Edmund Purdom
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Edmund Anthony Cutlar Purdom, known as Edmund Purdom is an English actor and voice actor. He was born on December 19, 1924 in Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, England.
[edit] Life and career
He was educated by the Jesuits at St Ignatius' College and by the Benedictines.
He began his acting career in 1945 on the stage, appearing in productions which included Romeo and Juliet and Molière's The Imaginary Invalid.
In 1951-52, he appeared in small roles with the Laurence Olivier/Vivien Leigh company on Broadway in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra and Shaw's Caesar and Cleopatra when his good looks brought him to the attention of Hollywood. His appearance in small roles in Titanic and Julius Caesar led to his being cast in the leading role opposite Ann Blyth in the MGM musical The Student Prince in 1954, a part originally intended for Mario Lanza who was deemed too corpulent for the role. Purdom lip-synched to Lanza's voice.
His best-remembered role was as the title character in The Egyptian, 20th Century-Fox's most-lavish production of 1954 for which Marlon Brando had originally been cast. In the same year, he appeared in another MGM musical, Athena, opposite Debbie Reynolds and Jane Powell. He then played the title role in the biblical epic The Prodigal, MGM's most-lavish production of 1955. He partnered Ann Blyth again in the swashbuckling adventure, The King's Thief (1955) which also co-starred David Niven and George Sanders.
Since then, his career as a major film star ran out of steam, with the exception of some rare cameo appearances, such as The Yellow Rolls-Royce in 1964.
Purdom relocated to Rome, Italy, where he first played parts in "sword and sandal" epics and has lived there ever since. He has continued to work extensively in Italian B-movies, on television and as a voice dubbing actor for many years (dubbing lines from Italian to English). In 1984, he directed his first and only film, Don't Open 'Til Christmas. Roman Catholic devotees will recognize his distinctive voice in the narration for a popular short documentary on the life of Padre Pio.
He has been married and divorced three times: his first wife, Anita Philips (or Phillips), the mother of his children; Linda Christian, ex-wife of Tyrone Power; and Alicia Darr, of Polish Jewish extraction.