“NOT AN ACTOR, BUT THE ACTOR”: INSCRIBED BY SIR JOHN GIELGUD, FIRST EDITION OF AN ACTOR AND HIS TIME
GIELGUD, John. An Actor and His Time. John Gielgud. A Collaboration With John Miller and John Powell. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, (1979). Octavo, original russet cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of this profusely illustrated autobiography by Sir John Gielgud, inscribed on the title page by him, “Sincerely, John Gielgud,” featuring over 200 color and black-and-white illustrations, with printed laid-in leaf (4 by 5 inches): “With the Compliments of Sir John Gielgud.”
“The first words Sir John Gielgud ever spoke on the stage of the Old Vic, the cradle of so much British theatrical talent, were those of the Herald in Henry V: ‘Here is the number of the slaughtered French.’ That was in 1921; he was 17 years old.” At his death in 2000, Sir John stood as the last of a “triumvirate of legendary theatrical knights—Laurence Olivier, Sir Ralph Richardson and Sir John—who dominated acting in England and vitalized Shakespeare in what became a golden age of classical theater. He was especially celebrated for his performances as Romeo, Hamlet, Benedick, Angelo in Measure for Measure, Prospero and various kings of the realm… Many contemporary critics considered him to be the greatest classical actor of their time. Where Lord Olivier was known for his physical daring and Richardson had a gift for eccentric characterization, it was Sir John who elevated language.” As critic Kenneth Tynan once said, Sir John is “not an actor, but the actor.” To many, as well, his autobiographical reminiscences were “as elegant as his acting” (New York Times). This is especially true of An Actor and His Time, assembling for the first time a series of BBC interviews in which he told the story of his life through the 1970s. With “Gielgud-Terry Family Tree” at rear, along with “Biographical Notes” by John Miller.
A fine copy, scarce inscribed.