Donal Donnelly was an English actor best known in the cinema for roles in
The Knack... and How to Get It (1965) and
The Godfather Part III (1990) and on stage for his work in the
plays of
Brian Friel. He was born in Bradford, West Yorkshire,
England, on the 6th of July 1931, but raised in Dublin, Ireland. In Dublin, he
went to a Christian Brothers School where he acted in school plays with
classmates
Jack MacGowran and
Milo O'Shea. Subsequently, he
toured Ireland with
Anew McMaster's repertory company.
On-stage, he established professional reputation in 1964 playing Gar
Private in the Friel's
Philadelphia, Here I Come! (1974) at Dublin's Gate Theatre. He was
nominated for a Tony Award when the show transferred to Broadway in
1966, where it was a hit, racking up 326 performances. Two years later,
he replaced
Albert Finney in the 1968 Broadway production of
A Day in the Death of Joe Egg (1972). From 1969 through 1995, he appeared in an additional
nine Broadway productions, including
Sleuth (1972) and
The Elephant Man (1980), and Friel's "The Mundy Scheme",
Dancing at Lughnasa (1998), and
"Translations".
In 1965, he co-starred with
Michael Crawford and
Rita Tushingham in
Richard Lester's movie adaption of
Ann Jellicoe's hit play "The
Knack". It was a hit. He played the scheming Archbishop Gilday out to
fleece Michael Corleone (
Al Pacino) in "The Godfather Part III"
and gave a critically acclaimed performance in
John Huston's
adaption of
James Joyce's short story
The Dead (1987). He also
appeared on British television, most memorably in
Z Cars (1962) and
the 1970s situation-comedy
Yes, Honestly (1976).
Donal Donnelly died from cancer on the 4th of January 2010 in Chicago. He was 78
years old. He and his wife Patsy had two children.