Dudley Moore
- In full:
- Dudley Stuart John Moore
- Died:
- March 27, 2002, Plainfield, New Jersey, U.S. (aged 66)
- Awards And Honors:
- Tony Awards (1974)
- Grammy Award (1974)
- Golden Globe Award (1985): Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy
- Golden Globe Award (1982): Best Actor in a Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy
- Grammy Award (1975): Best Spoken Word Recording
- Married To:
- Brogan Lane (1988–1991)
- Tuesday Weld (1975–1980)
- Suzy Kendall (1968–1972)
- Nicole Rothschild (1994–1998)
- Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
- "Arthur 2: On the Rocks" (1988)
- "10" (1979)
- "Derek and Clive Get the Horn" (1979)
- "Wholly Moses!" (1980)
- "Monte Carlo or Bust!" (1969)
- "The Wrong Box" (1966)
- "Unfaithfully Yours" (1984)
- "Best Defense" (1984)
- "Bedazzled" (1967)
- "Foul Play" (1978)
- "World in Ferment" (1969)
- "Lovesick" (1983)
- "Dudley" (1993)
- "The Disappearance of Kevin Johnson" (1996)
- "The Hound of the Baskervilles" (1978)
- "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" (1972)
- "Chronicle" (1964)
- "Romantic Comedy" (1983)
- "Really Wild Animals" (1993–1998)
- "Six Weeks" (1982)
- "Not Only But Also. Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in Australia" (1971)
- "Shelley Duvall's Bedtime Stories" (1992)
- "Daddy's Girls" (1994)
- "Micki + Maude" (1984)
- "Arthur" (1981)
- "Santa Claus: The Movie" (1985)
- "30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia" (1968)
- "When Things Were Rotten" (1975)
- "Like Father Like Son" (1987)
- "Five More" (1966)
- "Love Story" (1965)
- "Crazy People" (1990)
- "Film Review" (1968)
- "Not Only... But Also" (1965–1970)
- "Blame It on the Bellboy" (1992)
- "Oscar's Orchestra" (1995)
- "The Bed Sitting Room" (1969)
- Movies/Tv Shows (Writing/Creator):
- "Goodbye Again" (1968–1969)
- "Strictly For The Birds" (1961)
- "The Hound of the Baskervilles" (1978)
- "Bedazzled" (2000)
- "Not Only But Also. Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in Australia" (1971)
- "Derek and Clive Get the Horn" (1979)
- "Not Only... But Also" (1965–1970)
- "Bedazzled" (1967)
- "BBC Show of the Week" (1974)
- "The Best of... What's Left of... Not Only... But Also" (1990)
- "30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia" (1968)
Dudley Moore (born April 19, 1935, Dagenham, Essex, England—died March 27, 2002, Plainfield, New Jersey, U.S.) was a British actor, comedian, and musician whose career ranged from jazz and classical musician and composer to satiric comedian to Hollywood movie star.
Moore attended Magdalen College, Oxford, on a music scholarship, earning bachelor’s degrees in 1957 and 1958, and then toured as a jazz pianist. In 1960 Moore, Peter Cook, Jonathan Miller, and Alan Bennett created the satiric revue Beyond the Fringe for the Edinburgh Festival. The show thereafter was performed in London and on Broadway, where it won its creators a special Tony Award in 1963. Cook and Moore then teamed up for the television sketch comedy series Not Only…But Also (1965–66; 1970); the films The Wrong Box (1966), Bedazzled (1967), and The Hound of the Baskervilles (1977); three “Derek and Clive” comedy record albums in the 1970s; and, beginning in 1971, a follow-up to Beyond the Fringe. At first called Behind the Fridge, it toured Australia before being presented in London and then, retitled Good Evening, in the United States, where it won Cook and Moore a special Tony Award in 1974. Moore also composed film scores, including those for Bedazzled and Inadmissible Evidence (1968), and starred on the London stage in the comedy Play It Again, Sam (1969).
Following the end of his partnership with Cook, Moore made his Hollywood debut in 1978 in Foul Play. Moore then gained further renown for his roles in two blockbuster motion pictures—as a musician seeking the perfect woman in 10 (1979) and as a lovable millionaire drunk in Arthur (1981). Most of his other films, as well as two television series—Dudley (1993) and Daddy’s Girls (1994)—were less successful, however, and Moore concentrated on his music career until a rare neurological disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, caused his health to deteriorate. He was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2001.
