Tony winner was the original Nickleby
Welsh-born actor starred on stage and screen
NEW YORK — Roger Rees, the lanky Tony Award-winning Welsh-born actor and director who made his mark onstage as Nicholas Nickleby and later played English multimillionaire Robin Colcord on the TV show Cheers, has died. He was 71.
Rees died July 10 at his home in New York after a brief illness, said his representative, Rick Miramontez. Rees had abruptly left The Visit on Broadway in late May to undergo a medical procedure.
“The world has lost a great actor, gentleman and soul,” said Chita Rivera, Rees’s co-star in The Visit this year. “I have lost a beautiful new friend, one I was looking forward to spending exciting valuable time with.”
Rees played the snobbish Robin Colcord on TV’s Cheers — he was known for his condescending remarks and rivalry with Sam Malone and for dating Rebecca Howe — and the British ambassador, Lord John Marbury, in The West Wing. Other recent TV credits include Elementary and The Good Wife.
But he was probably best known onstage for playing the title character in the Royal Shakespeare Company’s original production of Charles Dickens’s The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby in England and on Broadway. He won an Olivier Award and then a Tony. When it was adapted to TV, he earned an Emmy Award nomination.
He earned two further Tony nominations in 1995 for Indiscretions and in 2012 for codirecting Peter and the Starcatcher, a Peter Pan prequel. Other Broadway roles were in The Addams Family, Uncle Vanya, The Rehearsal, The Red Shoes and London Assurance.
Born in Aberystwyth, Wales, on May 5, 1944, Rees also played the Sheriff of Rottingham in Mel Brooks’ Robin Hood: Men in Tights in 1993 and was in The Scorpion King in 2002 and The Pink Panther in 2006.
He is survived by his husband Rick Elice, the playwright, whose credits include the Peter Pan prequel Peter and the Starcatcher, which Rees co-directed.