John Burgess (2 February 1933 — 15 November 2010) was an English actor.
Burgess was born in Golders Green, North West London, the son of Edith and Bertram Bogush. He had two younger siblings, Michael and Wendy. His paternal grandfather, Morris, who arrived in the UK from Poland at the turn of the 20th century, became a successful travelling jeweler. His maternal grandparents were Hungarian. Burgess was born Jewish but had no faith. He changed his name from Bogush to Burgess after becoming an actor.
Burgess was educated at St. Paul’s school in West London. Having completed his National Service in Germany – he reached the rank of Officer-Burgess graduated from RADA in 1954. He spent a few years cutting his teeth in repertory theatre, including a four-year stint at the Elizabethan Theatre Company. However, disillusioned with life as an actor, Burgess left the profession and set up a menswear company. He and his partner ran it successfully for a decade or so but, by the end of the 1960s, unhappy with his conventional life, he emigrated to Canada. Following the successful completion of an English and Drama Degree at Queen’s University in Ontario, Burgess returned to the UK.
Burgess resumed his career in weekly rep, at Folkestone, where he ran into his old actor friend, Harry Landis, who was, at that time, Artistic Director of the Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury. Burgess joined Landis for a season there and subsequently went on tour in a production of The Tempest with the Oxford Playhouse Company. He then began a long and fruitful association with the Royal Shakespeare Company, for whom he appeared throughout the 1970s and 1980s. In both The Witch of Edmonton, in which he played Old Banks and Richard II, as John of Gaunt, he was directed by Barry Kyle. Under Terry Hands’ directorship, Burgess played Sicinius Velutus in Coriolanus, which toured Europe to great acclaim. He also played Reignier in Henry VI Part I, Simpcox in Henry VI Part II and Roman, in Children of The Sun, all for Hands.
Under Trevor Nunn’s stewardship, Burgess played Lodovico and The Duke of Venice in the much lauded 1989 production of Othello, which was made into a film. Also for Nunn, he performed the roles of Scroop in Henry IV, Parts I and II, Duke Frederick in As You Like It and Syringe and Sir John Friendly in The Relapse. Burgess was directed by Ron Daniels in The Lorenzaccio Story, in which he played a goldsmith, The Women Pirates - Ann Bonney and Mary Read in which he appeared as Forbes and A Midsummer Night’s Dream in which he performed the role of Egeus. He also plays Vesey in Bill Alexander’s production of Money and Pistol for the same director, again in Henry IV, Parts I and II. In 1978, Burgess played Vlok in David Edgar’s play "The Jail Diary of Albie Sachs", at the Warehouse Theatre in London. It was an important piece about the treatment of the dissident white lawyer, Albie Sachs, by the apartheid regime in South Africa.