From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Bernard James Miles, Baron Miles, CBE (27 September 1907–14 June 1991) was an English character actor, writer and director. He opened the Mermaid Theatre in London in 1959, the first new theatre opened in the City of London since the 17th century. Miles was born in Uxbridge, Middlesex and attended Bishopshalt School in Hillingdon. While his parents were respectively a farm labourer and a cook, he was educated at Pembroke College, Oxford. He entered the theatre in the 1930s, soon appearing in films. Like many actors, he featured prominently in the patriotic cinema during the Second World War, including classics of the genre such as In Which We Serve and One of Our Aircraft Is Missing. He also had an uncredited role in the WWII classic The First of the Few, released in the US as Spitfire. His typical persona as an actor was as a countryman, with a strong accent typical of the Hertfordshire and Buckinghamshire counties. He was also, after Robert Newton, the actor most associated with the part of Long John Silver, which he played in a British TV version of Treasure Island, and in an annual performance at the Mermaid commencing in the winter of 1961-62. Actors in the annual theatrical productions included Spike Milligan as Ben Gunn, and, in the 1968 production, Barry Humphries as Long John Silver. It was Miles who, impressed by the talent of John Antrobus originally commissioned him to write a play of some sort. This led to Antrobus collaborating with Milligan to produce a one-act play called The Bed Sitting Room, which was later adapted to a longer play, and staged by Miles at The Mermaid on 31 January 1963, with both critical and commercial success. He had a pleasant rolling bass-baritone voice that worked well in theatre and film, as well as being much in demand for voice-overs. As a performer, he was most well known for a series of comic monologues, often given in a rural dialect. These were recorded and sold as record albums, which were quite popular. Some of his comic monologues are currently available on youtube.com. Miles was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE) in 1953, was knighted in 1969, and was granted a life peerage as Baron Miles, of Blackfriars in the City of London in 1979. He was only the second British actor ever to be given a peerage (the first was Laurence Olivier). Miles's written works include "The British Theatre" (1947), "God's Brainwave" (1972), and "Favorite Tales from Shakespeare" (1972). In 1981, he co-authored the book Curtain Calls with J.C. Trewin. He died in Yorkshire. His daughters are the actress Sally Miles and the artist Bridget Miles. His son John Miles was a Grand Prix Driver in the late 1960s and early 1970s with the Lotus team. Description above from the Wikipedia article Bernard Miles, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Birthday: September 27, 1907
Death: June 14, 1991
January 01, 1982
March 29, 1969
April 24, 1950
April 28, 1944
December 04, 1942
August 01, 1942
October 26, 1948
May 16, 1956
June 27, 1956
April 09, 1957
December 26, 1946
April 24, 1942
November 02, 1959
March 18, 1953
November 27, 1956
March 12, 1947
December 04, 1958
March 28, 1969
March 30, 1980
March 13, 1957
November 15, 1941
April 19, 1941
February 02, 1938
December 01, 1938
March 23, 1944
May 28, 1940
December 02, 1946
May 20, 1963
September 17, 1942
January 19, 1944
March 01, 1936
September 23, 1947
November 19, 1935
February 04, 1941
January 01, 1941
September 14, 1938
August 03, 1939
May 01, 1938
June 30, 1935
August 03, 1936
October 29, 1938
May 11, 1940
March 23, 1940
January 01, 1958
April 30, 1951
January 19, 1942
December 01, 1956
January 01, 1943
October 01, 1935
January 01, 1952
June 08, 1942
May 08, 1957
August 21, 1966
November 03, 1939
September 17, 1961
November 22, 1988
May 09, 1958
December 03, 1988
January 01, 1942