A remote and rather prevailing sullenness has only enhanced the
mystique and charisma found in dashingly handsome Oliver Tobias, who
has enjoyed over a Five decade-long career on stage, screen and TV.
Born Oliver Tobias Freitag in Zurich, Switzerland on August 6, 1947, he
was the son of Swiss actor
Robert Freitag and German actress
Maria Becker, who
subsequently divorced when he was young. Living in England from age 8,
he was sent to boarding school and was later encouraged by his mother
to study at the East 15 Acting School (1965-1968) which coincided with
dance training at the Ecole de Dance in Zurich.
In 1968 he appeared in the original London production of "Hair" playing the prime rebel role
of Berger. The following year he starred, staged and choreographed the
rock opera in Amsterdam and again helmed a production in 1970 in Tel
Aviv. Oliver continued his shaggy-haired, counterculture musical career
with the role of Judas in a German touring company of "Jesus Christ
Superstar."
Around this time he started making an impression in films with the
international productions of
Romance of a Horsethief (1971),
'Tis Pity She's a Whore (1971), which co-starred
Charlotte Rampling, and
The God King (1974) in a Mephistophelean-styled role. On TV he
enhanced a number of classic, age-old stories from Sherlock Holmes to
Robin Hood. He earned TV stardom as King Arthur in the series
Arthur of the Britons (1972),
then again played the youthful ruler of Camelot in
King Arthur, the Young Warlord (1975) on film.
From there he graced a number of colorful costumers, including
Arabian Adventure (1979)
and on TV portrayed composer Johann Strauss in an equally colorful
outing. Despite this attention he did not give up his musical roots,
showing his prowess in the title role of the rock opera "Peer Gynt" in
Zurich, and in the role of The Pirate King in "The Pirates of Penzance"
at London's Drury Lane Theatre. As a stretch he also appeared as Bassa
Selim in the Mozart opera "The Abduction from the Seraglio" in 1988 and
1989, then appeared in a non-musical, the powerful AIDS drama "The
Normal Heart," shortly after.
Oliver's taste in movies have been eclectic to say the least, and not always tasteful. He appeared in
Joan Collins' scurrilous, soft-core flick
The Stud (1978) as an amorous waiter who
sleeps his way to the top, and was part of the cast in the costumed
romp
Mata Hari (1985) which focused more on the disrobing of its star
Sylvia Kristel
than anything else. For variety he portrayed a Vietnam veteran in
Cobra Mission (1986), a galactic dictator in
Nexus 2.431 (1994), and a U-boat captain in
The Brylcreem Boys (1998). In 1999 he again returned to musical limelight, this time in
London as King Roderick in "La Cava," based on the Dana Broccoli novel.
He returned to the role a second time in 2001. In 2003 he was Percival
Brown in the 50th anniversary production of "The Boyfriend" and the
very next year toured in the rock musical "Footloose."
Millennium films include prime appearances in the crime thriller
Don't Look Back! (2003) and the romance thriller
Method (2004), and featured roles in the war comedy
Dad's Army (2016), the mystery drama
Open My Eyes (2018), and two horror flicks,
When the Devil Rides Out (2006) and
Conjuring: The Book of the Dead (2020). Also more recent work on Swiss TV movies and series.
Divorced from Camilla Ravenshear, he has two daughters, Angelika and
Celeste. In 2001 he married Polish-born Arabella Zamoyska. The rugged
charmer is in the process of writing a tell-all
autobiography.