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  1. However, it helped that Mitchell's own personality and background were quite different from his alter ego's. A North London (Stoke Newington)-born Spurs supporter of Russian Jewish descent, with strongly left-wing political leanings, he was born Warren Misell on 14 January 1926. Attracted to acting from an early age, he attended Gladys Gordon's ...

  2. 14 de nov. de 2015 · Actor Warren Mitchell, who has died aged 89, will forever be associated with Alf Garnett, the vile old bigot he portrayed on television, stage and film from 1965 to 1998.

  3. J. Warren is the youngest of three children and first discovered music at a young age when he learned to play drums, piano, and conducted the choir at his family’s church in Montgomery, Alabama. Jay currently resides in Oklahoma City where, in his spare time, he enjoys Salsa dancing. His love and passion for choral music continue to grant him ...

  4. 14 de nov. de 2015 · Warren Mitchell, who played Alf Garnett in BBC's Till Death Us Do part, has died at the age of 89. "Sadly we can confirm Warren Mitchell died in the early hours of Saturday, November 14 ...

  5. 1 de dic. de 2015 · Warren Mitchell once observed that his appearance often lead him to be cast as “a foreigner”: “I played a funny foreigner, or a sinister foreigner, or a stupid foreigner, but always a foreigner, because I look sort of dark and can do accents.” In the 1960s this was indeed Mitchell’s standard role in various TV spy series from a recurring role as a Rome taxi driver in The Saint (1962 ...

  6. 14 de nov. de 2015 · Actor Warren Mitchell, best known for his role as the outspoken Alf Garnett in 60s sitcom Till Death Do Us Part, has died aged 89. News of his passing was broken by the actor’s great nephew ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Alf_GarnettAlf Garnett - Wikipedia

    Mitchell stated that he became tired of always being associated with Alf Garnett but enjoyed playing the part and appreciated the debt he owed to the character. [6] In the late 1980s, the Museum of the Moving Image in London staged an "Alf Garnett exhibition", where visitors pressed buttons representing particular social problems and were presented with Alf giving his opinions on the subject.