Philip Anglim is an American actor. He is best known for his performance as John Merrick in the stage and television versions of The Elephant Man, a role for which he received a Best Actor nomination in the 1979 Tony Awards. Other notable roles include the title role in Macbeth on Broadway and Dane O'Neill, the ill-fated love child who grew up to follow in his unknown father's footsteps on the path to the priesthood in the television mini-series The Thorn Birds. He also had a recurring guest role as the Bajoran priest Vedek Bareil on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

Philip Anglim
Alma materYale University (B.A., 1973)
OccupationActor
Years active1973–present
Notable credit(s)Vedek Bareil, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
John Merrick, The Elephant Man

Biography

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Anglim's father, a Catholic of Irish descent, worked as a patent attorney, and his mother, Paule Anglim, was of French-Jewish descent and was a San Francisco art dealer.[1] He originally aspired to become a veterinarian, but after he was asked to appear in a play by one of his teachers, he switched to acting. Anglim graduated with a bachelor's degree in English literature from Yale University in 1973. Subsequently, Anglim spent a year in Connecticut at the Southbury Playhouse.

His feature film debut was in The All-American Boy (1973), and his first television appearance was in the PBS The Adams Chronicles (1976). In 1979, while still an unknown, Anglim optioned the London play The Elephant Man, and debuted off-Broadway at St. Peter's Church. It later moved to The Booth Theater on Broadway in 1979, and earned several awards. He performed as Macbeth on Broadway in 1981 (in which he was replaced by Kelsey Grammer) and again on TV in 1982. In 1982, Anglim appeared in the ABC television version of The Elephant Man, and earned an Emmy nomination for Best Actor for the performance.

Anglim also maintains a cattle farm in Tennessee, and in 1992, founded The Lewis County Children's Fund to help children in the area.

Awards

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All of the following were for his performance in The Elephant Man:

  • 1979 Outstanding Actor in a Play, Drama Desk Award
  • 1979 nomination for Best Actor, Tony Awards
  • 1979 Theatre World Award
  • 1978–1979 OBIE Award Performance
  • 1982 nomination, Emmy Award
  • 1982 nomination, Golden Globe [1]

Works

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Theater

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  • What the Butler Saw, 1975, Cincinnati
  • The Contrast, 1975, Cincinnati
  • Snow White, 1976, New York
  • The Elephant Man (1977)
  • Macbeth, 1981, New York

Film/television

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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine appearances

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References

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