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词条 Lloyd Reckord
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Partial filmography

  3. References

  4. External links

{{BLP sources|date=January 2013}}{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2012}}{{Use Jamaican English|date=March 2012}}Lloyd Reckord (26 May 1929 – 8 July 2015) was a Jamaican actor, film maker, and stage director who lived in England for some years. Reckord appeared in 1958 in a West End production of Hot Summer Night, which as an ITV adaptation broadcast on 1 February 1959 contained the earliest known example of an interracial kiss on television.[1] His brother was the dramatist Barry Reckord.[2]

Biography

Lloyd Malcolm Reckord was born in Kingston, Jamaica, on 26 May 1929. He began his theatrical career with the Little Theatre Movement (LTM) pantomime at Ward Theatre. As reported by Michael Reckord in the Jamaica Gleaner, "Reckord's first big role was as Tobias in a production of Tobias and the Angel at the Garrison Theatre, Up-Park Camp, when he was in his late teens.[3]

Fired from his job at his uncle's hardware store because he insisted that he had to leave early to play his role in the LTM pantomime, Alice In Wonderland, Lloyd left Jamaica in 1951 when he was 21 to join his brother Barry, also a playwright and actor, in England."[3] He auditioned and was accepted as a student at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, subsequently joining the Old Vic Company in London. He would also study theatre in the US, years later, at Howard University, Yale University and the American Theatre Wing.[3]

Reckord appeared in the Ted Willis play Hot Summer Night at the New Theatre, St Martin's Lane, London in 1958, with Andrée Melly as his white girlfriend; a later Armchair Theatre adaptation the following year concentrated on the couple's relationship.[3] The ITV Armchair Theatre adaptation of this play, broadcast on 1 February 1959, is currently the earliest known example of an interracial kiss on television,[1][4][5][6][7][8] and three years later he participated in another early televised interracial kiss in You in Your Small Corner, a Granada Play of the Week broadcast in June 1962,[9][10] in which he kissed actor Elizabeth MacLennan. This claim had earlier been made for Emergency – Ward 10, which postdates Reckord's earlier kisses. The play was written by Reckord's brother Barry,[11] and directed by Claude Whatham.[9]

Reckord also acted in several television series, including four episodes of Danger Man (1960–61, 1964–65)[12] and The Human Jungle ("Enemy Outside", 1964), but feeling typecast as an actor, he wanted to move into direction.

With only limited funds, including a grant from the BFI, he made two non-commercial film shorts Ten Bob in Winter (1963, featuring Winston Stona, Bari Johnson, Peter Madden and Andrew Salkey, with a jazz soundtrack by Joe Harriott)[13][14][15] and Dream A40 (1965).[12]

Reckord later returned to Jamaica, where he worked as a stage director, with rare screen appearances, as in The Lunatic (1991) and Third World Cop (1999).

In 2011 his work featured in the Black London's Film Heritage Project, with the compilation Big City Stories[16] including Reckord's 1963 film Ten Bob in Winter, as well an excerpt from the television play by his brother entitled You in Your Small Corner, in which Lloyd Reckord played the lead male character.[15] His short film Dream A40 was shown at the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival (LLGFF) at the British Film Institute.[15]

Reckord died in Jamaica on 8 July 2015 after a short illness, aged 86,[17] and his life was celebrated at a thanksgiving service on 29 July.[18][19]

Partial filmography

  • Sapphire (1959) - Pianist in International Club (uncredited)
  • What a Whopper (1961) - Jojo
  • Thunderball (1965) - Pinder's Assistant (uncredited)
  • The Lunatic (1991) - The Judge
  • Third World Cop (1999) - Reverend (final film role)

References

1. ^Amanda Bidnall, The West Indian Generation: Remaking British Culture in London, 1945-1965: "The first on-stage interracial kiss came in 1958 with the performance of Ted Willis's Hot Summer Night, and one year later that same kiss came to the small screen with the play's adaptation for ITV's Armchair Theatre."
2. ^Margaret Busby, [https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2012/jan/16/barry-reckord "Barry Reckord obituary"], The Guardian, 16 January 2012.
3. ^Oliver Wake, "Hot Summer Night (1959)", BFI Screenonline.
4. ^Stephen Bourne Black in the British Frame: The Black Experience in British Film and Television 144116135X - 2005 "It was during the scene when I kiss Andree Melly. A frail, rather timid and very gentle voice called out from the stalls — 'I don't like to see white girls kissing niggers'. There was dead silence in the theatre, and we went on with the play."
5. ^[https://www.telegraph.co.uk/tv/2016/06/17/lesbian-kisses-nudity-and-sex-groundbreaking-british-tv-moments/emergency-ward-10-1964/ "Lesbian kisses, nudity and sex: groundbreaking British TV moments"], Culture – TV, The Telegraph, 17 June 2016.
6. ^{{cite web|title=Hot Summer Night – First inter-racial kiss? (01/02/1959)|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKqlVK0L7Hk|format=video|website=YouTube|publisher=VintageBritishComedy|accessdate=13 February 2016}}
7. ^"Hot Summer Night" at BFI Player.
8. ^{{cite web|last1=@DescantDeb|first1=|title=An Interesting Take on Race and Romance at the 2015 BFI Love Season|url=http://www.thebritishblacklist.com/tbbs-descantdeb-opines-interesting-race-romance-2015-bfi-love-season/|website=The British Blacklist|publisher=TBB|accessdate=11 February 2016}}
9. ^[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0926620/ "You in Your Small Corner (5 Jun. 1962)"], IMDb.
10. ^Eleni Liarou, "You in Your Small Corner (1962)", BFI Screen Online.
11. ^{{cite news|last=Brown|first=Mark|url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2015/nov/20/tv-archive-discovers-couple-who-beat-kirk-and-uhara-to-first-interracial-kiss|title=TV archive discovers couple who beat Kirk and Uhura to first interracial kiss|work=The Guardian|date=20 November 2015|accessdate=20 November 2015}}
12. ^Inge Blackman, "Reckord, Lloyd (1929-)", BFI screenonline.
13. ^[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt2281487/?ref_=nm_knf_t1 "Ten Bob in Winter (1963)"], IMDb.
14. ^Inge Blackman, "Ten Bob in Winter (1963)", BFI Screenonline.
15. ^"Jamaica Film-Maker Works On London Project", The Gleaner, 22 May 2011.
16. ^"Big City Stories", Black London's Film Heritage.
17. ^Michael Reckord, "Theatre Veteran Lloyd Reckord Passes", Jamaica Gleaner, 11 July 2015. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
18. ^Richard Johnson, "Lloyd Reckord’s thanksgiving service today", Jamaica Observer, 29 July 2015.
19. ^Richard Johnson, "Lloyd Reckord gave his life to film and theatre", Jamaica Observer, 23 August 2015.

External links

  • "Theatre Veteran Lloyd Reckord Passes", Jamaica Gleaner, 11 July 2015.
  • {{IMDb name|0714515|Lloyd Reckord}}
  • Lloyd Reckord discusses his career on the occasion of a rare screening of Dream A40, video at BFI Live, 12 April 2012.
  • "Lloyd Reckord", Aveleyman.
  • Lloyd Reckord Filmography, BFI
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9 : 1929 births|Jamaican male stage actors|2015 deaths|Jamaican male television actors|Jamaican expatriates in the United Kingdom|Jamaican theatre directors|Jamaican film directors|People from Kingston, Jamaica|20th-century Jamaican male actors

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