From: Favorite Hunks & Other Things
Speaking of Romeo's... Many many actors have put on the tights to play the doomed young lover, recently Leonardo DiCaprio (left) gave it a shot, but my all time favorite has to be Leonard Whiting (below) from the 1968 version. I remember catching it on late night TV in the early 80's, and Leonard had one of the most adorable faces and behinds I had ever seen. It may have been the first ass I saw on television, I don't remember for sure. Leonard has not done much since this movie though and appears not to have acted professionally for almost the past 20 years. You will be remembered Leonard.
Leonard Whiting (born 30 June 1950) is an English actor who is best known for his role as Romeo in the 1968 Zeffirelli film version of Romeo and Juliet opposite Olivia Hussey's Juliet, a role which earned him the Golden Globe Award for New Star of the Year - Actor and so by his Marcus S. Castor at The Summertime Killer, opposite Calista Flockhart's Barbara Scarlotti. He was touted as a star in the making, the next Laurence Olivier and the next great British actor.
Whiting was born in the Wood Green area of London, England, the only son of Arthur Leonard Whiting and Peggy Joyce O'Sullivan. He has English, Irish and some Romani/Gypsy ancestry. Whiting attended the St. Richard of Chichester School, Camden Town, leaving just a week or two before beginning work on Romeo and Juliet (1968). He is also renowned for his on-stage part as the Artful Dodger in the original London cast of Oliver!, where he replaced Davy Jones when Jones and most of the London cast were transferred to New York City for the play's Broadway run.
Whiting was spotted by an agent at the Connaught Rooms where he was performing at a Jewish wedding at the age of 12. He only sang one song ("Summertime") which he had rehearsed as a one-off song with the group Teal Lewis and the Fourtunes, who were the entertaining for the evening, and this was set up by his father to get him noticed. After hearing him sing, the agent suggested he try out for Lionel Bart's Oliver! which constantly needed replacements for its child performers. Whiting played the Artful Dodger in the long-running London musical for 18 months, and for 13 months appeared at Laurence Olivier's National Theatre in the production of Congreve's "Love for Love" opposite Olivier, which toured Moscow and Berlin.
Director Franco Zeffirelli described his discovery, made from 300 youngsters who auditioned during more than three months: "He has a magnificent face, gentle melancholy, sweet, the kind of idealistic young man Romeo ought to be."
In the mid-1970s, his voice caught the attention of Abbey Road and The Dark Side of the Moon engineer Alan Parsons, who was in the process of recording what was to be the first album by the Alan Parsons Project, Tales of Mystery and Imagination. Whiting performed lead vocals on the song "The Raven".
Whiting ended his film career, for the most part, in the mid-'70s and subsequently placed his focus upon his theatrical career as an actor and writer. He now lives in the Haverstock area of London.
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