Michael Gothard
Michael Alan Gothard was an English actor, who portrayed Kai in the television series Arthur of the Britons and the mysterious villain Emile Leopold Locque in the 1981 James Bond film For Your Eyes Only.
Early life
Michael Gothard was born in London in 1939. As a child, he lived in both Wales and London. After leaving Haverstock School, he travelled in France for several months before returning home. He went through various jobs, including being a building labourer and a trainee reporter. He even had a brief spell as a clothes model, but he never felt comfortable doing that job. He said: "I was as stiff as a board and I couldn’t overcome my sense of the ridiculous. I was a clothes hanger, an object, not a person."Career
He joined the New Arts Theatre as a scenery mover, and became part of an amateur film a friend was making. After landing the lead role, he was encouraged to take up the profession. He attended evening classes at an actors' workshop whilst holding down a day job. He was involved working in some of the first "Lunchtime theatre" productions in the 1960s, from pub cellars to top floor spaces . His first television role was in an episode of Out of the Unknown in 1966 called "The Machine Stops". He was then cast in Don Levy's film Herostratus in 1967 and Up the Junction in 1968. He then acquired a female following after taking a role as the villainous Mordaunt in the BBC's adaptation of Twenty Years After.His performance as the nightclubbing killer Keith in Scream and Scream Again, directed by Gordon Hessler, was a break-out role for him, giving him exposure and leading to other, more prominent parts. In the film, Keith makes one of the most memorable escapes from the police ever seen. The film also starred Vincent Price, Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. Executive producer Louis M. Heyward said of Gothard's performance: "I felt that Michael Gothard was going to be the biggest thing that ever happened. He had that insane look and that drive, and he was wonderful. Here is a kid who really threw himself into the picture wholeheartedly. Do you remember the scene where he appears to be walking up the cliff? That's a stunt that, as an actor, I would not have agreed to; I’d say, 'Hey, get a double or get a dummy. I ain't either one.' But the kid agreed to do it, without a double—he was that driven. He had a lot of class and a lot of style. Gordon came up with the idea of using an overhead cable to give that illusion of his walking up the cliff."
He appeared in Ken Russell's 1971 horror film, The Devils, in which Gothard had a stand-out role as a fanatic witch-hunter and exorcist who defiles Vanessa Redgrave and tortures Oliver Reed. His performance as a young disillusioned hippie in Barbet Schroeder's La Vallée contrasted with the rest of his career. He also played a fictionalised version of the 17th century assassin John Felton in Richard Lester's 1973 film of The Three Musketeers and its 1974 sequel, The Four Musketeers.
He had a regular role as Kai opposite Oliver Tobias's King Arthur on the aforementioned Arthur of the Britons during the early 1970s. He became known to a wider cinema audience for his menacing turn as the villainous Belgian henchman, Emile Leopold Locque, in the 1981 James Bond film, For Your Eyes Only. Gothard was actually the one who suggested Locque's signature octagonal glasses in an effort to make the character more menacing. His later appearances included supporting roles in Tobe Hooper's 1985 science-fiction horror extravaganza, Lifeforce, and as George Lusk in the 1988 TV movie, Jack the Ripper, with Michael Caine. He appeared with Dean Stockwell and Shirley Knight in a Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense episode, The Sweet Scent of Death. His last few roles were in in 1992, where he briefly acted opposite Marlon Brando. It was directed by his For Your Eyes Only director John Glen, but was a box office failure.
Glen had actually cast Gothard in the role beneath Brando with the intention of moving Gothard into the role of Tomás de Torquemada, Brando's character, in case Brando did not show up for filming. Brando did indeed miss the first day of filming, and Gothard took over this role for the day's shooting. However, Tom Selleck told the director that without Brando, he would quit the film. Word apparently got out, for Brando was on the set the next day, and assumed the role of Torquemada, with Glen reshooting the scene. Glen described Gothard as "a very good" and "captivating" actor, as well as a friend.
His final role was in David Wickes's Frankenstein, starring Patrick Bergin and Randy Quaid.
Death
Gothard, who struggled with depression for much of his life, committed suicide by hanging on 2 December 1992. He was fifty-three years old.Filmography
Film
- Herostratus as Max
- Up the Junction as Terry
- Michael Kohlhaas-Der Rebell as John
- Scream and Scream Again as Keith
- The Last Valley as Hansen
- The Devils as Father Barre
- Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? as Albie
- La Vallée as Olivier
- The Three Musketeers as John Felton
- The Four Musketeers as John Felton
- King Arthur, the Young Warlord as Kai
- Warlords of Atlantis as Atmir
- For Your Eyes Only as Emile Leopold Locque
- Lifeforce as Dr Bukovsky
- Going Undercover as Strett
- Gioco al massacro as Zabo
- Destroying Angel as "the Hitman"
- The Serpent of Death as Xaros
- as Inquisitor's Spy
- Frankenstein as Boatswain
Television
- Out of the Unknown as Kuno
- Thirty-Minute Theatre as Grady, in "The Excavation"
- The Further Adventures of the Three Musketeers as Mordaunt
- Armchair Theatre as Brian, in "The Story-Teller"
- Fraud Squad as Jacky Joyce, in "Run For Your Money"
- Department S as Weber, in "Les Fleurs du Mal"
- Randall and Hopkirk as Perrin, in "When the Spirit Moves You"
- Paul Temple as Ivan, in "Games People Play"
- Menace as Pip, in "Nine Bean Rows"
- Arthur of the Britons as Kai
- Warrior Queen as Volthan
- The Professionals as Kodai, in "Stopover"
- A Tale of Two Cities as Gaspard
- Shoestring as Harry, in "The Mayfly Dance"
- ITV Playhouse as Dieter, in "The Perfect House"
- Ivanhoe as Athelstane
- Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense as Terry Marvin, in "The Sweet Scent of Death"
- Scarecrow and Mrs. King as Karl Portillo, in "Our Man in Tegernsee"
- Lytton's Diary as Jake Cutler, in "Daddy's Girls"
- Minder as Sergei, in "From Fulham, With Love"
- Jack the Ripper as George Lusk
- Capital City as Stefan in "Twelve Degrees Capricorn"