Anthony Newley(1931-1999)
- Actor
- Writer
- Music Department
Anthony Newley was born in Hackney, London, England, to Frances Grace Newley and George Kirby, a shipping clerk. He was attracted to acting, after seeing
an ad for a child actor in a Fleet Street window. He attended the
Italia Conti Stage School from the age of 14 and, two years later, played
the Artful Dodger in David Lean's
film, Oliver Twist (1948). Newley was
called up to the Army for his National Service and, by the late
1950s, had a hit song Idol on Parade (1959), while in the movie of the same name. He married his first wife, Tiller
Girl Ann Lynn in 1956 but it was a rocky
marriage and they divorced in 1963. He was in the pop charts seven
times in 1960, twice at Number One with "Why?" and "Do You Mind?" written by Lionel Bart. In 1961, he collaborated with Leslie Bricusse on the
hit stage show, Stop the World: I Want to Get Off (1966).
After long runs in London and on Broadway, it was made into a film,
starring Millicent Martin, with the hit song "What Kind of Fool Am I?".
In 1963, he married Rank starlet Joan Collins. She described him at
the time as "A half-Jewish Cockney git" and herself as a "half-Jewish princess from Bayswater via Sunset Boulevard". Newley's film career
thrived, most notably with acting roles in Doctor Dolittle (1967) and
The Cockleshell Heroes (1955), and as a writer and composer. His partnership with Bricusse continued
with "The Roar of the Greasepaint: The Smell of the Crowd" and many other Oscar, Grammy and Ivor Novello award-winning collaborations. They had hit songs such as "The Candy Man" and "Goldfinger". His marriage to
Joan Collins broke up in 1971. He had two of his four children with her. Tony was married a third time, to former air hostess Dareth Rich, only
to divorce again. He once said "My only regret is that, in a show
business career, you can have no private life". Alone and facing a
battle against cancer, Newley moved in with his mother Gracie - now in
her 90s - at her home in Esher, Surrey. The stage performances
continued but were nothing to match his heyday. His last TV appearance
was in "The Lakes" in February 1999. Anthony Newley died in April of that year.