Bonar Colleano


Bonar Colleano was an American stage and film actor based in the United Kingdom.

Biography

Early life

Colleano was born Bonar Sullivan in New York City. He had childhood experiences with the Ringling Brothers Circus and in his family's famous circus.
He moved to the United Kingdom when he was 12 so his family could appear at the London Palladium. He spent several years performing in music halls. When war broke out in 1939, he began entertaining troops in Britain and was not called up for either nation's military forces. In 1941 he was in a revue Piccadixie.

Film career

Colleano's first important role came with the popular wartime drama The Way to the Stars, playing an American airman.
He played American servicemen in Wanted for Murder, A Matter of Life and Death, and While the Sun Shines.
Colleano played an Italian in One Night with You, and was in Good-Time Girl and Sleeping Car to Trieste. He worked regularly in radio, appearing in a revue Navy Mixture, and had a lead part in Once a Jolly Swagman.

Leading roles

Colleano's reputation shot up when cast in the role of Stanley Kowalski in the original English stage production of A Streetcar Named Desire at the Aldwych Theatre, London, directed by Laurence Olivier and co-starring Vivien Leigh.
His film parts got better. Give Us This Day was set in the U.S. but shot in England. He was a romantic lead in Dance Hall.
It led to lead roles in films starting with Pool of London and A Tale of Five Cities. The latter enabled him to display some of his circus skills. He went to the US and starred in a Hollywood production, Stanley Kramer's Eight Iron Men.
He went back to Britain to play the lead in Is Your Honeymoon Really Necessary?, a comedy with Diana Dors, and in Escape by Night.

Support parts

Colleano had another Hollywood role, a support, in Flame and the Flesh, shot in England and Italy.
He went back to support parts in British films with Time Is My Enemy and The Sea Shall Not Have Them.
Colleano had good support roles in the oddball Shakespeare derivation Joe MacBeth and Stars in Your Eyes.

Warwick Productions

used him in Zarak. They liked his work and kept him on for Interpol, Fire Down Below, No Time to Die and The Man Inside. He was also in Death Over My Shoulder.

Personal life

He was from a well known Australian circus family and was a nephew of Con Colleano, the first tightrope walker to perform a forward somersault on the wire. In 1946, he married actress Tamara Lees, but the couple divorced in 1951. His second wife was actress Susan Shaw, who descended into alcoholism after his death. Their son Mark Colleano is also an actor. In 1950, while living in the U.K., he fathered future Average White Band drummer, Robbie McIntosh. Colleano was not married to McIntosh's mother.

Death

Colleano died in 1958 at the age of 34, when he crashed his sports car in Birkenhead shortly after leaving the Queensway Tunnel. He was driving back from Liverpool's New Shakespeare Theatre, where he had been appearing in a stage production of Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?. His passenger, fellow actor and friend Michael Balfour, required 98 stitches, but eventually recovered.

Legacy

In the lyrics of Ian Dury and the Blockheads' 1979 song "Reasons to Be Cheerful, Part 3", Colleano was included in the list of reasons to be cheerful.

Filmography

Citations

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