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Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Michael Gambon, veteran actor who played Dumbledore in ‘Harry Potter’ films, dies at age 82

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Newsdesk
601 days ago
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FILE - British actor Michael Gambon arrives in Trafalgar Square, in central London, for the world premiere of "Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows: Part 2," the last film in the series, on July 7, 2011. Gambon, who was known to many for his portrayal of Hogwarts headmaster Albus Dumbledore in six of eight “Harry Potter” films, died. He was 82. A statement by his family, issued by his publicist on Thursday, Sept. 28, 2023, said he died following “a bout of pneumonia.” (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, File)

FILE - British actor Michael Gambon arrives in Trafalgar Square, in central London, for the world premiere of "Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows: Part 2," the last film in the series, on July 7, 2011. Gambon, who was known to many for his portrayal of Hogwarts headmaster Albus Dumbledore in six of eight “Harry Potter” films, died. He was 82. A statement by his family, issued by his publicist on Thursday, Sept. 28, 2023, said he died following “a bout of pneumonia.” (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, File)

Joel Ryan

Michael Gam­bon, the Irish-born ac­tor knight­ed for his il­lus­tri­ous ca­reer on the stage and screen and who went on to gain ad­mi­ra­tion from a new gen­er­a­tion of movie­go­ers with his por­tray­al of Hog­warts head­mas­ter Al­bus Dum­b­le­dore in six of the eight “Har­ry Pot­ter” films, has died. He was 82.

The ac­tor died on Wednes­day fol­low­ing “a bout of pneu­mo­nia,” his pub­li­cist, Clair Dobbs, said Thurs­day.

“We are dev­as­tat­ed to an­nounce the loss of Sir Michael Gam­bon. Beloved hus­band and fa­ther, Michael died peace­ful­ly in hos­pi­tal with his wife Anne and son Fer­gus at his bed­side,” his fam­i­ly said in a state­ment.

While the Pot­ter role raised Gam­bon’s in­ter­na­tion­al pro­file and found him a huge au­di­ence, he had long been cel­e­brat­ed as one of Britain’s lead­ing ac­tors. His work spanned TV, the­ater, film and ra­dio, and over the decades he starred in dozens of movies from “Gos­ford Park” and “The King’s Speech” to the an­i­mat­ed fam­i­ly film “Padding­ton.” He re­cent­ly ap­peared in the Judy Gar­land biopic “Judy,” re­leased in 2019.

Gam­bon was knight­ed for his con­tri­bu­tion to the en­ter­tain­ment in­dus­try in 1998.

The role of the much loved Pro­fes­sor Dum­b­le­dore was ini­tial­ly played by an­oth­er Irish-born ac­tor, Richard Har­ris. When Har­ris died in 2002, af­ter two of the films in the fran­chise had been made, Gam­bon took over and played the part from “Har­ry Pot­ter and the Pris­on­er of Azk­a­ban” through to “Har­ry Pot­ter And The Death­ly Hal­lows Part 2.”

He once ac­knowl­edged not hav­ing read any of J. K Rowl­ing’s best-sell­ing books, ar­gu­ing that it was safer to fol­low the script rather than be too in­flu­enced by the books. That didn’t pre­vent him from em­body­ing the spir­it of the pow­er­ful wiz­ard who fought against evil to pro­tect his stu­dents.

Co-stars of­ten de­scribed Gam­bon as a mis­chie­vous, fun­ny man who was self-dep­re­cat­ing about his tal­ent. Ac­tress He­len Mir­ren fond­ly re­mem­bered his “nat­ur­al Irish sense of hu­mor — naughty but very, very fun­ny.”

Fiona Shaw, who played Petu­nia Durs­ley in the “Har­ry Pot­ter” se­ries, re­called Gam­bon telling her how cen­tral act­ing was to his life.

“He did once say to me in a car ‘I know I go on a lot about this and that, but ac­tu­al­ly, in the end, there is on­ly act­ing’,” Shaw told the BBC on Thurs­day. “I think he was al­ways pre­tend­ing that he didn’t take it se­ri­ous­ly, but he took it pro­found­ly se­ri­ous­ly.”

Irish Pres­i­dent Michael D. Hig­gins paid trib­ute to Gam­bon’s “ex­cep­tion­al tal­ent,” prais­ing him as “one of the finest ac­tors of his gen­er­a­tion.”

Born in Dublin on Oct. 19, 1940, Gam­bon was raised in Lon­don and orig­i­nal­ly trained as an en­gi­neer, fol­low­ing in the foot­steps of his fa­ther. He did not have for­mal dra­ma train­ing, and was said to have start­ed work in the the­ater as a set builder. He made his the­ater de­but in a pro­duc­tion of “Oth­el­lo” in Dublin.

In 1963 he got his first big break with a mi­nor role in “Ham­let,” the Na­tion­al The­atre Com­pa­ny’s open­ing pro­duc­tion, un­der the di­rec­tor­ship of the leg­endary Lau­rence Olivi­er.

Gam­bon soon be­came a dis­tin­guished stage ac­tor and re­ceived crit­i­cal ac­claim for his lead­ing per­for­mance in “Life of Galileo,” di­rect­ed by John Dex­ter. He was fre­quent­ly nom­i­nat­ed for awards and won the Lau­rence Olivi­er Award 3 times and the Crit­ics’ Cir­cle The­atre Awards twice.

A mul­ti-tal­ent­ed ac­tor, Gam­bon was al­so the re­cip­i­ent of four cov­et­ed British Acad­e­my of Film and Tele­vi­sion Arts awards for his tele­vi­sion work.

He be­came a house­hold name in Britain af­ter his lead role in the 1986 BBC TV se­ries “The Singing De­tec­tive,” writ­ten by Den­nis Pot­ter and con­sid­ered a clas­sic of British tele­vi­sion dra­ma. Gam­bon won the BAF­TA for best ac­tor for the role.

Gam­bon al­so won Em­my nom­i­na­tions for more re­cent tele­vi­sion work — as Mr. Wood­house in a 2010 adap­tion of Jane Austen’s “Em­ma,” and as for­mer U.S. Pres­i­dent Lyn­don B. John­son in 2002’s “Path to War.”

Gam­bon was ver­sa­tile as an ac­tor but once told the BBC he pre­ferred to play “vil­lain­ous char­ac­ters.” He played gang­ster Ed­die Tem­ple in the British crime thriller “Lay­er Cake” — a re­view of the film by the New York Times re­ferred to Gam­bon as “re­li­ably ex­cel­lent” — and a Sa­tan­ic crime boss in Pe­ter Green­away’s “The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover.”

He al­so had a part as King George V in the 2010 dra­ma film “The King’s Speech.” In 2015 he re­turned to the works of J.K. Rowl­ing, tak­ing a lead­ing role in the TV adap­ta­tion of her non-Pot­ter book “The Ca­su­al Va­can­cy.”

“I ab­solute­ly loved work­ing with him,” Rowl­ing post­ed on X, for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter. “The first time I ever laid eyes on him was in ‘King Lear’, in 1982, and if you’d told me then that bril­liant ac­tor would ap­pear in any­thing I’d writ­ten, I’d have thought you were in­sane.”

Gam­bon re­tired from the stage in 2015 af­ter strug­gling to re­mem­ber his lines in front of an au­di­ence due to his ad­vanc­ing age. He once told the Sun­day Times Mag­a­zine: “It’s a hor­ri­ble thing to ad­mit, but I can’t do it. It breaks my heart.”

Gam­bon was al­ways pro­tec­tive when it came to his pri­vate life. He mar­ried Anne Miller and they had one son, Fer­gus. He lat­er had two sons with set de­sign­er Philip­pa Hart.

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