Dudley Moore
Born: 19th April 1935
Where: Dagenham, Greater London
Died: 27th March 2002
Dudley teamed up with Peter Cook at Oxford University, forming a comedy duo who appeared together in such hit films as The Wrong Box and Bedazzled with Raquel Welch.
But it was 10 that made him a star - and a surprise sex symbol.
The diminutive star replaced George Segal to play a middle-aged man in a midlife crisis who falls for the sexy Bo Derek.
Two years later he hit success again with Arthur, earning a Best Actor Oscar nomination playing a happy drunken heir to a fortune who falls in love with a working-class girl played by Liza Minnelli.
He made Arthur 2 in 1988 with the same cast.
More recent films featuring Moore include the farce Blame it on the Bell Boy, also starring Patsy Kensit, and Crazy People, where he played opposite Daryl Hannah.
In 1993 he starred in a short-lived TV sitcom called Dudley.
Described by Oscar Peterson as one of the great jazz pianists of his generation, Dudley was also highly rated as a player and composer, writing scores for films like Bedazzled, Inadmissible Evidence and Staircase.
He attributed his success at both music and comedy to a childhood spent fending off bullies who teased him about his height.
"I think most comedians start off defending themselves with comedy," he said.
"Generally they feel inferior in some way. I certainly did feel inferior. Because of class, because of strength, because of height... I guess if I'd been able to hit somebody on the nose. I wouldn't have been a comic."
'Cuddly Dudley' announced he had Progressive Supranuclear Palsy in 1999 and admitted in his last years that he felt trapped in his own body, scared of the horrible death he knew was coming.
However, at the time he made light of his illness saying that one person in 100,000 suffered from the disease and, as there were 100,000 actors in his union, he had been "considerate" in saving the other 99,999 from his fate.
His last of four marriages - Nicole Rothschild - ended in allegations of abuse and tabloid reports of domestic upsets.
Other stories of falls, slurred speech and car crashes in the late 1990s - later explained by his deteriorating health - led to rumours of drink and drug abuse and, in 1999, he was seen falling during a TV interview with Barbara Walters.
Later that year Dudley was diagnosed with PSP, a rare brain disorder that permanently affects the way a person walks and attacks their balance.
He co-founded the charity Philadelphia's Music for All Seasons - which brings concerts to nursing homes and hospitals - and, in 1999, launched the Dudley Dudley Fund aimed at finding a cure for PSP.


























