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Christopher Plummer: The Oscar-winning star whose talent transcended The Sound of Music

Few other actors have remained as heavily in demand in their eighties and early nineties as Plummer. Geoffrey Macnab looks back on the prodigious filmography of an actor who was never overshadowed by his biggest role

 

The biggest tribute that can be paid to Christopher Plummer is that, when his name is mentioned, the immediate response among film fans is no longer to think of The Sound of Music.

There was a period when fans associated Plummer (who died on Friday) so closely with his role as Captain Georg von Trapp, alongside Julie Andrews, in the 1965 musical that they didn’t realise he had played anything else. However, few actors have enjoyed Indian summers quite as long or as productive as that of the Canadian star. One of the quirks about Plummer’s film career is that so many of his best roles came towards its end.

Plummer was superb as the venerable and very callous old oil tycoon John Paul Getty in Ridley Scott’s All the Money in the World (2017), even though he inherited the role from the disgraced Kevin Spacey at the last minute. He played the part with such assurance that you guessed it was a role he had always coveted, not one he had taken to rescue a production that might have been scuppered without him.

In recent years, directors young and old have been drawn to work with him. Many were surprised to see an actor of his age and distinction in a film as offbeat as Mike Mills’s Beginners (2010). He played an old man who, after the death of his wife, is ready to come out as gay. Plummer brought humour and tenderness to a character who was as warm-hearted as John Paul Getty was cold. He fully deserved his Best Supporting Actor Oscar.

Christopher Plummer and Julie Andrews in The Sound of Music
Christopher Plummer and Julie Andrews in The Sound of Music  (20th Century Fox/Kobal/Shutterstock)

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