Paul Scofield, Oscar-winner for ‘Man for All Seasons,’ dies at 86

LONDON — Paul Scofield, a commanding stage and screen actor indelibly stamped on filmgoers’ minds as the doomed philosopher-statesman Sir Thomas More in “A Man for All Seasons,” has died at age 86.

Agent Rosalind Chatto said Thursday that Scofield died in a hospital near his home in southern England. He had been suffering from leukemia and died Wednesday.

Scofield won an Academy Award and international fame for the 1966 film “A Man For All Seasons,” in which he played the Tudor statesman and author of “Utopia” executed for treason in 1535 after clashing with King Henry VIII.

But he followed that breakthrough with relatively few film roles. Scofield was a stage actor by inclination and by his gifts — a dramatic, craggy face and an unforgettable voice likened to a Rolls-Royce starting up or the sound rumbling out of low organ pipes in an ancient crypt.

“He had a charisma, a hypnotism, a kind of spell that he cast on an audience, which was an extraordinary thing to negotiate as a young actor,” said Simon Callow, who performed alongside Scofield in the play “Amadeus” in 1979. “He was an absolutely towering actor.”

Judi Dench, who appeared with Scofield in Kenneth Branagh’s film of “Henry V” in 1989, remembered him as “a great friend and a great man.”

Even Scofield’s greatest screen role was a follow-up to a play — the London stage production of Robert Bolt’s “A Man for All Seasons,” in which he starred for nine months. Scofield then turned in a performance in the 1961 New York production that won him extraordinary reviews and a Tony Award.

“With a kind of weary magnificence, Scofield sinks himself into the part, studiously underplays it, and somehow displays the inner mind of a man destined for sainthood,” Time magazine said.

Actor Richard Burton, once regarded as the natural heir to Laurence Olivier and John Gielgud at the summit of British theater, said it was Scofield who deserved that place. “Of the 10 greatest moments in the theater, eight are Scofield’s,” he said.

Scofield’s infrequent films included Edward Albee’s “A Delicate Balance”; “Henry V,” in which he played the king of France; “Quiz Show,” Robert Redford’s film about a 1950s TV scandal; and the 1996 adaptation of Arthur Miller’s play “The Crucible.”

“Quiz Show” brought Scofield a second Oscar nomination, this time as best supporting actor. He played Mark Van Doren, the famed author and poet whose son, Charles, was the key figure in the scandal.

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