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| # | Fact |
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| 1 | When starring in Doctor in the House, he frequently sought the advice and guidance of the film's camera operator, H.A.R. Thomson regarding his performance on camera,rather than director Ralph Thomas. Bogarde said he learned more about acting for the screen/camera from this, than any other film he had worked on. |
| 2 | Suffered a stroke after undergoing heart surgery in September 1996 and spent the last three years of his life in a wheelchair. |
| 3 | Was among the actors considered for Hans Fallanda in Lifeforce(1985) Frank Finlay was cast instead. |
| 4 | Great uncle of singer Birdy. |
| 5 | Elder brother of Elizabeth Goodings and Gareth Van Den Bogaerde. |
| 6 | The ancestral town of paternal grandfather Aimé Van Den Bogaerde was Izegem in West Flanders, Belgium, where the illustrious family owned the castle Wolvenhof and produced several mayors. However Aimé left Belgium to pursue a Bohemian lifestyle and travel the world, and would tell his grandson Dirk that he was in fact Dutch. |
| 7 | During the late 1940s Bogarde was living at No 44 Chester Row, Belgravia, London with a rescued cat called Cliff. While he was there Bogarde received his first contract from J. Arthur Rank, which set him on the way to stardom. |
| 8 | He was a close friend of Rex Harrison, whom he named as the actor who had influenced him most in a 1963 interview with the BBC. In 1958 Bogarde provided a video message praising Harrison when the musical "My Fair Lady" transferred from Broadway to London. |
| 9 | He was made a Fellow of the British Film Institute in recognition of his outstanding contribution to film culture. |
| 10 | He had a remarkably good singing voice. |
| 11 | Turned down the role of the British padre in The Longest Day (1962). |
| 12 | Scottish director Bill Douglas approached Bogarde to play a small part in his feature Comrades (1986) but Bogarde declined, sending Douglas a postcard saying, "I don't do small parts". |
| 13 | Following the death of his partner Anthony Forwood in 1988, he moved into an apartment at 2 Cadogan Gardens in London, where he remained until his death. |
| 14 | His favourite of his films was King & Country (1964), which reflected his strong anti-war views. Bogarde was very disappointed by the film's commercial failure. |
| 15 | Befriended Rock Hudson while filming Campbell's Kingdom (1957), while Hudson was filming A Farewell to Arms (1957). |
| 16 | Quit smoking following a minor stroke in November 1987. |
| 17 | In "Dirk Bogarde: The Authorized Biography" (2004), John Coldstream offers four major reasons for Bogarde's failure to become a Hollywood star in 1960. Firstly, the vehicle for his potential breakthrough, Song Without End (1960), was a flop. Secondly, his talents at that time were not seen as being particularly different from those of, in particular, Montgomery Clift, John Cassavetes and Anthony Perkins - nor could he possibly compete as a light comedy lead in the manner of Cary Grant and Rock Hudson. Thirdly, he had had enough of making formulaic films and was determined to prove himself as a serious actor. But fourthly, and perhaps most importantly, his refusal to enter into an arranged marriage to a starlet in the style of Rock Hudson's marriage to Phyllis Gates, did not go down well among producers in Hollywood. |
| 18 | Sir David Lean considered making Doctor Zhivago (1965) with Bogarde, but decided on Omar Sharif instead. |
| 19 | Was considered for Louis Jourdan's role in Gigi (1958). |
| 20 | Turned down Glenn Ford's role in The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1962), which turned out to be a critical and financial disaster. |
| 21 | He made his stage debut in 1939, but his acting career was interrupted for seven years by World War II until he was demobilized in September 1946. |
| 22 | Born Derek van den Bogaerde in the north London suburb of Hampstead to an actress mother and an artist father, he went to university in London and Scotland. |
| 23 | Beginning in 1977, Bogarde was also a prolific writer with seven volumes of autobiography and seven novels all becoming best-sellers. |
| 24 | He moved to Europe in the late 1960s, when he saw his career path lay in the sort of films being produced in Italy, France and Germany, rather than England or America. He lived in France some 20 years, thus fulfilling a childhood ambition. |
| 25 | Considered retiring after The Night Porter (1974), which had left him emotionally drained. |
| 26 | Going to the wrong room for a British Broadcasting Corporation audition, the young Bogarde accidentally got a part in a stage play that proved so successful he was hailed as a star overnight. |
| 27 | Resisted attempts to make him Hollywood's new "Spanish" star, and to be married off to some starlet. Turned down The Egyptian (1954) after Marlon Brando had turned it down. |
| 28 | Turned down a co-starring role for $150,000 alongside Rock Hudson and George Peppard in Tobruk (1967). |
| 29 | Was considered for the role of Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons (1966). |
| 30 | Turned down an offer of $150,000 from MGM to star with Natalie Wood in Penelope (1966), in order to make Accident (1967) with his friend, director Joseph Losey. |
| 31 | Won a British Academy Award (BAFTA) for his performance in The Servant (1963). |
| 32 | Turned down Jeremy Irons's role in The Mission (1986). |
| 33 | Longtime companion of actor manager Anthony Forwood. |
| 34 | For a time in the 1950s, Bogarde was promoted as "The British Rock Hudson". |
| 35 | According to his friend Charlotte Rampling, Bogarde was approached in 1990 by Madonna to appear in her video for "Justify My Love", citing The Night Porter (1974) as an inspiration. Bogarde turned the offer down. |
| 36 | His height was measured at five feet eight and a half inches when he was drafted into the British army in September 1939. |
| 37 | 1984: President of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival. |
| 38 | 1985: Member of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival. |
| 39 | Director Joseph Losey originally offered the part of Leon Trotsky in his film The Assassination of Trotsky (1972) to Bogarde. Losey admitted that the script was terrible, but told Bogarde that it would be revised. Bogarde turned the role down, embittering Losey, who felt that Bogarde didn't trust him. Richard Burton, who had worked with Losey on Boom! (1968), did trust Losey enough to take the part, even though he was shown the same script. Bogarde was wise to turn down the part as the finished film was a critical and box office failure, and along with the earlier Losey-Burton collaboration Boom! (1968) made the list of the "Fifty Worst Films of All Time", by Harry Medved and Randy Lowell. |
| 40 | Uncle of Ulric Van Den Bogaerde. |
| 41 | A British soldier during World War II, he claimed to have been present when the Allies rescued the prisoners from the Nazi death camp at Belsen. However there is some doubt as to whether Bogarde was really there or whether he pretended to have been present in later years. |
| 42 | He was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Literature on Junly 4, 1985 by St. Andrews University in Scotland. |
| 43 | He was the only cast member of A Bridge Too Far (1977) to have actually served at the actual battles depicted in the film. |
| 44 | He was awarded a Chevalier De L'Ordre Des Lettres from the French Government in 1982. |
| 45 | He was created a Knight Bachelor in the 1992 Queen's New Year Honours List, and was officially knighted on February 13, 1992. |
| 46 | Born at 3:20am-UT |
| 47 | The day before he died was spent with his friend Lauren Bacall. Apparently they had a wonderful time together. |
| 48 | 1995: Chosen by Empire magazine as one of the 100 Sexiest Stars in film history (#78). |