
Acting
Also Known As: Trevor Wallace Howard-Smith
Birth Date
September 29, 1913
Death Date
January 7, 1988
(passed away at 74)
Place of Birth
Cliftonville, Kent, England, UK
Popularity
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Trevor Howard (29 September 1913 – 7 January 1988) was a British actor. He was born in Cliftonville, Kent, England, the son of Mabel Grey (Wallace) and Arthur John Howard. He was educated at Clifton College (to which he left in his will a substantial legacy for a drama scholarship) and at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), acting on the London stage for several years before World War II. His first paid work was in the play Revolt in a Reformatory (1934), before he left RADA in 1935 to take small roles. Although stories of his courageous wartime service in the British Army's Royal Corps of Signals earned him much respect among fellow actors and fans alike, files held in the Public Record Office reveal that he had actually been discharged from the British Army in 1943 for mental instability and having a "psychopathic personality". The story, which surfaced in Terence Pettigrew's biography of the actor, published by Peter Owen in 2001, was initially denied by Howard's widow, actress Helen Cherry. Later, confronted with official records, she told the Daily Telegraph (24 June 2001) that his mother had claimed he was a holder of the Military Cross. She added that Howard had an honourable military record and "had nothing to be ashamed of".





Self
1962 • 1 episode

Self
1974 • 1 episode

Narrator (voice)
1983 • 1 episode

Self - Guest
1968 • 1 episode

Vittorio
1948 • 1 episode
Self
1957 • 1 episode

The Abbot
1969 • 1 episode

1st Elder
1978

Doug Elliott
1955 • 1 episode

Kellis
1950 • 1 episode

Dr. Derek Lester
1958 • 1 episode

Dr. Alec Harvey
1945

Lord Charles Somerset
1986 • 10 episodes

Krypton Elder (archive footage) (uncredited)
1980

Major Calloway
1949

Denis Fallentin
1956

Father Silva
1988

Judge Broomfield
1982

Capt. William Bligh
1962

Abbé Faria
1975