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Terence Stamp, '60s British film legend and star of 'Superman,' dies at 87

Actor Terence Stamp is pictured in 2012 in Toronto. Stamp has died at age 87.
Sonia Recchia
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Actor Terence Stamp is pictured in 2012 in Toronto. Stamp has died at age 87.

Terence Stamp, the British heartthrob whose performance as the arch-villain in early Superman films and as the title role in Billy Budd won critical praise, died on Sunday. He was 87.

A representative for Stamp confirmed his death to NPR, but did not specify the cause.

"He leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come," Stamp's family wrote in a statement.

Often associated with the Swinging '60s, Stamp became a sought-after actor for both his distinctive good looks and the versatility of his performances, portraying everything from a humble sailor to shadow-haunted super-villains. The Guardian dubbed him the "master of the brooding silence," yet he resisted ever being typecast by taking creative risks and leaning into his range.

He played a road-tripping transgender woman in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. Writing in 1994, when the film was released, critic Roger Ebert said: "At the beginning of the film we're distracted by the unexpected sight of Terence Stamp in drag, but Stamp is able to bring a convincing humanity to the character."

Stamp once said about playing the drag queen: "I was incredibly frightened about it — it's not anything I have ever done, but I happened to be having an afternoon tea with a fellow actress who was a very wise woman and she was flicking through my script and told me to do it."

It grossed $16 million in the Australian box office, notched the Oscar for best costume design and became one of the generation's most iconic Australian films.

Born in East London, the son of a tugboat worker and a homemaker, Stamp has said his working-class background set him apart from other actors, who at the time mostly came from more affluent upbringings.

He dabbled in other fields, including advertising, and a stint working in a hospital, before he began doing theater in England — against the advice of his father and counselors at schools.

"When I asked for career guidance at school, they recommended bricklaying as a good, regular job," he told the Sunday Business Post in 2011.

Stamp has said after his father came back from World War II, he was a "very emotionally closed down guy," but credits his mother with supporting his drive to become an actor, noting in his memoir that she was an "inveterate moviegoer."

Terence Stamp in 1961.
Roger Jackson/Getty Images / Hulton Archive
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Hulton Archive
Terence Stamp in 1961.

At 24, Stamp landed his breakout role with Billy Budd, adapted from a Herman Melville novel, where critics noted that his "sinewy, boyish frame and the face of a Botticelli angel" made him the perfect lead-role sailor. The film earned him an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe for most promising male newcomer.

Though he had a stretch of success in the 1960s, he moved to an ashram in India in 1969 and became a swami after a romantic breakup. Stamp, however, said the real reason he moved was that he was having trouble landing work as an actor.

"I was 32, in my prime, but producers were looking for a young Terence Stamp. It was deeply humiliating," he said in the Irish publication The Business Post.

That all changed, he later wrote in his memoir, when he received a telegram to a hotel in India that asked him to return to London to be in the Superman movies. "YOU HAVE SCENES WITH MARLON BRANDO," the telegram read.

His career spanned more than 60 films, both blockbusters and arthouse, but perhaps his most widely known performance was portraying General Zod, the alien villain, in early Superman films.

In his memoir, The Ocean Fell into the Drop, Stamp describes being mesmerized at an early age by Cary Grant in The Bishop's Wife, the 1947 classic Christmas comedy.

"When I discovered he'd been born Archie Leech and was a working-class lad from Bristol, I was impressed in ways it's hard to explain," Stamp wrote. "I didn't stop watching television."

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Bobby Allyn
Bobby Allyn is a business reporter at NPR based in San Francisco. He covers technology and how Silicon Valley's largest companies are transforming how we live and reshaping society.