Peter O'Toole (1932–2013)
Author of Loitering with Intent: The Child
About the Author
Image credit: Peter O'Toole as T.E. Lawrence In Lawrence of Arabia, 1962 [source: Columbia Pictures extended 1962 trailer for "Lawrence of Arabia"]
Series
Works by Peter O'Toole
For Greater Glory 14 copies
Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell [1999 TV movie] — Director — 3 copies
Coming Home, Vol. 2 2 copies
Masada Part 1 1 copy
Associated Works
Reach for the Ground: The Downhill Struggle of Jeffrey Bernard (1996) — Foreword — 37 copies, 1 review
Dean Spanley [2008 film] 19 copies
The Savage Innocents [1960 film] 11 copies
Svengali [1983 film] 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- O'Toole, Peter
- Legal name
- O'Toole, Peter Seamus Lorcan
- Birthdate
- 1932-08-02
- Date of death
- 2013-12-14
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
- Occupations
- actor
- Nationality
- Ireland
UK - Places of residence
- Leeds, Yorkshire, England, UK
- Place of death
- London, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Discussions
Passing Of The "Old Guard," Peter O'Toole, Joan Fontaine And Tom Laughlin... in Pro and Con (December 2013)
Reviews
The first of two volumes of memoirs, covering his early education, upbringing by his “sporting” (i.e. bookmaking) father and mother, wartime evacuation, Royal Navy service, early acting, and ending with admission into the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art on a scholarship.
He’s highly literate and has a great talent for language.
It’s frequently funny.
He rambles, jumps around, and for some inexplicable reason devotes about a third of his memoir to a sort of biographical sketch of Adolf show more Hitler, which isn’t that badly done, but what the hell? He was known to be a drunk, and I guess some drunks do talk about Hitler a lot.
One of the main characters is a young friend that he calls “O’Liver.” It’s not clear to me whether it’s someone that we’re supposed to know, and given my heroic dedication to never doing any outside research, I’ll not figure it out until one of you writes in to tell me. My guess is Oliver Reed.
Reflecting on earlier days with O’Liver: “We both are old now, more sedate, more responsible, we sleep in beds and sometimes we are sober; our bones are brittle, our sinews want elastic, the optician is kept busy and the dentist’s in despair, the barber gives us shorter shrift while the tailor makes thick overcoats, but should a shining occasion present itself, why, we will run jump fight fuck wheel a barrow drive a truck and generally present ourselves, singly or in tandem, to whatever merry mayhem takes our fancy.”
Not bad. I hear the second volume is better. show less
He’s highly literate and has a great talent for language.
It’s frequently funny.
He rambles, jumps around, and for some inexplicable reason devotes about a third of his memoir to a sort of biographical sketch of Adolf show more Hitler, which isn’t that badly done, but what the hell? He was known to be a drunk, and I guess some drunks do talk about Hitler a lot.
One of the main characters is a young friend that he calls “O’Liver.” It’s not clear to me whether it’s someone that we’re supposed to know, and given my heroic dedication to never doing any outside research, I’ll not figure it out until one of you writes in to tell me. My guess is Oliver Reed.
Reflecting on earlier days with O’Liver: “We both are old now, more sedate, more responsible, we sleep in beds and sometimes we are sober; our bones are brittle, our sinews want elastic, the optician is kept busy and the dentist’s in despair, the barber gives us shorter shrift while the tailor makes thick overcoats, but should a shining occasion present itself, why, we will run jump fight fuck wheel a barrow drive a truck and generally present ourselves, singly or in tandem, to whatever merry mayhem takes our fancy.”
Not bad. I hear the second volume is better. show less
Lists
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 18
- Also by
- 58
- Members
- 426
- Popularity
- #57,312
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 19













