Genius who turned all he touched into gold

13 April 2012

Sir Peter Ustinov, actor, director, producer, playwright, raconteur and a host of other things, who died in Switzerland at the weekend, was one of the most extraordinary theatrical figures of the 20th century.

Peter Alexander Ustinov was born in London on April 16, 1921, half Russian and half German on his father's side, and half Russian, a quarter Italian and a quarter French on his mother's side.

Hardly surprisingly, he once said: "It's very difficult for me to feel British."
And on another occasion he observed: "I rather think of myself as ethnically filthy - and proud of it."

He went to Westminster School where, aged 14, he earned his first fee for a satirical piece about Von Ribbentrop's son, a fellow pupil. An early school report on Ustinov said: "He shows great originality which must be curbed at all costs."

He left school at 16 without qualification or distinction. At the London Theatre Studio he rapidly made a name for himself as an actor and writer in revue. He wrote his first play at the age of 18 and directed his first film at the age of 24.

Ustinov was called up into the army and served for a time as David Niven's batman. He found himself working on an official film, A School For Secrets, at the Malvern radar establishment.

Later, during the war, he told an officers' selection board that he had a preference for tanks "because you can go into battle sitting down".

Inevitably, the board issued a warning: "On no account must this man be put in charge of others."

He married his first wife when he was 19, a young lady who, it was claimed, was totally ignorant of the facts of life, although they were to have one child.

His second wife, Suzanne, was a beautiful but deeply troubled French Canadian actress. That marriage was dissolved in 1971, with Ustinov winning custody of their three children.

Of his third wife, Helene, he said: "She has made me into something approaching the man I once hoped to be, privately and secretly."

Ustinov wrote numerous plays, most successful of which was The Love of Four Colonels in which he starred with Moira Lister. But his style, which tended towards the whimsical, allegorical and long-winded, drifted out of fashion by the late Fifties.

From the 1960s, he concentrated on a series of mostly forgettable film roles, although he did win Oscars for the Best Supporting Actor in Spartacus and Topkapi.

Ustinov also wrote and directed the first-class film of Billy Budd, which introduced Terence Stamp to the movies. In addition he was writing novels, making spectacular one-man stage appearances, and producing newspaper columns.

The great critic, James Agate, once said of him: "Ustinov is whipped by something which must be genius since it cannot be talent, for the first characteristic of talent is the taking of trouble, and I suspect that Ustinov never takes any."

His ability to remember anecdotes and recall incidents amazed his friends. He never committed anything to paper, but he once explained: "I work on training the memory by a very complicated numerical and letter system of my own, which is a secret.

"I do that in case I am ever put in prison by mistake, which seems more and more likely these days. I'd have to have something to occupy the mind because I presume that in the kind of prison I'd be put into, there would be no paper allowed and no sharp objects."

Some people have said that Ustinov spread himself too thinly. He was invariably dashing around the world from his home in Switzerland, promoting books, making TV series, recording voice-overs, writing newspaper articles or speaking at seminars and literary lunches.

He was always more feted in Germany (where they continually reprinted all his literary endeavours), Switzerland (whose National Library keeps his entire oeuvre on microfilm) and France (where he was elected to Orson Welles's chair at the Academie des Beaux Arts) than he was in his native Britain.

Once he said: "Obviously the British are the toughest nail because I started here. Here it is as a comedian that I am best known. I am not known as that anywhere else.

"And that is why I find living in Switzerland rather emollient, because I get over the bruises much more quickly."

But in addition to being a celebrity, he shuttled about on behalf of Unicef, the world children's agency, and was president of an obscure "Utopian" lobby called the World Federalists.

Last year, he was honoured with a graduate college named after him at Durham University, where he was chancellor.

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