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Patrick McGoohan

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Irish American actor (1928-2009)
Not to be confused with Patrick McGeehan.

Patrick McGoohan
McGoohan in All Night Long (1962)
Born
Patrick Joseph McGoohan

(1928-03-19)March 19, 1928
New York City, New York, U.S.
DiedJanuary 13, 2009(2009-01-13) (aged 80)
Other namesPaddy Fitz
Citizenship
  • Ireland
  • United States[a]
Occupations
  • Actor
  • director
  • screenwriter
Years active1948-2002
Spouse
Joan Drummond
(m. 1951)
Children3, including Catherine

Patrick Joseph McGoohan (/m@'gu:.@n/; March 19, 1928 - January 13, 2009) was an Irish-American actor, director and screenwriter of film, television, and theatre.

Born in New York City to Irish parents, he was raised in Ireland and England. He began his career in England during the 1950s and became well-known for the titular role of secret agent John Drake in the ITC/ITV espionage programme Danger Man (1960-1968). He then created and produced the surrealistic series The Prisoner (1967-1968), again for ITC and ITV, in which he starred as former British intelligence agent Number Six.

Beginning in the 1970s, McGoohan maintained a long-running association with the television series Columbo, writing, directing, producing, and acting in several episodes. His notable films include Ice Station Zebra (1968), Mary, Queen of Scots (1971), Escape from Alcatraz (1979), Scanners (1981), Braveheart (1995), and A Time to Kill (1996).

During the height of Danger Man, McGoohan was the highest-paid actor on British television.[1] He won the 1960 BAFTA Television Award for Best Actor for Danger Man, and twice won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series, for Columbo.[2][3]

Early life

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Patrick Joseph McGoohan was born in Astoria, Queens, New York City on March 19, 1928, to Irish Catholic immigrant parents Thomas McGoohan and Rose McGoohan (nee Fitzpatrick).[4] Soon after he was born, the family returned to Ireland, settling in the Mullaghmore area of Drumreilly, County Leitrim.[5][6]

Seven years later, they relocated to England, settling in Sheffield, Yorkshire. McGoohan attended St Marie's School, then St Vincent's School,[7] and De La Salle College, all in Sheffield.[8] During World War II, he was evacuated to Loughborough, where he attended Ratcliffe College. McGoohan excelled in maths and boxing, and left school at 16 to return to Sheffield, where he worked as a chicken farmer, bank clerk, and lorry driver before getting a job as a stage manager for Sheffield Repertory Theatre. When one of the actors became ill, McGoohan substituted for him, which began his acting career.[9]

Career

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Early career

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In 1955, McGoohan featured in a West End stage production of Serious Charge, as a Church of England vicar accused of being homosexual.[10]

"Intimidated" by McGoohan's stage presence, Orson Welles cast him as Starbuck in his York theatre production of Moby Dick--Rehearsed.[11] Welles said in 1969 that he believed McGoohan "would now be, I think, one of the big actors of our generation if TV hadn't grabbed him,"[12] reflecting that he had "all the required attributes, looks, intensity, unquestionable acting ability and a twinkle in his eye".[4]

McGoohan's first television appearance was as Charles Stewart Parnell in "The Fall of Parnell" for the series You Are There (1954).[13][14] He had an uncredited role in the movie The Dam Busters (1955), standing guard outside a briefing room. He delivered one line, "Sorry, old boy, it's secret--you can't go in. Now, c'mon, hop it!," which was cut from some prints of the movie.[citation needed]

After a series of small roles in films, he was the lead in "The Makepeace Story" for BBC Sunday Night Theatre (1955) and appeared in Welles' movie version of Moby Dick--Rehearsed.

Rank Organisation

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While working as a stand-in during screen tests, McGoohan was signed to a contract with The Rank Organisation. They gave him mostly villainous parts in films, including High Tide at Noon (1957) and Hell Drivers (1957).[15]

He had frequent roles in television anthology series such as Television Playwright, Folio, Armchair Theatre, ITV Play of the Week and ITV Television Playhouse. He was given a leading role in Nor the Moon by Night (1958), filmed in South Africa.[16] After some disputes with Rank management, the contract was dissolved. He then worked in television, winning a BAFTA in 1960.[17][clarification needed]

His favourite part for stage acting was the lead in Henrik Ibsen's Brand, for which he received an award [clarification needed]. Michael Meyer, the play's translator, wrote of the last act "McGoohan suddenly unleashed all his terrifying power, and from then until the final moments... the audience was gripped as seldom happens in a theatre."[18] He also played the role in a BBC television production in August 1959.[19] Michael Meyer, who translated the stage version, thought McGoohan's performance was the best and most powerful he had seen.[18] It was McGoohan's last stage appearance for 28 years.[citation needed]

Danger Man

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Main article: Danger Man

Lew Grade soon approached McGoohan about a television series where he would play a spy named John Drake. Having learned from his experience at Rank, McGoohan insisted on several conditions: all the fistfights should be different; the character would always use his brain before using a gun; and--much to the executives' horror--no kissing. The show debuted in 1960 as Danger Man,[20] a half-hour programme intended for American audiences. It did fairly well, but not as well as hoped.[21][22]

Production lasted a year and 39 episodes. After the first series was over, an interviewer asked McGoohan if he would have liked it to continue. He replied, "Perhaps, but let me tell you this: I would rather do twenty TV series than go through what I went through under that Rank contract I signed a few years ago and for which I blame no one but myself."[23]

Post-Danger Man

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McGoohan was one of several actors considered for the role of James Bond in Dr. No. While McGoohan, a Catholic, refused the role on moral grounds,[24] the success of the Bond films is generally cited as the reason for Danger Man being revived. (He was later considered for the same role in Live and Let Die, but refused again.)[25]

McGoohan instead worked for The Walt Disney Company on The Three Lives of Thomasina (1963) and The Scarecrow of Romney Marsh (1963). A staid English vicar, Dr. Christopher Syn (a reformed pirate captain - played by McGoohan) disguised as a scarecrow and mounted on a magnificent black stallion thwarts King George III's Revenue officers in daring night-time smuggling adventures on the remote Kent coast.

Return of Danger Man

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After he refused the role of Simon Templar in The Saint,[25] Grade asked McGoohan if he wanted to give Drake another try. This time, McGoohan had even more say in the series. Danger Man (Secret Agent in the US) returned in 1964 as a one-hour programme. The scripts allowed McGoohan more range in his acting. Because of the popularity of the series, he became the highest-paid actor in the UK.[26][27]

After shooting the only two colour episodes of Danger Man, McGoohan told Grade that he would quit the role.[28]

The Prisoner

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Main article: The Prisoner

McGoohan pitched a miniseries about a secret agent who quits and is abducted to a surreal, cheerful holiday resort village. Grade asked for a budget, McGoohan had one ready, and they made a deal over a handshake to produce The Prisoner.[20] In addition to being the show's protagonist, McGoohan was its executive producer, forming Everyman Films with producer David Tomblin, and wrote and directed several episodes, in some cases using pseudonyms.[29][30] The originally commissioned seven episodes grew to seventeen.

The title character, the otherwise-unnamed "Number Six", spends the entire series trying to escape a mysterious prison community called "The Village", and to learn the identity of its ruler. The Village's administrators try just as much to force or trick him into revealing why he resigned as a spy, which he refuses to divulge. The series' main exterior filming location was the Italianate resort village of Portmeirion, Gwynedd, Wales, which was featured in some episodes of Danger Man. Although the show was sold as a thriller in the mould of Danger Man, its surreal and Kafkaesque setting and reflection of concerns of the 1960s counterculture have had a far-reaching influence on popular culture and the series ultimately developed a cult following.[2][3]

The Prisoner was created while McGoohan and George Markstein worked on Danger Man.[31] The exact details of who created which aspects of the show are disputed, as there is no "created by" credit. Majority opinion credits McGoohan as sole creator, but a disputed co-creator status was ascribed to Markstein after a series of fan interviews were published in the 1980s.[31]

MGM

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During production of The Prisoner, MGM cast McGoohan in an action movie, Ice Station Zebra (1968), for which his performance as a British spy drew critical praise.

After The Prisoner, he was meant to star in an expensive adaptation of the James Clavell best-seller Tai-Pan but the project was cancelled before filming.[32] Instead he made The Moonshine War (1970) for MGM.

1970s

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Following his turn in Mary, Queen of Scots (1971), he directed a rock opera version of Othello, entitled Catch My Soul (1974), but disliked the experience.[33]

McGoohan received two Emmy Awards for his work for the television series Columbo, with his long-time friend Peter Falk. McGoohan said that his first appearance on Columbo (in the 1974 episode "By Dawn's Early Light") was probably his favourite American role. He directed five Columbo episodes (including three of the four in which he appeared), one of which he also wrote and two of which he also produced. McGoohan was involved with the Columbo series in some capacity from 1974 to 2000; his daughter Catherine McGoohan appeared with him in the episode "Ashes to Ashes" (1998). The other two Columbo episodes in which he appeared are "Identity Crisis" (1975) and "Agenda for Murder" (1990).

As he had done early in his career with the Rank Organisation, McGoohan began to specialise in villains, appearing in Silver Streak (1976), The Man in the Iron Mask (1977), Brass Target (1978), and Escape from Alcatraz (1979), portraying the prison's warden.

In 1977, he had the main role of the television series Rafferty as a retired army doctor who moves into private practice.[34]

1980s-2000s

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In 1980 he appeared in the UK television movie The Hard Way, followed by the science fiction/horror movie Scanners in 1981 and a TV remake of Jamaica Inn in 1983. After seeing Jamaica Inn, McGoohan concluded he could no longer act and rejected offers from Michael Elliott to play Captain Ahab and Hotspur.[35]

In 1985 he appeared in his only Broadway production, featuring opposite Rosemary Harris in Hugh Whitemore's Pack of Lies, in the role of a British spy.[36] He was nominated for a Drama Desk Award as Best Actor.

McGoohan featured as Edward I of England in Braveheart (1995), revitalising his career, and was seen the following year as Judge Omar Noose in A Time to Kill.[25]

In 2000, he reprised his role of Number Six for an episode of The Simpsons, "The Computer Wore Menace Shoes". In it, Homer Simpson concocts a news story to make his website more popular, and wakes up in a prison disguised as a holiday resort. Dubbed Number Five, he meets Number Six, and later betrays him and escapes with his boat; referencing his numerous attempts to escape on a raft in The Prisoner, Number Six splutters "That's the third time that's happened!"

McGoohan's last movie role was the voice of Billy Bones in the Disney animated film Treasure Planet (2002). That same year, he received a Prometheus Hall of Fame Award for The Prisoner.

Personal life

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McGoohan married actress Joan Drummond on May 19, 1951. They had three children including Catherine McGoohan.[37] McGoohan "would not act any part in which he had to kiss any actress who was not his wife (and she, looking after him and their small sons, had little time for acting)",[18] which somewhat restricted his choices.

For most of the 1960s they lived in a secluded detached house on the Ridgeway, Mill Hill, London. They settled in the Pacific Palisades district of Los Angeles during the mid-1970s.[38]

Death

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McGoohan died following a "short illness" at Saint John's Health Center in Santa Monica, California, on January 13, 2009, at the age of 80.[39]

Legacy

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The surreal and Kafkaesque setting of The Prisoner and its reflection of concerns of the 1960s counterculture have had a far-reaching influence on popular culture and the series ultimately developed a cult following.[2][3] Since its debut, the series' enduring popularity has led to its influencing and being referenced in a range of other media.

McGoohan's name was associated with several aborted attempts at producing a new movie version of The Prisoner. In 2002, Simon West was signed to direct a version of the story. McGoohan was listed as executive producer for the movie, which never came to fruition. Later, Christopher Nolan was proposed as director for a movie version. However, the source material remained difficult and elusive to adapt into a feature movie. McGoohan was not involved with the project that was ultimately completed. A miniseries was shown on AMC in 2009.

A biography of McGoohan was published in 2007 by Tomahawk Press,[40] and another in 2011 by Supernova Books.[41]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1955 Passage Home McIsaacs
The Dark Avenger a.k.a. The Warriors English soldier Uncredited
The Dam Busters RAF guard
I Am a Camera Swedish water therapist
1956 Zarak Moor Larkin
1957 High Tide at Noon Simon Breck
Hell Drivers G. 'Red' Redman
1958 The Gypsy and the Gentleman Jess
Nor the Moon by Night a.k.a. Elephant Gun Andrew Miller
1961 Two Living, One Dead Erik Berger
1962 All Night Long Johnny Cousin
Life for Ruth a.k.a. Walk in the Shadow Doctor James 'Jim' Brown
The Quare Fellow Thomas Crimmin
1963 The Three Lives of Thomasina Andrew McDhui
Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow Dr. Christopher Syn
1968 Ice Station Zebra David Jones
1970 The Moonshine War Frank Long
1971 Mary, Queen of Scots James Stuart
1974 Catch My Soul N/a Director
1975 A Genius, Two Partners and a Dupe Major Cabot
1976 Silver Streak Roger Devereau
1977 The Man in the Iron Mask Fouquet
1978 Brass Target Colonel Mike McCauley
1979 Escape from Alcatraz The Warden
1981 Scanners Doctor Paul Ruth
Kings and Desperate Men John Kingsley Filmed in 1977
1984 Trespasses Fred Wells
1985 Baby: Secret of the Lost Legend Doctor Eric Kiviat
1995 Braveheart King Edward Longshanks
1996 The Phantom Phantom's Dad
A Time to Kill Judge Omar Noose
1997 Hysteria Dr. Harvey Langston
2002 Treasure Planet Billy Bones Voice (final film role)

Television roles

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Year Title Role Notes
1954 You Are There 2 episodes: "The Charge of the Light Brigade" and "The Fall of Parnell"
1955 The Vise Tony Mason 1 episode ("Gift from Heaven")
Terminus James Hartley 1 episode ("Margin for Error")
BBC Sunday Night Theatre Presents: The Makepeace Story Seth Makepeace 1 episode ("The Ruthless Destiny")
1956 The Adventures of Sir Lancelot Sir Glavin 1 episode ("The Outcast", S1, E4)
1957 Assignment Foreign Legion Captain Valadon 1 episode ("The Coward", S1, E23)
1956-57 The Adventures of Aggie Migual 1 episode ("Spanish Sauce", S1, E3)
1958 The Vise Vance 1 episode ("Blood in the Sky")
Armchair Theatre Jack 'Pal' Smurch 1 episode ("The Greatest Man in the World")
Television Playwright Presents James Coogan 1 episode ("This Day in Fear")
ITV Television Playhouse Mat Galvin 1 episode ("Rest in Violence")
1959 Brand Brand Henrik Ibsen play
1961 Armchair Theatre Nicholai Soloviov 1 episode ("The Man Out There")
1960-62
1964-68
Danger Man John Drake 86 episodes. Also directed 3 episodes.
1963 Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color Doctor Christopher Syn/
Scarecrow of Romney Marsh
3 episodes
1963 Sunday Night Play The Interrogator 1 episode ("The Prisoner")
1967-68 The Prisoner Number Six 17 episodes. Also directed 5 episodes.
1969 Journey into Darkness Host TV film
1974 Columbo Colonel Lyle C. Rumford 1 episode ("By Dawn's Early Light")
1975 Nelson Brenner 1 episode ("Identity Crisis"). Also directed.
1976 N/a 1 episode ("Last Salute to the Commodore") - director
1977 Rafferty Doctor Sid Rafferty 13 episodes. Also directed 1 episode.
1980 The Hard Way John Connor TV film
1983 Jamaica Inn Joss Merlyn
1985 American Playhouse Chief magistrate 3 episodes ("Three Sovereigns for Sarah" parts I, II & III)
1986 Of Pure Blood Dr. Felix Neumann
1987 Murder, She Wrote Oliver Quayle 1 episode ("Witness for the Defense")
1990 Columbo Oscar Finch 1 episode ("Agenda for Murder"). Also directed.
1998 Eric Prince "Ashes to Ashes". Also directed.
2000 N/a 1 episode ("Murder with Too Many Notes") - director
The Simpsons Number Six Episode: "The Computer Wore Menace Shoes"

Theatre roles

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This is an incomplete list. Sources include[42] and.[43]

Year Title Role Notes
1945 Pride and Prejudice Mr D'Arcy Vincent's Youth Club, Sheffield (amateur production)
1950-51 The Rivals Theatre Royal, Bath
1951 The Little Foxes Oscar Hubbard Sheffield Playhouse
Man and Superman John Tanner
1951-52 Hobson's Choice Albert Prosser Grand Theatre, Blackpool, then The Arts Theatre Club, London
1952-53 Henry V Bristol Old Vic and The Old Vic, London
1952 The Taming of the Shrew Petruchio Sheffield Playhouse
Cupid and Psyche Royal Court Theatre, Liverpool
1953 Spring Model Roy Mawson Theatre Royal, Windsor
The Castiglioni Brothers Camillo Castiglioni Bristol Old Vic
The Cherry Orchard Peter Trofimov
Antony and Cleopatra Pompey / a schoolmaster
Old Bailey Robert Bailey II
The River Line Philip Sturgess Theatre Royal, Windsor
Time on Their Hands Leonard White Q Theatre, London
1954 Burning Bright
Spring Model
Grace and Favour Producer and director
1955 Serious Charge Howard Phillips Garrick Theatre, London and Winter Gardens, Morecambe
Moby Dick - Rehearsed A Serious Actor / Starbuck Duke of York's Theatre, London
Ring For Catty Leonard White Coliseum Theatre, Harrow, Lyric Theatre, London
Brand Brand Lyric Theatre, London
1959 Danton's Death St. Just
1985 Pack of Lies Stewart Royale Theater, New York

Awards

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Notes

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  1. ^ McGoohan was a citizen of Ireland via Jus sanguinis and the United States via Jus soli

References

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  1. ^ Barker, Dennis (January 15, 2009). "Obituary: Patrick McGoohan". The Guardian. Retrieved November 13, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c Rogers, Dave (1992). The Prisoner & Danger Man. [London]: Boxtree. ISBN 978-1852832605.
  3. ^ a b c "Celebration as cult show The Prisoner turns 50". BBC. September 29, 2017. Retrieved March 28, 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Patrick McGoohan". The Daily Telegraph. January 15, 2009. Archived from the original on January 12, 2022. Retrieved September 11, 2010.
  5. ^ Langley, R: Patrick McGoohan. Tomahawk Press, 2007.
  6. ^ "BFI retrospective" Archived February 5, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, The Irish Post; retrieved July 9, 2016.
  7. ^ Langley, Roger Patrick McGoohan: Danger Man or Prisoner?, pp. 12-13. Tomahawk Press, 2007. Second revised updated edition, Escape Books, 2017.
  8. ^ "Why the Prisoner can't escape from us". September 14, 2007.
  9. ^ "BFI Screenonline: McGoohan, Patrick (1928-2009) Biography". www.screenonline.org.uk.
  10. ^ Hope-Wallace, Philip (February 18, 1955). "Another New Play in London: 'Serious Charge'". The Manchester Guardian. p. 7.
  11. ^ Fay, Gerard (June 18, 1955). "Wellesian Version of 'Moby Dick': A Sea Charade". The Manchester Guardian. p. 5.
  12. ^ Jonathan Rosenbaum (ed.), Orson Welles and Peter Bogdanovich, This is Orson Welles (Da Capo Press, New York, 1992 [rev. 1998 ed.]) p. 4
  13. ^ Cassin, B. I Never Had a Proper Job. Liberties Press, 2012.
  14. ^ Langley, R. Patrick McGoohan, pp. 41-42. Tomahawk Press, 2007.
  15. ^ Patrick McGoohan Picture Show; London 70.1823 (March 8, 1958): 8.
  16. ^ "Love under an African moon". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 26, no. 21. October 29, 1958. p. 73. Retrieved October 15, 2017 - via National Library of Australia.
  17. ^ "BAFTA award in 1960", BAFTA, Retrieved February 1, 2015
  18. ^ a b c Michael Meyer, Not Prince Hamlet
  19. ^ ""World Theatre" Brand (TV Episode 1959)". IMDb. IMDb.
  20. ^ a b "'Prisoner' Star Patrick McGoohan Dies". CBS News. January 14, 2009. Retrieved January 15, 2009.
  21. ^ Vincent Cosgrove, 2007. "Odds Are He Will Live on Disc Tomorrow," The New York Times, April 15. Retrieved 4-7-10.
  22. ^ "'Danger Man'". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 29, no. 7. July 19, 1961. p. 21. Retrieved October 15, 2017 - via National Library of Australia.
  23. ^ "Why Danger Man scared me", Photoplay, April 1961, p. 14.
  24. ^ "The Actors Who Almost Played James Bond". November 17, 2022.
  25. ^ a b c "20 The Catholic Actor Who Turned Down the Role of James Bond". January 12, 2016.
  26. ^ Time & Tide. Vol. 46. Time and Tide Publishing Company. 1965. p. 66. Danger Man, McGoohan put a new spin on the secret agent formula by refusing to allow his character, John Drake, ... The show's success made McGoohan Britain's highest-paid TV actor
  27. ^ "Dangerman". The Australian Women's Weekly. Vol. 33, no. 5. June 30, 1965. p. 17. Retrieved October 15, 2017 - via National Library of Australia.
  28. ^ Martin Jackson "Danger Man To Quit", Daily Express, April 16, 1966, p. 12. Jackson states: "Now McGoohan has put up a new TV idea to ATV's managing director Lew Grade." He said: "It is another adventure series but a very different sort of character. It promises to be very exciting. Mr. Grade said: Mr. McGoohan is coming to see me tomorrow to discuss the details. We hope to start work on the new series in October."
  29. ^ "The Prisoner Puzzle (with Patrick McGoohan)". YouTube. Retrieved January 23, 2014.[dead YouTube link]
  30. ^ McGoohan wrote "Free for All" as Paddy Fitz, and directed "Many Happy Returns" and "A Change of Mind" as Joseph Serf. He also wrote "Once Upon A Time" and "Fall Out" under his own name.
  31. ^ a b Davy, Rick (2017). The Prisoner - The Essential Guide. Quoit Media Ltd. p. 4. ISBN 9781911537052.
  32. ^ "MGM Won't Drop Plans for 'Tai-Pan'". Los Angeles Times. July 29, 1968. p. g15.
  33. ^ Katelan, Jean-Yves (October 1995). "Le Prisonnier au cinema". Premiere. No. 223. p. 26. Archived from the original on November 7, 2012. Retrieved January 17, 2009.
  34. ^ TV.com. "Rafferty". TV.com. Archived from the original on May 3, 2009. Retrieved November 26, 2012.
  35. ^ Michael Meyer, 'Not Prince Hamlet'
  36. ^ "Pack of Lies (original Broadway play)". IBDB.com. Internet Broadway Database.
  37. ^ Sellers, Robert (January 16, 2009). "Patrick McGoohan: Actor who created and starred in the cult 1960s television series 'The Prisoner'". The Independent. Archived from the original on May 25, 2022. Retrieved July 20, 2019.
  38. ^ Bennetts, Leslie (December 26, 1984). "McGoohan to Star in 'Pack of Lies'". The New York Times. Retrieved July 20, 2019. The McGoohans, who live in Pacific Palisades, Calif
  39. ^ Dalton, Andrew. "'Prisoner' actor Patrick McGoohan dies in LA". Associated Press. Archived from the original on February 9, 2009. Retrieved January 7, 2012 - via Internet Archive.
  40. ^ Langley, Roger; Falk, Peter (2007). Patrick McGoohan: Danger Man or Prisoner?. Tomahawk Press. ISBN 978-0-9531926-4-9.
  41. ^ Booth, Rupert (2011). Not a Number: A life. Supernova Books. ISBN 978-0-9566329-2-0.
  42. ^ "Patrick McGoohan". Theatricalia. Retrieved September 1, 2023.
  43. ^ "Patrick McGoohan". Sheffielder. February 8, 2020. Retrieved September 2, 2023.
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