Nicol Williamson
Thomas Nicol Williamson (September 14, 1936 - December 16, 2011) was a British actor. He was once described by playwright John Osborne as "the greatest actor since Marlon Brando". He was also described by Samuel Beckett as "touched by genius" and viewed by many critics as "the Hamlet of his generation" during the late 1960s.
Movies
One for the Money: The Birth of Rock & Roll
Spawn
Cogliostro
The Wind in the Willows
Badger
The Hour of the Pig
Seigneur Jehan d'Auferre
The Exorcist III
Father Morning
Passion Flower
Albert Coskin
Black Widow
William McCrory
Return to Oz
Dr. Worley / Nome King
Sakharov
Malyarov
Macbeth
Macbeth
I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can
Derek Bauer
Venom
Cmdr. William Bulloch
Excalibur
Merlin
The Human Factor
Maurice Castle
The Cheap Detective
Colonel Schlissel
The Goodbye Girl
Oliver Fry (uncredited)
The Seven-Per-Cent Solution
Sherlock Holmes
Robin and Marian
Little John
The Wilby Conspiracy
Major Horn
I Know What I Meant
Richard Nixon
The Gangster Show: The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui
Arturo Ui
The Monk
The Duke of Talamur
The Jerusalem File
Professor Lang
The Reckoning
Michael Marler
Hamlet
Hamlet / King Hamlet
Laughter in the Dark
Sir Edward More
Inadmissible Evidence
Bill Maitland
The Bofors Gun
Gunner O'Rourke
Of Mice and Men
Lennie
Horror of Darkness
Robin
The Day of Ragnarok
The Six-Sided Triangle
The Lover