Bernard Hill pulled out of the Lord of the Rings reunion at Comic Con telling organisers ‘his partner was ill’ just hours before he died, it emerged today.
The actor, who shot to fame as Yosser Hughes in Boys from the Blackstuff before becoming known to a new generation as the embattled King Theoden in Peter Jackson’s film trilogy, died in the early hours of this morning, his agent said.
Tributes have flooded in today for the beloved star, with his co-star Dom Monoghan, who played Merry Brandybuck, leading the way writing: ‘The Broken king has passed to the grey havens but he will always be remembered. RIP Bernard.’
His role as Yosser – the unemployed character known for saying ‘gizza job’ – not only brought him to the attention of Hollywood but quickly became representative of an era, defining a generation of working class men living in the North of England.
Alan Bleasdale, who co- wrote the 1980’s hit series, said that Hill’s death was ‘a great loss and great surprise’ adding that his performance as Yosser was ‘the great, definitive performance of his generation’.
James Graham, who adapted the show for the stage paid tribute: ‘It’s almost impossible to overstate the extent of the impact and legacy Bernard Hill, alongside Alan Bleasdale, created when they made Yosser Hughes.
‘How rare it is that a character can so definitively come to represent an era, both for Liverpool but way beyond.’
He went on to play Captain Edward Smith in the 1997 award-winning film Titanic, which crossed $1billion at the box office, and Lord of the Rings: Return of the King – both films won 11 Oscars each.
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The sad news of Bernard Hill’s death comes as a video emerged of him telling his fans at Scotland’s Comic Con to ‘keep going’
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Bernard Hill, pictured here in Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, played King Theoden in the epic fantasy trilogy
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Bernard Hill rose to fame for his performance as Yosser Hughes in the 1982 BBC drama Boys from the Blackstuff
Hill’s passing comes hours before he was due to return to TV screens in Martin Freeman drama The Responder, which airs on BBC One tonight.
The famous gang were seen posing together on Friday night at a restaurant in Liverpool following the culture convention yet Hill was nowhere to be seen.
The pictured shared by Monaghan was captioned ‘3 hobbits and an elf and the CONVERSATION tonight was VAULTED,’ while a second picture of the group on Saturday read ‘#squadgoals’.
Hill had also been due to speak at the convention in Merseyside yet the event was cancelled a day before.
A message posted on Comic Con’s Instagram said: ‘Due to Bernard’s partner being taken very ill he can no longer attend the event. He sends his sincere apologies and thanks you all for you understanding’.
The sad news of his death comes as a video emerged of him telling his fans to ‘keep going’.
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Hill had been due to speak at Comic Con in Liverpool today but cancelled because his wife was ill
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A message posted on Comic Con’s Instagram said: ‘Due to Bernard’s partner being taken very ill he can no longer attend the event. He sends his sincere apologies and thanks you all for you understanding’
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Lord of the rings star reunion Orlando Bloom, Elijah Wood, Billy Boyd, Sean Astin and Dom Monaghan dining together this weekend – with Hill notably absent
After attending Comic Con Scotland in Aberdeen in March, when asked what his plans for after the event, he said: ‘A good night’s sleep. It was pretty brutal coming in on that tiny aeroplane. It didn’t bother me, I liked it. I left me a bit weary at the end of it.’
Tributes from fans and those within the acting world have been paid to the thespian this afternoon, praising him for his ‘incredible talent’ and a career that saw him ‘blaze a rail across the screen’.
Lindsay Salt, Director of BBC Drama, said: ‘Bernard Hill blazed a trail across the screen, and his long-lasting career filled with iconic and remarkable roles is a testament to his incredible talent.
‘From Boys from the Blackstuff, to Wolf Hall, The Responder, and many more, we feel truly honoured to have worked with Bernard at the BBC. Our thoughts are with his loved ones at this sad time.’
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The thespian is set to return to our screens tonight in the Martin Freeman drama The Responder. Pictured: Hill (left) on set with Freeman (right) during filming for the BBC programme
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The actor also portrayed Captain Edward Smith in the 1997 Oscar-winning film Titanic (pictured)
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Bernard Hill had a varied screen career, coming to prominence acting in small down to earth dramas before going on to star in films that made billions worldwide. Pictured: Hill at the premier of ‘Gods Own Country’ in Edinburgh in June 2017
Writer Mr Bleasdale added: ‘: ‘It was an astonishing, mesmeric performance – Bernard gave everything to that and you can see it in all the scenes. He became Yosser Hughes.
‘I was desperate to work with him. Everything he did – his whole procedure for working, the manner in which he worked and his performance was everything that you could ever wish for.
‘You always felt that Bernard would live forever. He had a great strength, physically and of personality.’
‘Yosser is often remembered as a head-butting brute, which he was,’ Mr Graham added.
‘But Bernard’s mesmerising and heart-breaking incarnation of a man being slowly broken, in his spirit and his mind, by the cruelty of the world around him, it’s easy to forget how much heart there was there too.’
Actress and musician Barbara Dickson, who starred with him in a musical based on the Beatles, was among those paying tribute, describing him as a ‘marvellous actor’.
Alongside a photo of them together, she wrote: ‘It’s with great sadness that I note the death of Bernard Hill.
‘We worked together in John, Paul, George, Ringo and Bert, (by) Willy Russell marvellous show 1974-1975.
‘A really marvellous actor. It was a privilege to have crossed paths with him. RIP Benny x.’
Born in Blackley into a family of coal miners, he would attend acting school with Richard Griffiths, before moving into television.
After bit roles in Hard Labour and the poorly received but now acclaimed I, Claudius, he got his first major break in the early 1980s.
The actor was cast as Yosser Hughes, a working class Liverpudlian in The Black Stuff and its sequel, Boys from the Blackstuff, in 1982.
His character was a man left struggling to do the right thing after becoming unemployed and coined the phrase ‘gizza job’ – meaning ‘give us a job’ – became a common refrain among protesters in Thatcherite Britain.
The sequel won a Bafta for best drama series in 1983 and was listed as the seventh best TV show ever made on a British Film Institute list in 2000.
The same year he took the role of Sergeant Putnam in Richard Attenborough’s Oscar-winning biopic Gandhi, before starring in the BBC’s 1983 adaptation of Shakespeare’s classic play Henry VI, in which he played the Duke of York.
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The actor, pictured as King Theoden, won plaudits for his portrayal of the ageing monarch trying to protect his people from the forces of evil
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The actor also portrayed the Duke of Norfolk in the 2015 adaptation of Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall. Pictured: Bernard Hill on the Wolf Hall set in Gloucester in 2014
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Hill also won plaudits for his portrayal of Captain Edward Smith in 1997 drama Titanic. Pictured: The actor on set as Captain Smith
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Bernard Hill pictured with his wife Marianna Hill at the premier of the Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers in 2002
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Hill played Praetorian Guard Gratus in the British television drama I, Claudius about the reign of the Roman emperor Claudius
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The Manchester native will star opposite Martin Freeman in the second series of The Responder, which airs on the BBC tonight
He would later be cast as Captain Edward Smith in James Cameron’s gargantuan film, Titanic.
The 1997 movie saw him play the captain of the infamous vessel on what would be its maiden and only voyage across the Atlantic, before going down with the ship after it hit an iceberg.
It marked the start of a late career renaissance for Hill, who was then chosen by Peter Jackson in the role of King Theoden in the Lord of the Rings trilogy.
The actor was praised for his portrayal of the embattled King of Rohan who valiantly fights to save his people from the forces of evil.
Hollywood kept calling, with Hill making appearances in Dwayne Johnson vehicle The Scorpion King, Halle Berry horror film Gothika and the tennis-themed romantic comedy Wimbledon.
He continued to make regular appearances on British television, before being cast in the 2015 BBC drama Wolf Hall.
An adaptation of Hilary Mantel’s historical fiction about the rise of Thomas Cromwell, Hill portrayed the Duke of Norfolk in the first series of the show, before being replaced by Timothy Spall in the second.
He had been due to return to our screens once more tonight, with a role in Martin Freeman’s BBC show The Responder.
The thespian lived in Suffolk and is survived by his wife Marianna Hill and their son Gabriel.