George Rose (born February 19, 1920, Bicester, Oxfordshire, England—died May 5, 1988, near Sosúa, Dominican Republic) was a British-born actor who for decades was a multitalented star on Broadway.
Rose excelled in comic roles ranging from Shakespeare to Gilbert and Sullivan. He garnered two Tony Awards, in the role of the master of ceremonies in The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1985–87) and as Alfred P. Doolittle in a revival production of My Fair Lady (1976–77). After appearing in bit parts at the Old Vic Theatre in London, Rose made his New York debut in the 1946 production of Henry IV, Part 1. His prized comic performance as Dogberry in the 1959 production of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing earned him critical acclaim, but it was his 1961 eight-character role of the Common Man in Robert Bolt’s A Man for All Seasons (1961–63) that secured his reputation. Some of Rose’s other notable credits included The Pirates of Penzance (1981–82), My Fat Friend (1974), and The Kingfisher (1978–79), which earned him a Drama Desk Award in 1979.
Rose, who had moved to New York City in 1961, bought a vacation house in Dominican Republic in 1979. He adopted a Dominican boy in the early 1980s. In 1988 the actor’s badly beaten body was found by the side of a road near his Dominican house. Although an attempt had been made to create the appearance of a car crash, four Dominican men, including Rose’s adopted teenage son, later confessed to having murdered the actor for fear that Rose, who was gay, had turned his attentions elsewhere and was about to alter his will. The men did not stand trial for the murder, though all but his son were imprisoned for several years.