Mark Lester


Mark Lester is an English former child actor who starred in a number of British and European films in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1968 he played the title role in the film Oliver!, a musical version of the Charles Dickens' novel Oliver Twist. Lester also made several appearances in a number of British television series. In 1977, after appearing in the all-star international action adventure film The Prince and the Pauper, he retired from acting. In the 1980s, he trained as an osteopath specialising in sport injuries.

Early life

Mark Lester was born in the city of Oxford, to actress Rita Keene Lester and actor and producer Michael Lester. His father is Jewish and his mother Anglican. Lester was educated at three independent schools: at Corona Theatre School in Ravenscourt Park in West London, followed by Tower House School, a boys' preparatory school near Richmond Park, and at Halliford School in Shepperton in Surrey.

Acting career

Early performances

Lester initially had supporting roles in several British television series, including The Human Jungle and Danger Man. In 1964, at the age of six, Lester was cast in Robert Dhéry's film Allez France! with Diana Dors.
He also appeared in , played a small part as the second schoolboy in Fahrenheit 451 and had a larger role in Our Mother's House.

''Oliver!'' and child stardom

In 1967, at the age of eight, Lester was cast in the title role in the film version of Lionel Bart's musical Oliver!. The multiple Academy Award-winning adaptation of Charles Dickens' novel co-starred Jack Wild, Ron Moody, Harry Secombe, Shani Wallis and Oliver Reed and was directed by Carol Reed. Since Lester could not sing, his singing was dubbed by Kathe Green, daughter of the film's music arranger Johnny Green.
Lester received critical acclaim for his portrayal of a dysfunctional and withdrawn only child in Run Wild, Run Free, starring opposite John Mills, released by Columbia who financed Oliver!. He played a disturbed child in the first regular episode of Then Came Bronson and also guest starred on The Ghost & Mrs. Muir. Columbia wanted to sign him to a long term contract but Lester's parents refused.
Lester had leading roles in Eyewitness, a British thriller with Susan George shot on Malta; The Boy Who Stole the Elephant, a TV movie for Disney; and the horror film Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?, with Shelley Winters.
He was reunited with Wild in Melody, which depicted schoolchildren in love, based on a script by Alan Parker. Tracy Hyde played the role of Melody in the film, which used music from the Bee Gees and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.
Lester starred in a film version of Black Beauty. He was announced for a version of Treasure Island but it was never made.
After this period, his acting roles in the UK would begin to wane. This coincided with a decline in the British film industry.

European films

Lester remained in demand for films outside England: What the Peeper Saw with Britt Ekland; Senza ragione, in Italy with Franco Nero; Little Adventurer, a Japanese film; Scalawag, a pirate film with Kirk Douglas shot in Yugoslavia; the costume drama La Prima volta sull'erba, which was nominated for the Golden Bear prize at the 25th Berlin International Film Festival.
Lester wrapped up his film career playing the dual role as Edward VI of England and Tom Canty in the all-star film The Prince and the Pauper starring Raquel Welch, Charlton Heston, Rex Harrison, George C. Scott, and Oliver Reed, who had played Bill Sikes in Oliver!.
After this he said "I bought myself a Ferrari and set off through Europe for 18 months."

Later life

At the age of 18 Lester had access to some of his earnings from his films. He bought a Ferrari and a house in Belgravia and went to parties, nightclubs and restaurants, often paying for friends, and taking drugs. After the poor reception of The Prince and the Pauper, Lester gave up acting at the age of 19. In his twenties he became a karate black belt; through this he grew interested in sports injuries, and from there osteopathy. At the age of 28 he took his A-Levels, passing Chemistry and Biology. He became an osteopath, studying at the British School of Osteopathy, and in 1993, Lester opened the Carlton Clinic, an acupuncture clinic in Cheltenham.
He is a patron of the theatre charity The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America.

Personal life

Lester has four children with his first wife, Jane, whom he married in January 1993 and divorced in 2005. In 2006, he married his second wife, a psychiatric nurse.
Lester was a close friend of Michael Jackson and is godfather to Jackson's three children. In August 2009, after Jackson's death, Lester gave an interview to the British tabloid newspaper News of the World in which he claimed that he could be the biological father of Paris, the late singer's daughter. Lester claimed to have been a sperm donor for Jackson in 1996, and announced that he was willing to take a paternity test to determine whether he was the father. Brian Oxman, former lawyer for the Jackson family, rejected the claim in a television interview, stating, “The thing I always heard from Michael was that Michael was the father of these children, and I believe Michael." In 2019, Lester stated that he was one of twenty sperm donors for Jackson.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1964The Counterfeit ConstableGéralda.k.a. Allez France
1965Spaceflight IC-1: An Adventure in SpaceDon Saunders
1966Fahrenheit 451schoolboy
1967Our Mother's HouseJiminee
1968Oliver!Oliver Twist
1969Run Wild, Run FreePhilip Ransome
1970The Boy Who Stole the ElephantDaveyTV movie
1970EyewitnessZiggy
1971Melody Daniel Latimer
1971Black BeautyJoe Evans
1971Whoever Slew Auntie Roo?Christopher Coombs
1972What the Peeper SawMarcus
1973RedneckLennox Duncan
1973Little AdventurerMike Richard
1973ScalawagJamie
1975The First Time on the GrassFranz Schmidta.k.a. La prima volta sull'erba
1977The Prince and the PauperPrince Edward/Tom Cantya.k.a. Crossed Swords
2019HimselfDocumentary film

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1964The Human JungleSmall boyTV series
1966Danger ManA boyTV series
1966Court MartialPaolo StevensTV series
1969Then Came BronsonJohn BeamanTV series
1969The Ghost & Mrs. MuirMark HelmoreTV series
1970DisneylandDavey