Sebastian Shaw (29 May 1905 – 23 December 1994) was an English stage, film, television and radio actor, as well as a director, novelist, playwright and poet.
During his 65-year career, Shaw appeared in dozens of stage performances and more than 40 film and television productions. A self-described "rotten actor" as a youth, Shaw claimed to mature as a performer after returning from service in the Royal Air Force during World War II. Shaw was particularly known for his performances in William Shakespeare productions, which were considered daring and ahead of their time. He also wrote a novel, The Christening, in 1975.
Shaw is perhaps most widely known for his brief but important performance in Return of the Jedi, the sixth film in the Star Wars franchise, in which he played Anakin Skywalker.
Biography
Early life
Sebastian Lewis Shaw was born at
Holt,
Norfolk in England on 29 May 1905. His father, Dr. Geoffrey Shaw, was the
music master at
Gresham's School, a
North Norfolk independent coeducational boarding school, where Shaw began his education. His uncle,
Martin Shaw, was a composer of
church music, and his family's love of music heavily influenced Shaw's future career path. Shaw made his acting debut at age eight on the
London stage as one of the juvenile band in
The Cockyolly Bird at the
Royal Court Theatre in the
Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea on
New Year's Day of 1914. During his time at Gresham's, he also played
Petruchio in
The Taming of the Shrew, his first of many performances from the works of
William Shakespeare; fellow classmate
W.H. Auden, who would go on to become a highly regarded
poet, portrayed Katherina in the play opposite Shaw. After Gresham's, Shaw planned to become a
painter and spent two years at the
Slade School of Fine Art before switching his interests to acting; regarding the change, his father said to Shaw, "I wondered when you would come to your senses." Shaw earned a scholarship to the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in
Bloomsbury, London. Actor
Charles Laughton enrolled in the Academy the same time as Shaw, who later said his first impression of Laughton was "a poor fat boy." Although Shaw and his fellow students initially felt sympathetic toward Laughton, they were quickly impressed with his talent.
Early stage career
Shaw appeared in regional theatres in
Bristol,
Liverpool and
Hull. In 1925, he performed in London as the Archangel in
The Sign of the Sun, and played first Lewis Dodd and then the Major in separate productions of
The Constant Nymph. Shaw received instruction in verse speaking under famed theatre director
William Bridges-Adams in the
Stratford Festival Company at
Stratford-upon-Avon, where he played some of his early Shakespeare roles, including
Romeo Montague in
Romeo and Juliet, Ferdinand in
The Tempest and Prince Hal in
Henry IV in 1926. Shaw was criticised for the audacity he displayed in the latter role. When Prince Hal takes on his kingship and rejects the self-indulgent character Falstaff, convention of the day called for Prince Hal to change from a jovial drinking partner to an arrogant snob, but Shaw saw the view as simple-minded and contradictory toward Shakespeare's script. Instead, Shaw displayed inward regrets toward leaving Falstaff and accepting the new responsibilities. The interpretation was criticised at the time but, years later, was seen as the standard approach to the character.
Shaw made his Broadway debut in 1929, when he created the role of Wyndham Brandon, one half of a duo of homosexual murderers in Patrick Hamilton's stage thriller, Rope's End; although he played the role in New York, he was passed over when the show moved to London. In 1929, Shaw married Margaret Delamere and lived with her in The Albany, an apartment complex off of Piccadilly in London. Shaw would return to the works of William Shakespeare in 1931, playing Claudio in Measure for Measure at London's Fortune Playhouse. In 1932 he once again played Romeo at the Embassy Theatre. Other works around this period included productions of Ivor Novello's Sunshine Sisters in 1933; Double Door alongside actress Sybil Thorndike in 1934; J.M. Barrie's A Kiss for Cinderella in 1937; and Robert Morley's Goodness, How Sad! in 1938.
Early film career
The first
film Shaw appeared in was
Caste in 1930. The actor soon began to make a name for himself in motion pictures such as
Brewster's Millions in 1935,
Men Are Not Gods in 1936 and
Farewell Again in 1937. Shaw was making about 300
pounds a week during this stage of his career. He brought what
The Daily Telegraph described as a "smooth villainy" to the title role of Frank Sutton in
The Squeaker in 1937, while in 1939 he played the hero Cmdr. David Blacklock alongside
Conrad Veidt and
Valerie Hobson in
Michael Powell and
Emeric Pressburger's first collaboration
The Spy in Black. Shaw described himself as a movie buff and called
Academy Award-winning actor
Spencer Tracy his "great god of all screen actors"; he was so impressed by Tracy's technique that he claimed to become depressed while watching his movies because Tracy made acting look simple, while Shaw claimed to find it so difficult to master himself.
World War II
When
World War II broke out, Shaw took a break from his acting career and immediately joined the
Royal Air Force, where he served as an
Aircraftman 2nd Class. He saw little action in the service and was told the only chance he would have to fly would be as a
rear gunner. Some of his fellow airmen hounded Shaw for autographs while others mocked his posh accent, to which Shaw would retaliate with an excellent and unflattering imitation of their less refined speech. Immediately upon returning to London after the war, Shaw lost his Albany flat and his acting contract, and essentially had to restart his acting career.
Although Shaw made 20 films before World War II and had already began to develop a reputation as a strong leading man before the war began, in later years Shaw would describe himself as "a rotten actor" in the 1930s who landed roles based mainly on his good looks. He used the phrase "a piece of cinema beefcake" to describe himself as an actor during that period, and felt it was after his return home from military service that he learned to act properly and began to mature as a performer. Shaw's Royal Air Force experience would be put to good use when he played a pilot in Journey Together, the 1946 RAF training film in which actor Edward G. Robinson would coach actor Richard Attenborough in the rudiments of flying.
Post World War II career
In 1945, Shaw returned to the Embassy Theatre to
direct Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Gambler. Significant theatre roles that decade would include
Hercules in
The Thracian Horses at the
Lyric Hammersmith theatre in 1946; Hern Lawrance in
I Said to Myself at the
Old Mercury Theatre in 1947; Sir James Kirkham in
His Excellency at
Prince's Theatre in 1950 and Filmer Jesson,
MP in
Arthur Wing Pinero's His House In Order at
New Theatre in 1951. In 1956, he would play the title role in the first English production of
Hugo von Hofmannsthal's Everyman. That same year, he would write the lyrics to his father's ballad-opera,
All at Sea, which played at the
Royal College of Music. In 1957, he played
Lucifer in
Brother Lucifer in
Shrewsbury, England, and a sinister
Venetian agent in Jonathan Griffin's
The Hidden King in
Edinburgh,
Scotland.
As Shaw grew older, his reputation as a dramatic actor grew stronger, and he became known for a sharp intelligence and dignified style. Although his good looks began to diminish, reviewers felt his florid and weatherbeaten face was well utilised by Shaw in evoking grandeur and self-assuredness in such roles as generals, priests and his familiar Shakespearean parts. In 1956, his wife Margaret Delamere died; she was survived by her daughter with Shaw, Drusilla. Shaw began a romantic relationship in the mid-1950s with Joan Ingpen, the well-known classical music and opera talent agent who previously represented Shaw. The two were romantically involved, to the point that she even took his last name, for about four decades until Shaw's death. During the 1980s, however, Shaw also engaged in a brief relationship with Harriet Ravenscroft, the mother of disc jockey John Peel, whom Shaw met while performing at Ludlow Castle at Ludlow. Shaw split his time between Ingpen and Ravenscroft on a four-day rotation basis to which both women consented. Although Peel got along with Shaw and said he made his mother happy, Peel admitted he did not feel comfortable with the arrangement and felt it disrupted his mother's friendships and prospects for a more stable relationship.
Writing career
Shaw wrote
Take a Life, his first play, in 1961. He directed a production of the show at London's
Mermaid Theatre, where he also played the lead role of the
Detective. That same year he played two lead roles in
George Bernard Shaw plays at the
Dublin Theatre Festival:
Mrs. Warren's Profession and
Candida. Around this time, Shaw also wrote an outline for a
television comedy series about four girls sharing a flat, inspired by his real-life daughter, who was in her early twenties and living in a flat with other girls her age. The series was submitted to the
Granada Television company, which expressed interest in the show and said it was one of two under consideration for television. The company ultimately chose the other show, the long-running British
soap opera Coronation Street.
Shaw agreed to take certain roles only under the condition that he have complete freedom to rewrite his dialogue. When Shaw appeared in It Happened Here, a 1966 World War II film, he wrote much of his own dialogue, which the filmmakers would later admit "gave his dialogue an individual slant which enhanced his performance." Shaw also helped in other aspects of the filmmaking, including casting; he introduced the filmmakers to Fiona Leland, who would be cast as Shaw's wife in It Happened Here. Shaw wrote other plays, including The Ship's Bell, The Cliff Walk, The Glass Maze and Cul de Sac. He also wrote Poems, a collection of his personal poetry, which saw a limited print of 300 editions by publisher Exeter University. It included poems called "Nightmare", "Sing Cuckoo", "Necrophilia", "Apple Harvest", "Noctambulation", "Thought From Ireland", "Moor Mouse", "White Blues", "The Naked Hill", "The Cover of Darkness", "Two Pictures at Edinburgh", "Waking at Dawn", "The Comedian's Tale" and "The Building Site."
Royal Shakespeare Company
In 1965, British theatre director
William Gaskill was named artistic director of the Royal Court Theatre, where he hoped to re-establish a repertoire. He approached Shaw, who made his acting début at the Royal Court Theatre as a youth, and Shaw agreed to return. There he would deliver several performances there over the next year, including
General Conrad von Hotzendorf in
Joan Osborne's
A Patriot for Me; various roles in
Ann Jellicoe's
Shelley;
Sir Francis Harker in
N. F. Simpson's
The Cresta Run and
Pte Atterclife in
John Arden's
Serjeant Musgrave's Dance.
In 1966, Shaw joined the Royal Shakespeare Company, where he spent the next decade of his career and eventually became an associate artist. He mostly appeared in Shakespeare plays, including the title role in Cymbeline; Edmund of Langley in Richard II; the King in All's Well That Ends Well; Ulysses in Troilus and Cressida; and Leonato in Much Ado About Nothing. The Times described his performance in the title role of Cymbeline as "awe-inspiring", and The Independent described his performance as Polonius in Hamlet as "unrivalled in his complacency and sense of circumstance." The Telegraph described his performance of Gloucester in King Lear as "doleful" and his performance of Duncan in Macbeth as "decent." Many of the company's Shakespearean productions at the time were considered interpretive and modern, which drew criticism from some traditionalists, but Shaw defended the experimental nature of the shows and shunned the notion that plays should be restricted to preconceived interpretations.
He demonstrated what The Daily Telegraph called a "crusty charm" as Sir Oblong Fitz Oblong in Robert Bolt's children's play, The Thwarting of Baron Bolligrew, during his time with the company. Shaw was also noted as possessing a gift for dry comedy during this period of his acting career, such as during his roles in Maxim Gorky's plays Enemies and Summerfolk. Shaw demonstrated a particular knack for Russian comedy in Jonathan Miller's productions of Anton Chekhov plays Three Sisters and Ivanov.
The Christening
Shaw wrote
The Christening, his only
novel, in 1975. Shaw originally planned to call the novel
The Godfather, but later said he was glad he did not due to the popularity of
Mario Puzo's book of
that name.
The Christening focuses around Miles Madgwick, who believes himself to be
bisexual but is too timid to find out through
physical intercourse, so he instead describes his most intimate thoughts into his diary. He then meets, and becomes attracted to, a married woman named Alice and her son, Rodney; he comes to identify with Rodney's childhood innocence, and in Alice sees a symbol both of his mother and a
heterosexual lover. Alice starts to tire of her husband and grow fonder of Madgwick, who experiences mixed emotions in his continued interactions with her and Rodney.
One night, Rodney stays overnight at Madgwick's house and, when he takes the boy home in a taxicab, the driver observes their strange behaviour and accuses Madgwick of being a pederast. When Alice asks Madgwick to become the godfather to her new child, the driver threatens to expose Madgwick, creating a conflict between losing his first feelings of intimacy with others or facing humiliation and ridicule at the driver's exposure. A description in the book cover flap reads, "In this tender, sensitive and blackly comic novel, Sebastian Shaw, the distinguished Shakespearean actor, explores areas of sexual and emotional encounter that are rarely seen and, unfortunately, too rarely understood." Shaw was said to have been working on another novel shortly after The Christening was completed, but no others were ever published.
Acting career in 1970s
In 1978, Shaw earned acclaim for his performance as a judge in the stage debut of
Whose Life Is It Anyway? at the Mermaid Theatre, where he debuted his first play 17 years earlier. The production won
Laurence Olivier Awards for Best Play and Best Actor (
Tom Conti). Although 73 years old, Shaw did not let his age slow down his career. During the run of this production a mugger tried to steal his money, but Shaw chased him down, tackled him and recovered his property. Later that same year, Shaw was painted in the nude by his nephew, Brian Ocean. During his later years, Shaw suffered a physical disability that made him tremble, which had a negative impact on his television roles, particularly when handling cups or trays of drinks. One of Shaw's later television appearances was in
The Old Curiosity Shop, a 1979
mini-series based on the novel by
Charles Dickens. Around this time, he also voiced the part of
Squire Beltham in a
radio production of
The Adventurers of Harry Richmond, which
The Daily Telegraph said was "remembered with affection." Shaw lent his voice to several radio performance, both Shakespearean and modern, including protagonist John Tanner in the five-hour
Man and Superman by
George Bernard Shaw.
Return of the Jedi
Casting
In 1982, Shaw was chosen for the brief but crucial role of
Anakin Skywalker in
Return of the Jedi, the third and final movie in the
original Star Wars trilogy. Although
David Prowse played the costumed scenes and
James Earl Jones portrayed the voice of Darth Vader, just as they had in the first two films, Shaw was to play a single scene with
Mark Hamill, during the moment aboard
Death Star II when
Luke Skywalker unmasks his dying father. Since the scene was arguably the emotional climax of the film, the casting crew wanted an experienced actor for the role. At the time he was approached for the film, Shaw was playing such Shakespearean roles as
Charles VI in
Henry V and
First Gravedigger in
Hamlet at London's
Barbican Centre. Shaw enjoyed the first two
Star Wars films, particularly for the visual effects, which he described in an interview with
science-fiction film magazine Starlog as "brilliant techniques which, in many ways, were revolutionary, something quite new".
Secrecy
Shaw participated in an audition for the
Return of the Jedi part but, due to the secrecy regarding the production, was not allowed to see his portion of the actual script until he had guaranteed to take the role and promised not to reveal any film secrets to anyone. His contract included a stipulation that he could not even tell family or friends the part he would be playing; Shaw told
Starlog when asked by his loved ones about the role, he would answer, "I'm sorry, I'm not at liberty to tell you." Shaw received many
press inquiries about his part in the movie once word of his casting was leaked, but he did not discuss his participation in the film until
George Lucas gave him permission after the film's 1983 theatrical release. When Shaw arrived at the set for filming, he ran into his friend
Ian McDiarmid, the actor playing
Emperor Palpatine, but Shaw did not tell him anything about the part. When McDiarmid asked him what he was doing there, Shaw simply responded, "I don't know, dear boy, I think it's something to do with science-fiction." McDiarmid later reflected upon the comment, "That was Sebastian. The
Star Wars saga had passed him blissfully by."
Filming
Shaw's scene in
Return of the Jedi was filmed in only one day at
Elstree Studios in
Hertfordshire, England. His presence during the filming was kept secret from all but the absolute minimum cast and crew. Director
Richard Marquand directed the scene, but George Lucas was present for the entire length of filming.
Shaw found the costume to be physically challenging during his scene; he had difficulty breathing through the two small holes in the quarter-inch thick Darth Vader mask that covered his entire face and head. His head was shaven, white make-up was applied to his face, black make-up was applied around his eyes and fake burn scars were applied to his head and cheeks. Regarding the screenplay by Lucas and
Lawrence Kasdan, Shaw told
Starlog his unmasking scene "was so beautifully written that we never altered the dialogue at all." The scene was filmed in only a few takes, although some of Mark Hamill's close-ups took multiple takes because Shaw said "he was so terribly anxious to get it right." Shaw said the young actor was enjoyable to work with and appreciative of Shaw's experience.
The unmasking scene lasts two minutes and seven seconds and includes 24 words of dialogue spoken by Shaw. George Lucas personally directed Shaw for his appearance in the final scene of the movie, in which he is a Force ghost of Anakin Skywalker dressed in brown and white robes, his prior burns and injuries completely healed. The footage was shot against a green screen and the characters of Obi-Wan Kenobi and Yoda, with whom Anakin exchanges glances and smiles, were added later. Shaw did not know the purpose of the footage and believed it to be publicity, not for the film. When directing the scene, Lucas simply advised the actor, "Look happy, smile."
Response
Shaw received more fan mail and autograph requests from
Return of the Jedi than he had for any role in his career; he said most of the letters he received were from boys between the ages of 12 and 14, but he also heard from older people who were unexpectedly touched by the film. Shaw later reflected that he very much enjoyed his experience filming for
Return of the Jedi and expressed particular surprise that an
action figure was made of him from the film.
ROTJ re-release changes
In the 2004
DVD re-release of
Return of the Jedi, several changes and modifications were made to the scenes involving Shaw. The unmasking scene with Mark Hamill remained mostly intact, but Shaw's eyebrows were digitally removed from his face due to the fact that they would be burned off Anakin Skywalker in the 2005
prequel,
Revenge of the Sith. Shaw's eyes were also digitally coloured to look more like those of
Hayden Christensen, who played Anakin in the prequel films. A far more drastic change, however, was the replacement of Shaw's image with that of Christensen during his appearance as a Force ghost in the last scene of
Return of the Jedi. This attempt to tie the prequel and
original trilogies together proved to be one of the least popular changes in the
Star Wars re-releases. Some, however, defended the movie; although author and pop culture expert Will Brooker said George Lucas "totally Stalinized" Shaw by removing him from the scene, Brooker also disputed a claim that Luke Skywalker would not have recognised the young Anakin, explaining his connection to
the Force allowed him to do so. Film reviewer
Roger Ebert described the change as "actually a little poetic" because it meant Anakin became one with the Force before he turned into Darth Vader.
Acting career in 1980s
Shaw remained active in his later years; along with fellow Royal Shakespeare Company actors
Ian Richardson,
John Nettles, Martin Best, and Ann Firbank, Shaw engaged in discussions and workshops with acting teachers and students in the early 1980s. Although appearances in films became far less common in Shaw's later career, he received much acclaim for his performance as the
Cold War spy Sharp in Clare Peploe's
High Season at the
New York Film Festival in 1987;
The San Diego Union-Tribune said Shaw played the role with "endearing, sweet gravity". One of his last performances was in the
Christmas season of 1988 and 1989, when he played the
wizard in a stage production of
The Wizard of Oz at the Barbican Centre and the Stratford Festival Company.
The Times said audiences were "delighted to recognise his honeyed threats from behind the great carapace that disguised the Wizard of Oz". Shaw became an honorary life-member at The
Garrick Club, which included such past members as writers Charles Dickens, J. M. Barrie,
Kingsley Amis and
A. A. Milne; artists
Dante Gabriel Rossetti and
John Everett Millais; and composer
Edward Elgar.
Death
Shaw died of natural causes on 23 December 1994 at age 89 in
Brighton,
East Sussex, England. A funeral service was held 15 February 1995 at
St Paul's, Covent Garden, commonly known as The Actors' Church due to its long association with the theatre community, in
Covent Garden, London. Actors Ian Richardson and
Ben Kingsley read works by William Shakespeare; stage actress Estelle Kohler read
The Ways of Love by
Victorian poet
Elizabeth Barrett Browning; actress
Sheila Allen read
Life by
Welsh poet
George Herbert; and actor
Kenneth Branagh read from the works of
Canon Henry Scott Holland. One of Shaw's own poems,
Gemini, was also read.
Baritone Stephen Varcoe sang
Wie bist du meine Konigin by
Johannes Brahms, accompanied by
Graham Johnson on the piano, and guitarist Martin Best performed and sang his composition of
Ariel's Songs from
The Tempest. Shaw was survived by his partner
Joan Ingpen; daughter Drusilla MacLeod; sisters Susan Bonner-Morgan and Penelope Harness; and his sister-in-law Olga Young.
Filmography
| Year
| Title
| Role
| Other notes |
| 1930
| Caste
| Hon. George d'Alroy
| Film debut |
| 1933
| Little Miss Nobody
| Pat Carey
| |
| House of Dreams
| (unknown)
| |
| Taxi to Paradise
| Tom Fanshawe
| |
| 1934
| The Way of Youth
| Alan Marmon
| |
| The Four Masked Men
| Arthur Phillips
| |
| Get Your Man
| Robert Halbean
| |
| Adventurers Ltd.
| Bruce Blandford
| |
| 1935
| Brewster's Millions
| Frank
| |
| The Lad
| Jimmy
| |
| The Ace of Spades
| Trent
| |
| Three Witnesses
| Roger Truscott
| |
| Jubilee Window
| Peter Ward
| |
| Department Store
| John Goodman Johnson
| aka Bargain Basement |
| 1936
| Tomorrow We Live
| Eric Morton
| |
| Birds of a Feather
| Jack Wortle
| |
| Jury's Evidence
| Philip
| |
| Men Are Not Gods
| Edmund Davey
| |
| 1937
| Farewell Again
| Capt. Gilbert Reed
| aka Troopship (USA) |
| The Squeaker
| Frank Sutton
| aka Murder on Diamond Row (USA) |
| 1938
| Julius Caesar
| Marcus Brutus
| Television |
| 1939
| Too Dangerous to Live
| Jacques Leclerc
| |
| Prison Without Bars
| Doctor
| |
| Table d'Hote
| Adam ("Doubting Hall" section)
| |
| The Spy in Black
| Lt. Ashington/Cmdr. David Blacklock
| aka U-Boat 29 (USA) |
| 1940
| Now You're Talking
| Charles Hampton
| |
| Three Silent Men
| Sir James Quentin
| |
| Bulldog Sees It Through
| Derek Sinclair
| |
| The Flying Squad
| Inspector Bradley
| |
| 1941
| East of Piccadilly
| Tamsie Green
| aka The Strangler (USA) |
| 1946
| Journey Together
| Squadron Leader Marshall
| |
| 1947
| Hamlet
| Claudius
| Television |
| 1949
| The Glass Mountain
| Bruce McLeod
| |
| Landfall
| Wing Cmdr. Dickens
| |
| 1952
| BBC Sunday Night Theatre
| Archdeacon Adam Brandon
| Television (1 Episode, The Cathedral) |
| 1953
| Laxdale Hall
| Hugh Marvell, M.P.
| aka Scotch on the Rocks (USA) |
| 1958
| Armchair Theatre
| (unknown)
| Television (1 episode, "The Terrorist") |
| 1960
| Here Lies Miss Sabry
| James "Cracker" Talbot
| Television |
| 1966
| It Happened Here
| Doctor Richard Fletcher
| |
| Out of the Unknown
| Major Gregory
| Television (1 episode, "Walk's End") |
| 1968
| All's Well That Ends Well
| King of France
| Television |
| A Midsummer Night's Dream
| Quince
| |
| 1972
| Thirty-Minute Theatre
| The Judge
| (1 episode, "The Judge's Wife") |
| Dead of Night
| Powys Jubb
| Television (1 episode, "Death Cancels All Debts") |
| 1975
| Village Hall
| Ralph
| Television (1 episode, "Lot 23") |
| 1977
| Play for Today
| Abbot General
| Television (1 episode, "A Choice of Evils") |
| 1978
| BBC2 Play of the Week
| (unknown)
| Television (1 episode, "Liza") |
| 1979
| Rumpole of the Bailey
| Mr. Justice Skelton
| Television (1 episode, "Rumpole and the Show Folk") |
| The Old Curiosity Shop
| Grandfather
| TV mini-series |
| 1981
| Nanny
| Mr. Starkie
| Television (1 episode, "Goats and Tigers") |
| Timon of Athens
| Old Athenian
| Television |
| 1983
| Reilly: Ace of Spies
| Reverend Thomas
| Television (1 episode, "An Affair with a Married Woman") |
| The Weather in the Streets
| Mr. Curtis
| Television |
| Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi
| Anakin Skywalker |
| The Nation's Health
| Doctor Thurson
| Television (2 episodes, "Collapse" and "Decline") |
| 1984
| Crown Court
| Justice Bewes
| Television (2 episodes, "There Was an Old Woman" and "Drunk, Who Cares") |
| 1987
| High Season
| Sharp
| |
| 1988
| The Master Builder
| Knut Brovik
| Television |
| Casualty
| Charles Howlett
| Television (1 episode, "Drake's Drum) |
| 1989
| Chelworth
| Lord Toller
| TV mini-series |
| 1991
| Chernobyl: The Final Warning
| Grandpa
| Television |
| Chimera
| Dr. Liawski
| TV mini-series, aka Monkey Boy |
References
External links