Richard Burton (born November 10, 1925, Pontrhydyfen, Wales—died August 5, 1984, Geneva, Switzerland) was a Welsh stage and motion-picture actor noted for his portrayals of highly intelligent and articulate men who were world-weary, cynical, or self-destructive.
Jenkins was the 12th of 13 children born to a Welsh coal miner. He studied acting under Philip Burton, a schoolteacher who became his mentor and helped him obtain a scholarship to the University of Oxford. In gratitude to his benefactor, he assumed the professional name Burton. His first stage appearance was in 1943, but subsequent service as a Royal Air Force navigator delayed his career. In 1948 he resumed his stage performances. The following year he made his film debut in The Last Days of Dolwyn and scored his first real stage triumph, in Christopher Fry’s The Lady’s Not for Burning. In 1950 Burton made his Broadway debut in the latter production.
With his resonant voice and commanding presence, Burton caught the attention of Hollywood, and in 1952 he made his first American film, My Cousin Rachel (1952), for which he received an Academy Award nomination. Throughout the remainder of the 1950s he specialized in historical roles in motion pictures, including the leading role in the first wide-screen CinemaScope production, The Robe (1953), for which he received his second Oscar nomination; Edwin Booth in Prince of Players (1955); and the title role in Robert Rossen’s Alexander the Great (1956). Other movies from this period included Tony Richardson’s Look Back in Anger (1959), which was based on a play by John Osborne, and the World War II drama The Longest Day (1962).
Burton rose to superstar status after being cast as Mark Antony in Cleopatra (1963). During filming of the epic drama, he and his American costar Elizabeth Taylor became lovers—though both were married to other people at the time—igniting a media frenzy. They subsequently received divorces from their spouses, and the high-profile couple was married twice (1964–74, 1975–76), both unions ending in divorce. Burton made 11 films with Taylor, notably Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966), which was based on Edward Albee’s play and earned Burton his fifth Oscar nod, and The Taming of the Shrew (1967), an adaptation of the Shakespeare play.
Burton also received Academy Award nominations for his work in Becket (1964), about the archbishop of Canterbury; The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1965), an adaptation of John le Carré’s novel about a cynical British agent; Anne of the Thousand Days (1969), in which he portrayed Henry VIII; and Equus (1977), based on a play by Peter Shaffer. Other notable films included John Huston’s The Night of the Iguana (1964), Where Eagles Dare (1968), The Wild Geese (1978), and 1984 (1984), the latter of which was his final feature film. Burton also occasionally appeared on television, notably playing Winston Churchill in the TV movie The Gathering Storm (1974) and Richard Wagner in the miniseries Wagner, which first aired in the early 1980s and later was released as a movie.
Burton meanwhile continued to receive critical acclaim for his theatre performances. He acted in Shakespearean productions at London’s Old Vic in 1953–56, and he gave a memorable performance of Hamlet in John Gielgud’s long-running Broadway production of that play in 1964. Burton’s other Broadway credits included Jean Anouilh’s Time Remembered (1957), the musical Camelot (1960–63 and 1980), and Noël Coward’s Private Lives (1983), in which he appeared opposite Taylor.
Despite his numerous successes, Burton’s career was erratic and often overshadowed by his personal life, notably his numerous marriages and excessive drinking. In 1984 he died suddenly from a cerebral hemorrhage.