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Post by GetSmart on Oct 29, 2009 14:37:39 GMT -5
Unfortunately, I must announce to you that one of the very best Hollywood actors has been replaced by another actor playing the part of... Peter Seamus O'Toole. The Doppelganger has a different nose, closer eyes, a thinner longer head and considerably larger ears. Here are some photos of Peter and Feter for comparison. Faulcon was right. When a double ages their similarity decreases and they look more and more phony. Peter O'Toole had sufficient culture to make a Mind Controlled Clone less viable an option than a handler controlled actor usurping his identity. While the actor will fare much better in passing for him by his expressive style and cultural references, the physical appearance is far less compelling. We can see in this photo Feter O'Toole receiving an Oscar rewarding the career of the man he was replacing, to the right Feter is ageing and due to this looking less and less like Peter, and then he underwent surgery to try to look more like Peter. However, while he is less obviously radically different from the original man, he still has very important discrepancies from Peter. So as for many other well-known actors, comedians, musicians and artists... we must bid farewell to Peter O'Toole who graced us with his magnificent interpretations of Laurence of Arabia, Mister Chips and so many other unmatched performances ranging from Shakespeare to the original Casino Royale. As a salute, here is Peter to the left.
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Post by artemis on Oct 29, 2009 15:22:08 GMT -5
What's left to say? F******* BAFFLING! Keep it like that! The replacement is looking like a hag... And very inspired the last pics, I must say that... A somehow useless question: when do u think PETER was replaced? Between 1999 and 2002? For imdb shows a break of 3 years that time between movies...
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Post by GetSmart on Oct 29, 2009 15:48:43 GMT -5
We can pinpoint that the switch was made quite a long time ago, prior to the 1971 release of Murphy's War. Feter was disguised similarly as it today customary for people after plastic surgery with a two week beard and a large floppy hat to conceal his larger ears, more elongated head and squarer jaw.
To conceal that it was no longer the same actor the role called for a heavy poorly executed Irish accent so that we wouldn't immediately scream out "Wwho on Earth is THAT pretending to be Peter O'Toole?"
Here is a clip on Youtube where you can see Feter doing a rather poor job of filling in for a presumably assassinated Peter O'Toole.
Actually it seems he may have been replaced earlier yet... amazing? PID now also means Peter is Dead.
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Post by beatlies on Oct 29, 2009 15:51:28 GMT -5
(sigh) Alright, add Peter O'Toole to the List.
Lawrence of Arabia, perhaps O'Toole's best known role, is on the cover of Sgt. Pepper incidentally. Relevant clue?
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Post by GetSmart on Oct 29, 2009 17:57:44 GMT -5
Hi Beatlies, I haven't analyzed that album cover but given this unsettling coincidence it might be worthwhile to examine more closely other "living" personalities who are represented there. Regarding Peter O'Toole, here is confirmation of his replacement prior to this film making his double's career rival in length that of Faul McCartney. It took some patience, but I was able to capture a second or two during Murphy's War where you could catch a brief glimple of Feter's ear. It matches that of Feter pictured again at an older age, and he is not the same as Peter shown at the far right. Beyond his different features, much like in the case of Paul and Faul McCartney, Feter doesn't have the charisma of Peter who is quite a handsome man. Furthermore, I wonder if there isn't a reason that Peter O'Toole was eliminated. Peter O'Toole may have been an early experimentation in Genetic resurruction of old DNA. Unexpectedly after 2 years in the Royal Navy he then went on to receive a scholarship which opened the gates to the greatest heights of theater at the Royal Dramatic Art Academy as classmate of Alan Bates and Richard Harris. We may ponder at the following resemblance which seems greater yet than that of his double Feter. Was the original Peter O'Toole a resurrection of Horus Djer? If this seems far fetched, I invite you to check out this thread showing another possible clone of a more recent Pharaoh only 45 centuries old... www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/viewthread.php?tid=513915&page=1
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Post by GetSmart on Dec 1, 2009 21:28:36 GMT -5
While not everyone will agree with the origin of Peter O'Toole being Djer, a Pharaoh of ancient Egypt, at least modern science has confirmed that it is possible to clone DNA from Egyptian Mummies dating back further than 2500 BC. Regardless of whose donor DNA was used, here is evidence that Peter O'Toole was a clone, or at least was one of two twins separated at birth. Peter O'Toole and Nazi SS Officer Joachim PeiperWe will note small cartilage differences in the nose, ears and chin which are quite common between clones with the same DNA. Something rather ironic is that Peter O'Toole went on to play the role of a Nazi Officer in The Night of the Generals. He can be seen here on a poster advertising that movie next to his "kin" which was the real thing. Peter O'Toole and Nazi Officer Joachim PeiperIt is interesting to note that his SS Officer "brother" was tried and condemned to death in Dachau for war crimes, but after McCarthy's intervention was released and hired by Ferdinand Porsche for his US export market before working for Volkswagen. Caught up in legal pursuits by former victims, he moved to France in1772 writing military history and using the name Rainer Buschmann as a pen name for German car magazines. After being recognized by locals he was publically denounced as a member of a Nazi SS continuity movement. At 1 AM on July 13, 1976 his house was burnt down and an unidentifiable body found, he was presumed dead without any verifiable evidence. This time period coincides with the replacement of Peter O'Toole by a doppelganger, and we can wonder if there might not be a relation between the two? He could have had plastic surgery done to his ears to attempt to disguise himself, making them big enough to change his appearance? Why else would a Peter O'Toole double avoid at all costs reducing his ears to fit the size of the actor he is replacing, if it weren't for a more important reason yet, to make sure he wouldn't be recognized as a Nazi War Criminal. Was it Peter O'Toole's body which was found carbonized in his house? And could this be one of the practical reasons for using clones in general? If one of the clones is caught in a pinch, the other be baited and eliminated to serve as a convenient, almost genuine. death certificate... finger prints and minor forensic details aside. Joachim Peiper worked with Himmler who was a proponent of Cloning and we can find his clones in the Soviet Politburo and until recently in the White House (see link below). We may find a lot of other interesting links in investigating other doppelgangers, and the rest of the story might be even more astonishing than the fact that we have been fooled with a double. www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/viewthread.php?tid=513915&page=9
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Post by beatlies on Dec 1, 2009 22:31:48 GMT -5
Thanks GetSmart. There appears to be a post-war Nazi intelligence network embedded in the Volkswagen corporation and its worldwide branches. Many VW clues in the media as to this, grandfatheraleister on youtube was making videos about this. The (Beetles) Beatles' album covers/inserts and Rosemary's Baby being examples of this. Also in The Shining, The Long Goodbye and other Hollywood films. Advanced Search WebHide optionsShow options... Results 1 - 10 of about 106,000 for joachim peiper VW. (0.50 seconds) Search ResultsJoachim Peiper: Facts, Discussion Forum, and Encyclopedia Article Joachim Peiper (30 January 1915 - 13 July 1976) more often known as Jochen ..... After his release Peiper worked first for Porsche and then for a VW dealer. ... www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Joachim_Peiper - Cached SS Kampfgruppe Peiper & LSSAH | EUCMHMar 5, 2009 ... After the end of World War II, Joachim Peiper and other members of the ... release Peiper worked first for Porsche and then for a VW dealer. ... www.eucmh.com/2009/03/05/ss-kampfgruppe-peiper-lssah/ - Cached Battle of the Bulge--Prescott, At left, LTC Joachim Peiper, with his VW Schwimwagen, in command of a SS Battle Group Peiper. A German war reporter stages the photo as Peiper ... www.eaglehorse.org/3_home_station/bulge/bulge.htm - Cached - Similar Jochen PEIPER - Thiazi Forum1 post - 1 author Jochen PEIPER Stahlhelm-Magazin. ... VW had heard of his plight and offered him a position in Stuttgart, .... SS-Standartenführer Joachim Peiper Spanish ... forum.thiazi.net/showthread.php?t=134575 - Cached German Rally // BlogCatalog Topic // BlogCatalogVolkswagen Race Touareg at Dakar Rally – VW will take five teams to South ... Joachim Peiper was a German Waffen-SS officer who fought in World War II. ... www.blogcatalog.com/topic/german+rally/ - Cached Joachim (Jochen) Peiper - Skadi ForumVW had heard of his plight and offered him a position in Stuttgart, thence he moved with his ..... Joachim Peiper's wartime feats are well documented. ...
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Post by artemis on Dec 19, 2009 16:45:24 GMT -5
Hmmm... Canadian actor PETER OUTERBRIDGE, star of REGENESIS series
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Post by fauxster on Dec 20, 2009 23:52:57 GMT -5
When the ears don't match, it's not the same guy. Is it even possible to have plastic surgery on the ears (other than pinning)? I know it's not possible to surgically alter the tragus. The whole ear on O'Foole is different. Shocking.
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Post by fauxster on Jan 19, 2010 15:38:49 GMT -5
It looks like PETER OUTERBRIDGE bears a closer resemblance to O'Foole than O'Toole...
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Post by artemis on Jan 19, 2010 17:02:16 GMT -5
It looks like PETER OUTERBRIDGE bears a closer resemblance to O'Foole than O'Toole... O'FOOLE indeed, he fooled us all... ;D
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Post by artemis on Jul 10, 2012 16:27:42 GMT -5
"Peter O'Toole retires with 'dry-eyed farewell'
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Peter O'Toole is retiring from show business, saying he no longer has the heart for it and that it's time to "chuck in the sponge."
O'Toole, who turns 80 on Aug. 2, said in a statement Tuesday that his career on stage and screen fulfilled him emotionally and financially, bringing "me together with fine people, good companions with whom I've shared the inevitable lot of all actors: flops and hits."
"However, it's my belief that one should decide for oneself when it is time to end one's stay," he said. "So I bid the profession a dry-eyed and profoundly grateful farewell."
In retirement, O'Toole said he will focus on the third volume of his memoirs.
An eight-time Academy Award nominee who never won Hollywood's top acting honor, O'Toole shot to screen stardom 50 years ago in the title role of "Lawrence of Arabia," which earned seven Oscars, including best picture and director for David Lean.
O'Toole's grand performance as British adventurer T.E. Lawrence brought him his first best-actor nomination but set him on an unenviable path of Oscar futility. His eight losses without a win is a record among actors.
The honors stacked up quickly as O'Toole received Oscar nominations for 1964's "Becket," 1968's "The Lion in Winter," 1969's "Goodbye, Mr. Chips," 1972's "The Ruling Class," 1980's "The Stunt Man" and 1982's "My Favorite Year."
In the latter film, O'Toole played a dissolute actor preoccupied with drink and debauchery, seemingly a tailor-made role for a star known in his early years for epic carousing with such fellow partiers as Richard Burton, Richard Harris and Peter Finch.
O'Toole went into acting after serving in the Royal Navy, studying at London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. His early stage successes included the lead in "Hamlet" and Shylock in "The Merchant of Venice."
He was among a wily new breed of young British stage actors who soon would rise to Hollywood stardom.
"There was a group of us working-class actors, Peter O'Toole, Albert Finney, everybody, and we changed the way things were," Michael Caine said last weekend in an interview for his latest film, "The Dark Knight Rises."
Caine recalled being O'Toole's understudy in playwright Willis Hall's "The Long and the Short and the Tall," which opened in London in 1959.
"He did an incredible performance and he got 'Lawrence of Arabia,' and then I took it on tour," said two-time Oscar winner Caine.
In 2003, at age 70, O'Toole received an honorary Oscar, often given as a consolation prize for acclaimed actors and filmmakers who never managed to win Hollywood's top award.
The honorary Oscar came 20 years after his seventh nomination, for "My Favorite Year." By then it seemed a safe bet that O'Toole's prospects for another nomination were slim. He was still working regularly, but in smaller roles unlikely to earn awards attention.
O'Toole graciously accepted the honorary award, quipping, "Always a bridesmaid, never a bride, my foot," as he clutched his Oscar statuette.
O'Toole nearly turned down the award, sending a letter asking that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences hold off on the honorary Oscar until he turned 80.
Hoping another Oscar-worthy role would come his way, O'Toole wrote: "I am still in the game and might win the bugger outright."
O'Toole was still in the game. He earned his eighth best-actor nomination for 2006's "Venus," in which he played a lecherous old actor consigned to roles as feeble-minded royals or aged men on their death beds.
"If you fail the first time, try, try, try, try, try, try, try again," O'Toole said in a statement on nominations day.
Unfortunately for O'Toole, he failed again. The best-actor prize went to Forest Whitaker for "The Last King of Scotland."
Still, O'Toole had the esteem of Hollywood from that honorary prize a few years earlier.
"I have my very own Oscar now to be with me until death us do part," O'Toole told the academy crowd that night."
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Post by artemis on Dec 15, 2013 15:24:16 GMT -5
"Peter O'Toole, star of Lawrence of Arabia, dies aged 81
Actor who shot to fame in David Lean's 1962 masterpiece and received eight Oscar nominations has died in hospital in London
The actor Peter O'Toole who found stardom in David Lean's masterpiece Lawrence of Arabia, has died aged 81, his family has annouced.
The acclaimed leading man who overcame stomach cancer in the 1970s passed away at the Wellington hospital in London following a long illness.
His daughter Kate O'Toole said: "His family are very appreciative and completely overwhelmed by the outpouring of real love and affection being expressed towards him, and to us, during this unhappy time. Thank you all, from the bottom of our hearts."
O'Toole announced last year he was stopping acting saying: "I bid the profession a dry-eyed and profoundly grateful farewell."
He said his career on stage and screen fulfilled him emotionally and financially, bringing him together "with fine people, good companions with whom I've shared the inevitable lot of all actors: flops and hits."
The president of Ireland, Michael Higgins, was among the first to pay tribute: "Ireland, and the world, has lost one of the giants of film and theatre."
"In a long list of leading roles on stage and in film, Peter brought an extraordinary standard to bear as an actor," Higgins said. "He had a deep interest in literature and a love of Shakespearean sonnets in particular. While he was nominated as best actor for an Oscar eight times, and received a special Oscar from his peers for his contribution to film, he was deeply committed to the stage. Those who saw him play leading roles on the screen from Lawrence in 1962, or through the role of Henry II in Becket, and The Lion in Winter, or through the dozens of films, will recognise a lifetime devoted to the artform of the camera.
Higgins, who knew O'Toole as a friend since 1969, said "all of us who knew him in the west will miss his warm humour and generous friendship.
"He was unsurpassed for the grace he brought to every performance on and off the stage," he said.
The British prime minister, David Cameron, paid tribute to the actor, saying that Lawrence of Arabia, his favourite film, was "stunning".
O'Toole's agent, Steve Kenis, said: "He was one of a kind in the very best sense and a giant in his field."
The O'Toole family announced there will be "a memorial filled with song and good cheer, as he would have wished", but until then they would like to be allowed to grieve privately.
Early in his career O'Toole became emblematic of a new breed of hard-drinking Hollywood hellraiser.
"We heralded the '60s," he once said. "Me, [Richard] Burton, Richard Harris; we did in public what everyone else did in private then, and does for show now. We drank in public, we knew about pot."
In the 1990s he found stage fame starring in Keith Waterhouse's play, Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell, about a hard-drinking journalist who propped up bars in Soho. O'Toole's version sold out the Old Vic theatre in 1999.
Last month it was reported he had been coaxed out of retirement to act in a film about ancient Rome called Katherine of Alexandria in which he would play Cornelius Gallus, a palace orator. It is believed he completed filming on the project alongside Joss Ackland, Steven Berkoff and Edward Fox and the movie is due to be released next year.
O'Toole is believed to have been born in Connemara in County Galway in Ireland, and lived in London. He shot to stardom in the 1962 film of TE Lawrence's life story and went on to take leading roles in Goodbye Mr Chips, The Ruling Class, The Stunt Man and My Favourite Year. He received an honorary Oscar in 2003 after receiving eight nominations and no wins – an unassailed record. He considered turning it down and asking the Academy to hold off until he was 80, on the basis that "I am still in the game and might win the bugger outright."
He finally accepted, saying: "Always a bridesmaid, never a bride, my foot".
He is survived by his two daughters, Pat and Kate O'Toole, from his marriage to actress Siân Phillips, and his son, Lorcan O'Toole, by Karen Brown."
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Post by emerald on Nov 3, 2016 15:50:55 GMT -5
Peter O'Toole's downward spiral from one of England's greatest actors to a raging alcoholic nursed by Katharine Hepburn and cut off from his friendship with Richard Burton by Liz Taylor when she found them in a drunken embrace Considered one of England's greatest stage and film actors, and a leading man for half a century, Peter O'Toole lived a debauched life of booze, cocaine and weed. No one expected him to live past 50 years old. He lived 31 years beyond 50. But by the time he was 48 in 1980, he had almost no stomach left - thanks to his massive consumption of alcohol. As a young acting student, he could sniff out the best parties like a veteran bloodhound and told a fellow student that he wanted to be dead from drink by 30. But drinking brought out the dark side of his psyche and he reveled in being a bad boy, reveals author Robert Sellers in his book published for the first time in the United States, Peter O'Toole: The Definitive Biography published Thomas Dunne Books. He was great friends and drinking buds with actors Richard Harris, his wife Elizabeth, and later Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton - all sharing a love of alcohol until Taylor pulled the plug on their friendship in 1972 when she found O'Toole and Burton drunk on the floor of a pub embracing each other and singing 'Happy Birthday'. They had been there for hours. www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3898126/Peter-O-Toole-s-downward-spiral-one-England-s-greatest-actors-raging-alcoholic-nursed-Katharine-Hepburn-cut-friendship-Richard-Burton-Liz-Taylor-drunken-embrace.html
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