Gerald Charles Dickens (actor)
Gerald Charles Dickens | |
---|---|
Dickens during his one-man show of A Christmas Carol (2010) | |
Born |
Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England | 9 October 1963
Residence | Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England |
Occupation | Actor |
Spouse(s) |
Lucy Marsh (divorced) Liz Hayes (m. 2015) |
Children | 1 |
Relatives |
|
Gerald Roderick Charles Dickens (born 9 October 1963) is an English actor and performer best known for his one man shows, based on the novels of his great-great-grandfather, Charles Dickens. He was the President of the Dickens Fellowship from 2005 to 2007.[1]
Early life
Born in Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent, the fourth child and second son of David Kenneth Charles Dickens (1925–2005) and his wife Betty (1927–2010), Dickens is the grandson of Gerald Charles Dickens RN (after whom he was named) and the great-grandson of Henry Fielding Dickens KC; he is also the cousin of author Monica Dickens, biographer and writer Lucinda Hawksley, and actor Harry Lloyd.[2] Dickens attended Huntleys Secondary School for Boys in Royal Tunbridge Wells and West Kent College.
Career
Inspired to be an actor by a performance of Nicholas Nickleby by the Royal Shakespeare Company, Gerald Dickens first performed his solo version of A Christmas Carol in America in 1993,[3] returning annually to perform at historic hotels, libraries, theatres and Dickens festivals. In 2009, Dickens' American tour included such Christmas companies as Vaillancourt Folk Art[4] and Byers Choice[5] and has yielded national and local press.[6][7]
Based on the readings performed by Charles Dickens himself during his own British and American tours, Gerald Dickens performs extracts from The Pickwick Papers, David Copperfield, Oliver Twist, Great Expectations, Nicholas Nickleby and A Christmas Carol among others,[8] in the latter creating 26 characters in a performance described by The New York Times as "a once in a lifetime brush with literary history."[9]
Dickens has recorded unabridged audiobooks of The Pickwick Papers[10] and Nicholas Nickleby. In December 2011 he appeared on the BBC's Songs of Praise.[11] A keen golfer, he wrote and performs the two-act play Top Hole!, based on four golfing stories by P. G. Wodehouse. In 2015 at the Music Box Theatre in Minneapolis he played Charles Dickens in Jeffrey Hatcher's one-hander To Begin With, which was adapted from Dickens' The Life of Our Lord.[12][13][14]
Personal life
In 2004 Dickens won the British TV how The Weakest Link during its 8th season in an episode where the contestants all had famous ancestors .[15][16]
Gerald Dickens lived in Goudhurst, Kent with his former wife Lucy Marsh, with whom he had a son, Cameron. He married his long-term partner Liz Hayes, a pianist who sometimes accompanies his performances, on 10 August 2015. They live in Abingdon, Oxfordshire.
See also
References
- ↑ The Dickensian No. 482 Vol. 106 Part 3 Winter 2010 pg 285
- ↑ Dickens Family Tree website
- ↑ Dickens's biography on Jackprises.com
- ↑ Dickens Performing at Vaillancourt Folk Art
- ↑ Dickens Performing at Byers Choice
- ↑ 'A Real Dickens' (Telegram and Gazette)
- ↑ Hear The Radio Interview
- ↑ Dickens on the Lichfied Garrick Theatre website
- ↑ Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities website
- ↑ Classic FM website
- ↑ BBC Songs of Praise- 'A Dickensian Christmas' 11 December 2011
- ↑ Review: Dickens commands stage in world premiere 'To Begin With' - Star Tribune - 24 February 2015
- ↑ Review of To Begin With on talkinbroadway.com
- ↑ 'What the Dickens? Local playwright wrote "To Begin With," starring Gerald Dickens' - Minnesota Daily - 19 February 2015
- ↑ 'Dickens of a victory' - The Daily Telegraph 14 January 2004
- ↑ The Weakest Link (UK) Season 8 Episode 3: 12 January 2004 - tv.com
External links
- Dickens's official website
- Dickens's biography on Jackprises.com
- Dickens interviewed in the Los Angeles Times
- Interview with Dickens on the BBC website
- Dickens performs A Christmas Carol
- Dickens in the footsteps of Charles Dickens
- Dickens performs at the Dickens Festival
- Gerald Dickens and the controversy over Dickens memorials BBC World Service