
Terence Stamp, who gained fame as an actor in London in the 1960s before playing the villainous General Zod in the Hollywood blockbusters “Superman” and “Superman II,” passed away on Sunday at the age of 87, according to his family. In addition to playing a transgender lady in “The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert” (1994), the Oscar-nominated actor acted in Pier Paolo Pasolini’s “Theorem” (1968) and “A Season in Hell” (1971).
For years to come, people will be moved and inspired by his remarkable body of work as an actor and writer, according to the family. We want privacy during this difficult time.
The son of a tugboat stoker, he was born in 1938 in London’s East End and survived the World War II bombing of the city before dropping out of school to work in advertising before being awarded a scholarship to theater school.
Known for his attractive appearance and immaculate sense of style, he and Julie Christie, who costarred in the 1967 film “Far From the Madding Crowd,” were one of the most fashionable couples in Britain.
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