Michael Patrick Dumble-Smith (born
January 19,
1942), better known as
Michael Crawford, is one of Britain's leading actors, so much so that he was voted into the Top "
100 Greatest Britons" in a
2002 poll sponsored by the
BBC. Crawford began his acting career as a seven-year-old, appearing in the première of
Benjamin Britten's work for children,
Let's Make an Opera. Although he most often appears in musicals, he became known to millions for his role as the hapless
Frank Spencer in the television
sitcom,
Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em[?], for which he performed most of his own stunts. It was one of the
BBC's most successful series of all time.
Crawford has played leading roles in films such as Hello, Dolly[?] (1968), but more often appears on stage, having starred in West End productions such as Billy (based on the novel, Billy Liar) (1974), Barnum[?] (1981) (one of the longest runs by a leading man) and, most notably, Andrew Lloyd Webber's Phantom of the Opera[?] (1986).
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