Friday, 7 August 2009

Pierce Brosnan


Off-hand charm and self-deprecating comic were two qualities of this dashing Irish leading man brought to his victory of modernity, often bumbling, CON-male private investigator Remington Steele on the long-term series (NBC , 1982-87) with the same name. Brosnan, a former commercial illustrator who has received many comparisons to Cary Grant, became so popular in this role, he was selected by readers polled a national magazine as the favored actor to replace the departure of Roger Moore in the highly profitable James Bond series. However, contractual obligations to "Remington Steele" not available and made him the witness was presented to Timothy Dalton. 
Brosnan entered show business as an escape teenagers working in a circus as a fire consumer reviews. He received a little more than usual excellence as a member of an experimental theater workshop in London before its first stage in the 1976 production of "Wait Until Dark." Brosnan in a room jumping playwright Tennessee Williams, who has chosen the young actor to create the role of McCabe in the UK premiere of "Red Devil Battery Sign." Additional stage work followed, before his debut in the movie character, in turn, welcomed British gangster film The Long Good Friday "(1980). 

America first discovered thin, dark-haired performer on television in the miniseries "The Manion of America" (ABC, 1981), as Rory O'Manion, Irish immigrant who made much of America, 19 th century. The success of exposure to its players like Steele. Brosnan, a number of special offers in a series of "Run, and a" no "," Nomads "(1985), in which he divided french anthropologist. The transition to film actor was difficult, but TV offered regular work in telefilms and mini. Brosnan was well cast as the town eccentric Phineas Fogg in the adaptation of the mini-novel by Jules Verne's "Around the World in 80 Days" (NBC, 1989). He became a familiar face in the thriller cable, in particular, has played an agent Mike Graham in "Alistair MacLean Death Train (USA, 1993), and Alistair MacLean to Night Watch" (USA, 1995).

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