American actor Richard Chamberline He died on Saturday, 30, at the age of 90, as a result of the problems caused by stroke. This information was confirmed by his press officer Harlan Bole. Recognized for its performance TelevisionNo. Theater And no CinemaChamberline Medical Drama has reached the notion as the protagonist Dr. KilderDemonstrated from 1961 to 1966 and later became important in minishers Shogun E. The injured birdsThe 1980s wins.
At the age of 27, he played a young doctor James KilderThe role that has been expanded over 60 years with tickets for television adaptations of theatrical productions and classics.
Over time, the chamberline was called “Miniseries King”, accumulating ambitious roles in prestigious works on American television. He also acted on pieces like My fair ladyProfessor Henry Higgins and explaining in The Sound of MuseC, in the role of Captain Van Trap. In the classic theater, the embodied characters like Hamlet and Ricardo II Shakespeare. In 1988, Jason Bourne lived in the first television version of the Born Identity, a few years before he followed Matt Daman.
Shows and personal life
The artist has been nominated for four Emmy Awards: For his performance as a 17th -century British navigator in the 17th century Shogun (1981), a priest’s banned birds (1983), divided by Swedish diplomat Raul Valenburg: Walenburg: In Valentburg: The protagonist of (1985). Most of his career, he acted as romantic roles.
Chamberline has been open to his homosexuality for decades, as he lost Temer space in the industry. Only in 2003, at the age of 68, he revealed his sexual orientation in his autobiography, cracked love: memory. At that time, he said that this gesture was a huge personal relief.
He was born on March 31, 1934 in Los Angeles in George Richard Chamberline, the youngest of two brothers. Initially interested in fine arts, he changed the direction of the years after attending Pomona College, California. In 1956, the acting profession was disrupted and he was summoned to Korea by calling him the US Army. After leaving the armed forces, he returned to California, collaborated with a theater group and started his journey on television with secondary characters.
With Dr. Kilder’s success, he also tried to be a singer and participated in Petulia (1968), Julie Christie, and The Mad Woman of Chailot (1969) and Catherine Hepburn. He also joined the cast of music breakfast in Tiffany, in which Mary Tyler Moore played, and he was canceled after some previews.
In the 1960s, he went to England, where he asked for artistic improvement. He starred in the BBC’s The Portrait of A Lady and had a Hamlet at the Birmingham Repertory Theater. He later returned to the film as Lord Bairon in Lady Caroline Lamb (1972) and participated in the titles such as The Three Musketters (1973) and The Towering Inferno (1974).
His presence in the Broadway Mantage is stable, with classics such as Tennessee Williams’s The Night of the Iguana with musicians and television series. After receiving his sexuality, he continued to work with different, heterosexual and homosexual characters in structures such as Brothers & Sisters, Will & Grace and Desperate Housewives.
In addition to being an actor, he published the High COSE book in 2012 and gave him his voice to the environmental documentaries of Adubone.
The chamberline lived in Hawaii for many years. He has been involved in almost 30 years with his partner actor and writer Martin Rabbet in Alan Quatemine and The Lost City of Gold (1986). Despite the separation in 2010, the two were friends.
“He is free now, next to those who have left in front of us. How much right to meet someone with this loving spirit”Rabbet said in a note.