Thane Bettany
Thane Bettany | |
---|---|
Born |
Sarawak, Borneo, Kingdom of Sarawak | 28 May 1929
Occupation | Actor |
Partner(s) |
|
Children | Sarah, Paul, Matthew |
Thane William Howard Hardcastle Christopher Bettany (born 28 May 1929) is an English actor and former dancer. He is the father of film actor Paul Bettany and father-in-law of Oscar-winning actress Jennifer Connelly.[1]
Early years
Thane Bettany was born in Sarawak, an independent state on the island of Borneo, which was then a British protectorate governed by the White Rajahs. Thane's elder brother was Peter Bettany. His godmother was the American memoirist Agnes Newton Keith, author of Three Came Home. The Bettanys also knew the Rhys-Jones family from Sarawak. Years later, when both had been widowed, Howard John Bettany, Thane's father, married Margaret Patricia Newall Molesworth Rhys-Jones (1904-1985), who had a granddaughter, Sophie, born the same year (1965).[2] Thane Bettany stood godfather to the daughter of his new stepbrother: Sophie Rhys-Jones, later Countess of Wessex and wife of Prince Edward.[3]
Dancing career
Bettany had become enamoured with ballet after seeing a performance as a child. Once he left school he took the money given to him by his father to go to engineering school to study ballet. After National Service, when he served in the Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm as a mechanic, he entered Sadler's Wells Ballet School (which later became the Royal Ballet School). He began dancing in musical theatre, but after an accident on stage when he broke his back he had to give up professional dance. Acting was an obvious career move, but he had a bad stammer. He went to study mime in Paris with Charles Antonetti, who helped him overcome the problem. Bettany returned to England and joined the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre Company, which would later become the Royal Shakespeare Company. He played Osric to Sir Michael Redgrave's Hamlet. In The Tempest, he was the understudy for the role of Ferdinand; he then took over the part when the play transferred to Drury Lane with Sir John Gielgud.[4]
Marriage
After a few years with the New Zealand Players, he returned home and taught at Corona Stage School, where he met Anne Kettle, whom he would later marry. He moved on to Norway as the Artistic Director of the English Theatre Company there, inviting Kettle over as his stage manager. Back in England they renewed their friendship at the Lincoln Theatre Royale. They married and settled in North London, and although stage work continued to be his focus, when his children were born he looked for other work to be closer to home. He continued to act, mainly in television; during this period he was cast in one of his most famous roles, as Tarak on Doctor Who.[4]
Children
The couple had three children: daughter Sarah, elder son Paul and younger son Matthew. Sarah and Paul initially attended school in North London. When Sarah, Paul and Matthew were 11, 9 and 2 years old, respectively, their father obtained employment as a drama teacher at the Hertfordshire all-girls boarding school, Queenswood School; the family lived on campus.[5]
Matthew Bettany died after a fall at Queenswood when he was eight. Soon after, Paul Bettany left home to live on his own in London. Thane and Anne Bettany divorced in 1993 after 25 years of marriage. Thane Bettany now lives in Fife, Scotland with his partner, Andy, and continues to work regularly as an actor, including performing with Dundee Rep.[4]
Filmography
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1957 | Fire Down Below | ||
1979 | North Sea Hijack | Heyerdahl | |
1980 | The Talisman | Theodoric | TV Series |
Doctor Who: State of Decay | Tarak | TV Episode | |
1985 | Maelstrom | Mr. Tovan | TV Miniseries |
References
- ↑ Zulhilmi Supaat (29 March 2009). "Dancing man who can't put a foot wrong... just like his son". Daily Express.
- ↑ Peerage genealogy
- ↑ Biography of Paul Bettany
- 1 2 3 "My son, the actor". The Scotsman - 26 April 2004. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
- ↑ Julie McCaffery (16 May 2006). "Tragedy, Drugs and a Dad Who Wanted to Have a Sex Change Op". Daily Mirror. Archived from the original on 7 December 2008. Retrieved 14 January 2008.