Roger Rees, the handsome, dark-haired Welsh-born actor and director who rose to fame as the title character in âThe Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby,â a stage adaptation of an obscure Dickens novel for which he won a Tony Award, died on Friday at his home in New York. He was 71.
His death followed a brief illness, his publicist, Rick Miramontez, said.
In what proved to be the final role of a career that spanned six decades across stage, film and television, Mr. Rees played the doomed lover of Chita Riveraâs character in the musical âThe Visitâ on Broadway until May, when he was forced to bow out for health reasons.
Ms. Rivera and Mr. Rees met last year while rehearsing fo r the musical and became fast friends as they performed it at the Williamstown Theater Festival in Massachusetts, where Mr. Rees once served as artistic director, before the show moved to New York. It closed in June.
âI feel Iâve been cheated a little bit,â Ms. Rivera, who played a vengeful millionaire in âThe Visit,â said in a telephone interview on Saturday from her home in Rockland County, N.Y. âI havenât had enough time with Roger Rees.â
âThe worldâs lost a great actor, a great soul, a great gentleman,â she added. âIâve lost a new friend that I was really looking forward to spending the rest of my life with, getting to know him.â
Perpetually befuddled-looking, Mr. Rees often played eccentric characters. He was best known to American television audiences as the self-assured millionaire Robin Colcord on the sitcom âCheers,â and as the British ambassador Lord John Marbury on âThe West Wing.â
He was a mainstay on Broadway, where he earned two other Tony nominations, one for best actor in âIndiscretions,â in 1995, and another, in 2012, for his work as a director of âPeter and the Starcatcher.â He also had a memorable turn as Gomez in âThe Addams Family.â
But he was best known, both in England and on Broadway, as Nicholas Nickleby. The play, based on Dickensâs 1839 novel about a young man who struggles to support his mother and sister after the death of his father, was an unlikely hit when it debuted in London in 1980. It quickly gained critical and popular success, and, after moving to Broadway in the fall of 1981, won the Tony Award for best play and earned Mr. Rees the Tony for best actor in a play. He also won an Olivier Award, the British equivalent of t he Tony, and was nominated for an Emmy Award when the play was adapted for television.
Mr. Reesâs own life bore much in common with that of the Nickleby character. He was forced to drop out of school to earn a living after his father died.
Roger Rees, who became a United States citizen in 1989, was born on May 5, 1944, in Aberystwyth, Wales, and grew up in South London. His father, William, was a police officer; his mother, Doris, was a shop clerk.
âI was at a pretty rough school, and the only thing I was good at was art,â Mr. Rees told Playbill in 2013. âI got out of this school and went to Camberwell College of Arts, a terribly prestigious thing to do. I was there to be a painter. And I sketched so well that a year later I was sent to Slade School of Fine Art, one of the great art schools.â
After his father died, Mr. Rees found work painting scenery at the Wimbledon Theater in south London. He became an actor there in 1965, appearing in âHindle Wakesâ as a mill ownerâs son who impregnates a mill girl resistant to efforts to make an honest woman out of her.
Mr. Rees moved to the Royal Shakespeare Company in 1967, appearing in âThe Comedy of Errors,â âThree Sisters,â âThe Merchant of Venice,â âOthello,â âTwelfth Nightâ and âCymbeline.â
He spent over two decades with the Royal Shakespeare Company, and was the artistic director of the Williamstown Theater Festival in Massachusetts from 2004 to 2007. He was also an associate artistic director of the Bristol Old Vic in England for two years starting in 1985.
In film, he played the Sheriff of Rottingham in Mel Brooksâ âRobin Hood: Men in Tightsâ in 1993. He also appeared in âThe Scorpion Kingâ in 2002, and âThe Pink Pantherâ in 2006.
Mr. Rees is survived by his husband, Rick Elice, the playwright whose credits include âJersey Boys.â The pair collaborated on âPeter and the Starcatcher,â a Peter Pan prequel, and wrote a play, âDouble Double,â a thriller in which Mr. Rees played opposite Jane Lapotaire.
In an interview with âThe Graham Showâ on YouTube in 2013, Mr. Rees likened acting to being a blacksmith.
âItâs hot and cold, itâs fierce and pleasant,â he said. âSometimes the most excruciating experiences in rehearsals and performances yield the most beautiful work.â
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