Universal-International )
TV Credits
Dame Edna: Live at the Palace ( 2004 / Released ): Actor
The Secret of the U-110 ( 2001 / Released ): Voice
Winnie the Pooh, A Valentine For You ( 1999 / Released ): Voice
Young Indiana Jones: Travels With Father ( 1996 / Released ): Actor
The Haunting of Helen Walker ( 1995 / Released ): Actor
Sleepers ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
The Mountain and the Molehill ( 1991 / Released ): Actor
After the War ( 1990 / Released ): Actor
The Case of the Late Pig ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
The Shell Seekers ( 1989 / Released ): Actor
Inspector Morse, Series I ( 1988 / Released ): Actor
Arthur the King ( 1985 / Released ): Actor
Lace II ( 1985 / Released ): Actor
A Christmas Carol ( 1984 / Released ): Actor
Mistral's Daughter ( 1984 / Released ): Actor
To the Lighthouse ( 1984 / Released ): Actor
The Citadel ( 1983 / Released ): Actor
Brideshead Revisited ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
Inside the Third Reich ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
Smiley's People ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
Witness For the Prosecution ( 1982 / Released ): Actor
Shoulder to Shoulder ( 1975 / Released ): Actor
Qb VII ( 1974 / Released ): Actor
Search For the Nile ( 1972 / Released ): Actor
Full Biography (Back to top)

Born to British parents in Malaya, Michael Gough received classical training at the Old Vic Theater, where he made his stage debut in 1936. He acted on Broadway the following year, inaugurating a distinguished stage career on both sides of the Atlantic. Gough did not enter films until after WWII, first performing in the striking Technicolor noir melodrama, done up in period dress, "Blanche Fury" (1947). For the next decade his appearances were intermittent and primarily in historical drama, ranging from "Anna Karenina" (1948) to Laurence Olivier's adaptation of "Richard III" (1956), with Gough as one of the murderers.

With his tall, gaunt frame and brooding looks, marked especially by his thick, prominent eyebrows, Gough has frequently played villains in horror films and melodrama, or austerely British aristocrats or bureaucrats in contemporary dramas and farces. His many Hammer horror film roles began in 1958 when he supported Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee in "The Horror of Dracula". Gough has subsequently tended to play uncooperative authority roles, somewhat sympathetic but stuffy figures who don't comprehend the nature of the menace until it's almost too late, or outright villains in films including "The Phantom of the Opera" (1962), "Dr. Terror's House of Horrors" (1964), "The Skull" (1965) and "The Legend of Hell House" (1973).

Gough has regularly appeared in TV miniseries including "QB VII" (1974), "Brideshead Revisited" (1982) and "Lace II" (1985). He has continued to be an asset to melodrama, lending his ripe delivery to the delicacy of Joseph Losey's "The Go-Between" (1971), the flamboyance of "The Boys from Brazil" (1978) and the experimental and thematic audacity of Derek Jarman's "Caravaggio" (1986) and "Wittgenstein" (1993). Stage work continued through the years as well, and Broadway audiences saw his talent for camp on display in a Tony-winning performance in "Bedroom Farce" (1979). He was more serious in a later Tony-nominated role as the boss of gay scientist Alan Turing (Derek Jacobi) in the moving "Breaking the Code" (1988). Contemporary filmgoers are likely to know the venerable Gough best for conveying a touch of elderly British loyalty as Alfred the butler in the features "Batman" (1989), "Batman Returns" (1992) and "Batman Forever" (1995).


Profession(s):
Actor
Sometimes Credited As:

Horizontal Line
Education
Rose Hill School Kent, England
Durham School England
Wye Agricultural College England
Bristol Old Vic Theatre School Bristol, England drama
Awards (Back to top)
Tony Featured Actor in a Play "Bedroom Farce" 1979

Milestones (Back to top)
1997 Again played Alfred, this time opposite George Clooney, in "Batman & Robin"
1995 Played Alfred to Val Kilmer's Bruce Wayne in "Batman Forever"
1992 Reprised role of Alfred in "Batman Returns"
1989 Cast as Alfred, the butler, in "Batman", opposite Michael Keaton
1988 Returned to Broadway in the drama, "Breaking the Code"; received a Tony nomination as Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play
1979 Returned to Broadway in the comedy, "Bedroom Farce"
1974 First miniseries to air on US TV, "QB VII"
1972 Played Dr. David Livingstone on the short-lived NBC historical drama series, "Search for the Nile"
1958 First Hammer horror film, "The Horror of Dracula"
1953 First US feature credit, the US-UK co-production, "Rob Roy, the Highland Rogue", produced by Walt Disney Studios
1947 Made feature film debut in the costume drama, "Blanche Fury"
1938 Returned to the London stage in the play, "The Zeal of Thy House"
1937 Made New York stage debut in the play, "Love of Women"
1936 Made stage acting debut at the Old Vic in London
Made US TV appearances on such early anthology drama programs as "Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Presents the Rheingold Theater"


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