John Richardson, the British actor who starred opposite Ursula Andress in
She
and
Raquel Welch
in
One Million Years B.C.,
died Tuesday of COVID-19 complications. He was 86.
His death was
reported
by
Cinema Retro
writer Mark Mawston.
In Mario Bava’s credited feature directorial debut, Richardson portrayed a doctor’s assistant whose blood inadvertently brings a vampiric witch (Barbara Steele) back to life in the Italian horror classic
Black Sunday
(1960).
He screen-tested for James Bond after Sean Connery relinquished the role, but model George Lazenby was hired to play Agent 007 opposite
Diana Rigg
in
On
Her Majesty’s Secret Service
(1969).
For Hammer Films and Seven Arts producer Ray Stark, Richardson played an archeologist who discovers a lost city ruled by the immortal queen Ayesha (Andress), who believes he is her reincarnated lover, in
She
(1965), also featuring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee.
He then donned a loincloth to star with Welch amid stop-motion dinosaurs animated by Ray Harryhausen in
One Million Years B.C.
(1966), another movie for Hammer and Seven Arts.
Richardson also starred in the spaghetti Westerns
John the Bastard
(1967),
Execution
(1968) and
A Candidate for a Killing
(1969) and had a supporting turn in Vincente Minnelli’s
On a Clear Day You Can See Forever
(1970), starring Barbra Streisand.
Born in Sussex on Jan. 19, 1934, Richardson started out with small roles in such notable films as
A Night to Remember
(1958), the Kenneth More-starring 1959 remake of
The 39 Steps
and
The League of Gentlemen
(1960).
Back in England after
Black Sunday,
he had uncredited roles in
Tender Is the Night
(1962) and
Lord Jim
(1965) before breaking out in
She
. (He later returned, minus Andress, for a 1968 sequel,
The Vengeance of She
.)
Richardson spent most of the ’70s working in Italy in such films as
Frankenstein ’80
(1972),
Torso
(1973),
Eyeball
(1975),
Reflections in Black
(1975),
Duck in Orange Sauce
(1975),
Nine Guests for a Crime
(1977) and
War of the Planets
(1977).
Richardson, who last appeared onscreen in 1994 and focused on photography in his later years, was married to actress Martine Beswick (
One Million Years B.C., From Russia With Love)
from 1967 until their 1973 divorce.