A British actor, born in Manchester, England, United Kingdom. He married twice and had two children. George received the NBR Award for Best Actor for his role in the movie Citizen Kane (1941). His other credits include Murder on the Orient Express (1974), Between Two Worlds...Read more (1944), and Arabesque (1966). George Coulouris was born to an immigrant merchant father from Greece and an English mother. He completed his education at the Manchester Grammar School in England and studied at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama. His first appearance on stage was in London in 1925 in Eugene O’Neill’s masterpiece “The Hairy Ape.” By 1929, he had arrived on the Broadway stage, and from there, MGM took him to Hollywood in 1933. During the forties, he played many roles in Hollywood, and by the end of the forties, he returned to England and made English films. In the fifties and eighties, he loved theater and grappled with Henrik Ibsen, George Bernard Shaw, William Shakespeare, and Molière. He died in London, England, United Kingdom, on April 25, 1989, as a result of a heart attack resulting from Parkinson's disease.
(According to views)
A British actor, born in Manchester, England, United Kingdom. He married twice and had two children. George received the NBR Award for Best Actor for his role in the movie Citizen...Read more Kane (1941). His other credits include Murder on the Orient Express (1974), Between Two Worlds (1944), and Arabesque (1966). George Coulouris was born to an immigrant merchant father from Greece and an English mother. He completed his education at the Manchester Grammar School in England and studied at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama. His first appearance on stage was in London in 1925 in Eugene O’Neill’s masterpiece “The Hairy Ape.” By 1929, he had arrived on the Broadway stage, and from there, MGM took him to Hollywood in 1933. During the forties, he played many roles in Hollywood, and by the end of the forties, he returned to England and made English films. In the fifties and eighties, he loved theater and grappled with Henrik Ibsen, George Bernard Shaw, William Shakespeare, and Molière. He died in London, England, United Kingdom, on April 25, 1989, as a result of a heart attack resulting from Parkinson's disease.