Magee changed his stage name to supposedly avoid confusion with another actor called Patrick McGee. He was given to exaggeration in interviews and often stated that he was originally a street fighter from Dublin when in fact he was born into a comfortable middle class family. His father, Pat McGee, was the Master of Banbrook School. Magee joined the Belfast Group Players theatre group in 1948 and appeared in several acclaimed production during the three years he stayed there. He left to travel to England under the auspices of the renowned director Tyrone Guthrie to appear in a series of Irish plays staged at the Hammersmith Lyric as part of the Festival of Britain in 1951. He returned to Ireland with a tour of Shakespeare productions. Part of the acting company was the aspiring actor Harold Pinter who would strike up a lifelong friendship with Magee.
Magee returned to the UK to work in repertory theatre and soon picked up the occasional role on television. His debut in the TV medium came with the role of Harry Berks in the BBC Sunday Night Theatre episode 'The Adventurer' (31st July 1955). He later returned to the anthology series with appearances in the episodes 'Juno and the Paycock' (17th March 1957), an Irish based family drama, and in a small role as a policeman in 'Teru' (4th August 1957). He would later return to the BBC series for two further instalments; 'Gracie' (12th October 1958) and 'Mooney’s Wreck' (3rd May 1959). Magee also found himself cast regularly in ITV’s flagship drama anthology series, ITV Television Playhouse, with the role of Maguire in 'The Shadow of the Gun Man' (11th July 1957) based on the Sean O’Casey play, portraying Mate in a version of the Herb Tank play 'Longitude 49' (17th July 1959) and as a unnamed police detective in 'Who’s Owen Stephens..?' (10th November 1960). His final appearance in the programme was in the episode 'Too Old For Donkeys' (4th April 1963).
The actor was equally as busy with television roles during 1963 appearing in 'The Escape' (20th June 1963), an episode of the adventure series Moonstrike, Zero One episode 'Stopover' (21st August 1963) as the character Gallegos and playing a police inspector in 'Express Delivery' (12th October 1963), an episode of The Sentimental Agent. He also popped up in two episodes of the soap opera Compact playing the character Sligo in the episodes 'Faith and Begorra' (10th September 1963) and 'A Touch of the Blarney' (12th September 1963). There was also two appearances in The Avengers; playing Pancho in the second season instalment 'Killer Whale' (2nd March 1963) and the third season story 'The Gilded Cage' (9th November 1963) as criminal mastermind J P Spagge. Finally he appeared as William Breen in The Plane Makers episode 'The Old Boy Network' (21st October 1963) which was followed by his return in the later episode 'The Smiler' (14th January 1964).
More high profile film work came with the role of surgeon James Reynolds in the classic Zulu (1964), Alfredo in the sumptuous looking Roger Corman production of The Masque of Red Death (1964) and as Inspector Walsh in Bryan Forbe’s Séance on a Wet Afternoon (1964). His TV resume for the year included playing Jack Mullen in two episodes of Z Cars written by Eric Paice – 'The Fire Raiser' (21st March 1964) and 'The Witness' (28th March 1964) – and playing The Duke of Wellington for the Theatre 625 episode 'Carried By Storm' (25th October 1964) directed by Donald McWhinnie who would later direct 'What Big Eyes'. The Stage review singled out his performance in the play “Patrick Magee showed us yet another side of his considerable talent, and was indeed the Iron Duke when he delivered lines like “The only rules of war that concern is gentlemen. Are mine.[2]””
Magee was so busy with the RSC that he only found time to make two television appearances in 1965; essaying the role of James Spalding in 'Beware of the Dog' (16th May 1965), an episode of Dr Finlay’s Casebook, and featuring as Tetzel in the BBC Play of the Month production 'Luther' (19th October 1965). Film wise he appeared as a police surgeon on the British horror flick The Skull (1965) and could be seen as Doctor Henderson in Die, Monster, Die! AKA Monster of Terror (1965) which was based on the H P Lovecraft story The Colour Out of Space. Magee also played a criminal out to steal a valuable painting in Portrait in Terror (1965).
The following year Magee played the role of Mark in the Peter Shaffer play The Battle of Shrivings at the Brighton Royal during January with a London run in February 1970. Mark sounds typical Magee material from The Stage review description of his character as a “raging, coarse, earthy force of destruction[3]”. As well as the legends of stage John Gielgud and Wendy Hiller in the cast there was a young actor just making his mark, Martin Shaw, who would later play a lead role in the Beasts episode 'Buddyboy'. The first year of the new decade saw Magee make only two film appearance with the role of Hugh Peters in Cromwell (1970) and as General Ataturk in the action comedy You Can’t Win ‘Em All (1970). His non-stage work for 1971 consisted of three film roles the first of which was for director Peter Brook’s version of King Lear (1971) playing the role of Cornwall. The next was in the obscure historical epic The Trojan Woman (1971) undertaking the role of Menelaus. The final film role for the year is possibly one of his most famous, playing Mr Alexander, the householder who tortures Malcom McDowell’s character Alex in Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange (1971) after his home is invaded by Alex. McDowell and Magee had previously met when they had worked on the 1965 Royal Shakespeare Company production Squire Puntila and His Servant Matti. Magee had the lead role of Matti and McDowell was a lowly supporting artist.
1972 would be the year that Magee really threw himself into horror film roles starting with the portmanteau Tales From The Crypt (1972). Magee featured in the segment 'Blind Alleys' playing the role of George Carter, the leader of a group of blind people who have their revenge on the callous new owner of their care home. He also took the lead role of the sinister unnamed minister who leads a religious sect called The Brethren in Robert Hartford-Davis’ grubby horror flick The Fiend AKA Beware My Brethren (1972). Next was another portmanteau horror, Asylum (1972), with Magee essaying the role of the distinctly odd Doctor Rutherford who instructs a new doctor (Robert Powell) that he must guest which one of four inmates is the doctor he has come to replace. This acts as the framing story for the portmanteau film. His final horror film for the year was the Hammer production Demons of the Mind (1972) in which he chews the scenery as Falkenberg. His other film appearances for the year included appearing as General Bindon Blood in Young Winston (1972) and as an elderly monk in Pope Joan (1972). He also made two appearances in two editions of Thirty Minute Theatre, the first was as Michael in 'Thrills Galore' (4th September 1972), whilst his second was in a performance of 'Krapp’s Last Tape' (29th November 1972).
Magee had a guest role as Gardner in The Persuaders episode 'Chase' (2nd March 1973) before appearing in the Orson Welles’ Great Mysteries adaptation of 'The Monkey’s Paw' (10th November 1973) playing the central role of Sergeant Morris. Also in the cast was Michael Kitchen who would later appear alongside Magee in the Beasts episode 'What Big Eyes'. Magee then made his second appearance in a BBC Play of the Month production playing The Storyteller in an adaptation of Brecht’s play 'Caucasian Chalk Circle' (16th May 1973). His film credits included another horror film, And Now The Screaming Starts (1973) playing Doctor Whittle, the Donald Sutherland starring crime thriller Lady Ice (1973) and the truly bonkers psychedelic science fiction film The Final Programme AKA The Last Days of Man on Earth (1973) as mad scientist Doctor Baxter.
Film roles for 1974 took in in the Italian drama Simona (1974) and Luther (1974), a film version of the John Osborne stage play, starring Stacey Keach as Martin Luther supported by a wealth of Brit character actors including Hugh Griffith, Julian Glover, Judi Dench and Robert Stephens. Television roles included playing Corporal Donovan in 'The Last Charge' (3rd March 1974), a second season episode of The Adventures of Black Beauty. His major television role for the year was undertaking the title role in a Thames Television production of King Lear (24th September – 5th November 1974). This was a six-part production for schools and colleges and originally transmitted on Tuesday mornings from 24th September. The adaptation, intended for secondary school pupils boasted a cast that also had roles essayed by Patrick Mower (Edmund), Peter Jeffrey (Cornwall) and Wendy Allnut (Cordelia). The production was later edited into a single play running to two hours in length and was released on DVD in 2004. In the year prior to his role in Beasts Magee played Cardinal Bellarim in the biopic Galileo (1975) which saw him reunited with director Joseph Losey. Rather strangely Topol was cast as the eponymous 17th Century Italian astronomer. His only other film role for the year saw him also reunited with Stanley Kubrick for whom he undertook the role of gambler the Chevalier du Balibari in Barry Lyndon (1975). During the filming a card game scene Magee had difficulty in saying his lines due to being distracted by having to wear an eye patch. When he did get the line right his hands were not in the position that Kubrick required and so a hand model was used to shuffle and deal the cards. However this caused continuity problems because the hand model had smooth hands and Magee’s were very hairy. Kubrick’s solution to match the shots was for Magee to shave his hands.
On television he could be seen playing another mad scientist, Professor Marcus Carnaby, in the Thriller episode 'A Killer in Every Corner' (1st February 1975). Carnaby is a psychologist who habitually records his voice on a tape recorder, possibly a direct reference to Krapp’s Last Tape. Next was a role as Vamvakaris in the Quiller episode 'Mark The File Expendable' (7th November 1975). On the stage there was a revival of Krapp’s Last Tape at the Greenwich Theatre during December 1975. Magee directed with Max Wall taking on the central role previously written by Beckett for Magee. During May 1976 to mark the seventieth birthday of Samuel Beckett the Royal Court staged a new production of his play Endgame, directed by Donald McWhinnie who would cast Magee in his episode of Beasts. Magee played the central role of Hamm whilst a young Stephen Rea essayed Clov. This was followed with McWhinnie also directing a production of Beckett’s trilogy Play, That Time and Footfalls. Magee appeared in That Time. Further stage roles for the year included The White Devil at the Old Vic during July 1976 and part of the Oxford Theatre Festival Magee directed a revival of Samuel Beckett’s Waiting For Godot during August.
Magee’s role as Leo Raymount in the Beasts episode 'What Big Eyes' was his only film or television appearance during 1976. Perhaps Magee’s biggest achievement of the year was not on the screen or on the stage, but in the realm of politics. He joined fellow actors Vanessa Redgrave and Glenda Jackson in successfully campaigning to persuade the actor’s union Equity to boycott South African because of Apartheid. Post-Beasts there was a third and final appearance in a BBC Play of the Month production with Magee in the supporting role of Fergus Crampton in a version of the George Bernard Shaw play 'You Can Never Tell' (30th October 1977). This was followed by a role in 'The Well' (12th December 1977), an episode of the BBC drama series Who Pays The Ferryman? His only film work for the year was as a Russian KGB officer, General Strelsky, in Don Siegel’s action film Telefon (1977) which starred Charles Bronson. During 1978 Magee’s sole television appearance was as the recurring character Ebenezer Balfour in HTV’s production of Kidnapped. He then appeared on screen in the strife-torn Belfast set Play for Today episode 'The Last Window Cleaner' (13th February 1979). Tony Harrison’s staging of Aeschylus trilogy of plays was filmed by the BBC and Magee could be seen in the role of Kalchas in the opening episode Agamemnon (7th March 1979). For the French film production Les soeurs Bronte (The Bronte Sisters) (1979) Magee played the strict Anglican pastor who fathered the eponymous siblings. Churchill and the Generals (1979) was a star studded TV movie which featured Timothy West as Churchill. The production examined the relationship Churchill had with his army generals during the war and Magee appeared as General Sir Archibald Wavell. Magee also appeared as Muldooney in the Play for Today production 'The Last Window Cleaner' (13th February 1979).
In the last few years of his life Magee became more active onscreen than he had been in recent years. In 1980 he appeared in four cinema releases; playing Ernst Mueller in heist movie Rough Cut (1980), popping up as the sacrilegious Reverend Slodden who declares he is the anti-Christ in comedy vehicle Sir Henry at Rawlinson’s End (1980), portraying the Marquis in obscure Swedish horror film The Sleep of Death AKA Inn of the Flying Dragon (1980) and a cameo as a priest in the low budget fantasy film Hawk The Slayer (1980). His only TV role for the year was in a Play for Today episode which unusually featured a science fiction storyline. 'The Flipside of Dominck Hide' (9th December 1980) featured Magee in the role of Caleb Line.
His appearance as the pompous aristocrat Lord Cadogan, head of the British Olympic Committee, in the Oscar winning film Chariots of Fire (1981) is possibly his most recognisable role from his final years and is certainly the most highly visible with his other film roles for the year being in the horror genre. The Monster Club (1981) was a late entry into the horror portmanteau field and feels and looks very old fashioned. Magee graced the film with his role as the Innkeeper in the third and final segment. The Black Cat (1981) was an Italian horror film directed by the notorious director Lucio Fulci which featured Magee as Professor Robert Miles opposite David Warbeck’s police inspector and Mimsy Farmer. Professor Miles is a psychic who is able to communicate with his pet cat who he sends to wreak vengeance on those that wronged him. His final horror film role was as General William Danvers Carew in Walerian Borowczyk’s art porn horror The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Miss Osbourne (1981). The director had seen Magee in Sir Henry at Rawlinson’s End and recruited him and the cinematographer, Martin Bell, to work on his production following the viewing. Magee’s final film appearance was in the documentary Samuel Beckett: Silence To Silence (1982) which celebrated the work of the writer with who Magee had been a lifelong friend to.
Next was the role of Alfred in 'Horace Finds a Friend' (22nd April 1982), an episode of the Yorkshire Television comedy series Horace starring Barry Jackson in the title role. His final posthumous appearance saw him reprise the role of Caleb Line in the Play For Today story 'Another Flip For Dominick' (14th December 1982)
Despite all this success Magee still struggled financially, in part due to his vices. A low in his stage career came when he appeared opposite Helen Mirren in a production of the play The Faith Healer at the Royal Court Theatre in London. Magee was cast in the central role of Frank McCabe and was eventually sacked for appearing on stage drunk. The playwright Thomas Kilroy who was rehearsing another production at the Royal Court reflected “I have never been so frightened in the theatre. Most of those nights Magee was so drunk that he barely made it into the spot on the stage. To compound matters, Mirren was giving a performance of matching power and you ached for even one respite to allow these two performances to speak to one another. It never quite happened because the real danger that Magee was about to fall head over heels into the front rows of the stalls.[4]”
Magee died from a heart attack (probably caused by his drinking and hell raiser lifestyle) at his home in Fulham, London on 14th August 1982. His wife Belle passed away in September 2006. In 2017 his life was commemorated with a blue plaque by the Ulster History Circle at his former family home in Armagh. The plaque was unveiled by actor Stephen Rea who had appeared with Magee on stage in a 1976 production of Samuel Beckett’s Endgame.
[3] “Gielgud, Hiller, Magee in Shaffer Drama”, The Stage and Television Today, Thursday 29th January 1970, page 14
[4] Quoted in “A Drunk, Gambler and Hell-Raiser, But A Towering Acting Talent… Remembering Patrick Magee” by Ivan Little, Belfast Telegraph Digital, available at https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/entertainment/film-tv/news/a-drunk-gambler-and-hellraiser-but-a-towering-acting-talent-remembering-patrick-magee-35974861.html (accessed 19th March 2019)
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