Quantcast
Channel: Obituaries | The Guardian
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 12695

Bob Hoskins obituary

$
0
0
Actor associated with tough guy roles, but capable of playing the poodle as well as the pitbull

Bob Hoskins: Xan Brooks pays tribute
Bob Hoskins: a career in pictures
Bob Hoskins: Michael Coveney on his stage work

Plenty of better-looking performers than Bob Hoskins, who has died aged 71 of pneumonia, have found themselves consigned to a life of bit parts. Short, bullet-headed, lacking any noticeable neck, but with a mutable face that could switch from snarling to sparkling in the time it took him to drop an aitch, Hoskins was far from conventional leading-man material. In his moments of on-screen rage, he resembled a pink grenade. But he was defined from the outset by a mix of the tough and the tender that served him well throughout his career.

As the beleaguered, optimistic sheet-music salesman in the BBC series Pennies from Heaven (1978), written by Dennis Potter, he was sweetly galumphing and sincere. Playing an ambitious East End gangster in The Long Good Friday (1980), he added an intimidating quality to the vulnerability already established. Hoskins could be poodle or pitbull; as a reluctant driver for a prostitute in Mona Lisa (1986) and a patiently calculating murderer in Felicia's Journey (1999), he was a cross-breed of the two. No other actor has a more legitimate claim on the title of the British Cagney.

Continue reading...

Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 12695

Trending Articles