
John Standing
Acting
Born 1934-08-16 · London, England, UK
Sir John Ronald Leon, 4th Baronet (born 16 August 1934) is an English actor and baronet who is known as John Standing. He is the stepson of John Clements. Standing was born in London, the son of Kay Hammond (née Dorothy Katherine Standing), an actress, and Sir Ronald George Leon, 3rd Baronet, a stockbroker descended from Sir Herbert Leon, the builder of Bletchley Park. He succeeded his father as the 4th baronet in 1964, but does not use the title. The Leon family were, until 1937, owners of Bletchley Park, the country house in Buckinghamshire used in the Second World War as a code-breaking centre. He was educated at Eton College and Millfield School, Somerset. He served in the King's Royal Rifle Corps as a second lieutenant, before going on to study at the Byam Shaw School of Art in London Standing began his career in Peter Brook's 1955 production of Titus Andronicus starring Laurence Olivier and wife Vivien Leigh and later played leading parts in Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, Christopher Fry's Ring Round the Moon, A Sense of Detachment by John Osborne, and Noël Coward's Private Lives, with Maggie Smith. He was nominated for an Olivier award (1979) for Close of Play at the National Theatre. He made his film debut in The Wild and the Willing (1962), going on to appear in King Rat (1965), Walk, Don't Run (1966), The Psychopath (1966), The Eagle Has Landed (1976), The Elephant Man (1980), Nightflyers (1987), Mrs Dalloway (1997) and A Good Woman (2004). One of his first major television roles was as Sidney Godolphin in the BBC twelve-part serial, The First Churchills (1969). Other television appearances include Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1979); the ITV sitcom The Other 'Arf (1980–84), with Lorraine Chase; The Choir (1995) and King Solomon's Mines (2004). In the United States, he made guest appearances in numerous weekly programmes including L.A. Law, Civil Wars and Murder, She Wrote, and co-starred briefly with Robert Wagner and Samantha Smith in the action series Lime Street (1985). In 1976, he also appeared opposite Peter O'Toole in the little-seen BBC thriller film, Rogue Male, directed by Clive Donner. He appeared in the horror film Nightflyers (1987) adapted from a short story by George R. R. Martin. In 2002, he had a speaking credit on Lost Horizons, the second studio album from the British electronic duo Lemon Jelly. On track 1, "Elements", he lists the basic “elements" that make up the world: ash, metal, water, wood, fire and sky. On track 3, "Ramblin' Man", Standing reads a long list of various locations around the world, ranging from small Sussex villages to major world capitals. In July 2010, it was confirmed that he would be appearing as Jon Arryn in the HBO series Game of Thrones, based on Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire novels.
Known for

The Other 'Arf
1980 · TV

Paddington Bear
1989 · TV

The First Churchills
1969 · TV

Game of Thrones
2011 · TV

Midsomer Murders
1997 · TV

Lime Street
1985 · TV

The Choir
1995 · TV

A Dance to the Music of Time
1997 · TV

Agatha Christie's Poirot
1989 · TV

Hunter
1984 · TV

Fallen Angel
2007 · TV

The Crown
2016 · TV

Murder, She Wrote
1984 · TV

In Deep
2001 · TV

Patrick Melrose
2018 · TV

Love in a Cold Climate
2001 · TV

Gulliver's Travels
1996 · TV

Joan of Arc
1999 · TV

The Line of Beauty
2006 · TV

King Solomon's Mines
2004 · TV

Rosamunde Pilcher: The Other Wife
2012 · TV

The Avengers
1961 · TV

L.A. Law
1986 · TV

The Saint
1962 · TV

Hotel
1982 · TV

Hart to Hart
1979 · TV

BBC Play of the Month
1965 · TV

Space: 1999
1975 · TV

The Main Chance
1969 · TV

The Endless Game
1989 · TV

Lexx
1997 · TV

BBC2 Play of the Week
1977 · TV

ITV Playhouse
1967 · TV

The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes
1971 · TV

Eerie, Indiana
1991 · TV

The Frighteners
1972 · TV

Keen Eddie
2003 · TV

Borgia
2011 · TV

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
1979 · TV

Van der Valk
1972 · TV

Longitude
2000 · TV

Shillingbury Tales
1981 · TV

Murphy's Law
1988 · TV

Beryl Reid
1977 · TV

The Vice
1999 · TV

Armchair Theatre
1956 · TV