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Timothy James Curry (born 19 April 1946) is an English actor and singer. He rose to prominence as Dr. Frank-N-Furter in the musical film The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975), reprising the role he had originated in the 1973 London, 1974 Los Angeles, and 1975 Broadway musical stage productions of The Rocky Horror Show.
Almost 50 years after “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” debuted, Tim Curry is gearing up for another spooky role. The veteran actor will return to the big screen as a character in the horror ...
Tim Curry is set to make his long-awaited return to the movie screen in the new horror film Stream. Curry, 78, has been using a wheelchair since a major stroke in July 2012 .
Patricia Quinn, Tim Curry and Richard O'Brien in 1975's 'Rocky Horror Picture Show' Bostwick continues, "The magic of Tim Curry on stage was indelible. I mean it.
Little Nell, Patricia Quinn, Tim Curry, and Richard O'Brien in The Rocky Horror Picture Show. All were in the original stage show. Richard O'Brien was living as an unemployed actor in London during the early 1970s. He wrote most of The Rocky Horror Show during one winter just to occupy himself.
The Rocky Horror Picture Show: Dr. Frank N. Furter Jim Sharman: 1978 The Shout: Robert Graves Jerzy Skolimowski: 1980 Times Square: Johnny LaGuardia Allan Moyle: 1982 Annie: Rooster Hannigan John Huston: 1983 The Ploughman's Lunch: Jeremy Hancock Richard Eyre: 1985 Legend: Darkness Ridley Scott: Clue: Wadsworth Jonathan Lynn: 1988 Pass the Ammo ...
Back in the 1970s, Tim Curry was primarily a stage actor, until one of the musicals he starred in, The Rocky Horror Show, was turned into a film. Curry led the absurdity as Dr. Frank-N-Furter, a ...
The plot of the tribute is fundamentally identical to the original film, with some additional scenes wrapped around the film. These scenes show several people attending a theatrical showing of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, and subsequently are used to introduce some of the audience participation elements from the original film (such as throwing toilet paper on the line "Great Scott!").