Michael Redgrave ranks with Olivier, Gielgud and Richardson as one of the great British actors of the 20th century. Married to the actress Rachel Kempton, he also fathered a dynasty of actors, Vanessa, Corin and Lynn Redgrave. He played all the great Shakespearean roles (his Prospero reckoned better even than Gielguds), he was considered the greatest English actor in Chekhov), had an impressive film career (that included Hitchcocks celebrated THE LADY VANISHES, the schizophrenic ventriloquist in DEAD OF NIGHT and Crocker Harris in THE BROWNING VERSION) and then in his prime contracted Parkinsons disease and was no longer able to learn new roles. He wrote his memoirs, but these were noted as much for what he left out, including his complex private life. In his thirties he had an affair with Edith Evans, then Englands leading actress and 20 years his senior. But he had realised his bisexuality while at university and soon began a series of homosexual affairs. This biography has exclusive access to the papers recently sold to the Theatre Museum and will allow Strachan to tell stories that involve not only fellow actors, by Anthony Blunt, Alistair Cooke and the political left of the 30s, 40s and 50s. Strachan intends showing how the children and now their children have been influenced by Michael Redgrave. Strachan directed Redgrave in his last years and knows the family well Alan Strachan is a noted theatre director (Noel Coward, Simon Gray as well as work at the National). He is also a writer on acting and contributes most of the theatrical obits to The Independent.