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Keith Michell

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Keith Michell (born 1 December 1928) is an Australian actor and producer.

He taught art, until he made his theatre debut in Adelaide in 1947 and he first appeared in London in 1951. He has acted with the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre Company. He has also appeared extensively in cinema and television, notably as the King in "The Six Wives of Henry VIII". He was the artistic director of the Chichester Festival Theatre (1974-1977). As well as acting, Michell pursues other interests: he wrote the musical "Pete McGynty and the Dreamtime", an Australian rendering of Ibsen's "Peer Gynt", the performance of which used Michell's own paintings as backdrops; he is a painter and has illustrated a limited edition run of Shakespeare's sonnets for which he also did the calligraphy; and he has written and illustrated a number of macrobiotic cookbooks. Michell himself follows a macrobiotic diet.

Michell was also the illustrator of "Captain Beaky", a collection of Jeremy Lloyd's poems. "Captain Beaky" enjoyed phenomenal success in Britain in the 1980s, among both children and adults. The song "Captain Beaky" peaked at No. 5 on the UK charts in 1980.

He is married to the actress Jeanette Sterke and they have a son, Paul, and a daughter, Helena, who appeared in the films "Prick Up Your Ears", based on the biography of British playwright, Joe Orton, and "Maurice", from the E.M. Forster novel of the same name.