Mon. Dec 23rd, 2024
alert-–-can-you-match-the-celebrity-to-their-withering-school-report?-answer-which-star-was-called-‘imbecilic,-lunatic,-impertinent-&-smug’,-who-was-accused-of-‘spending-too-much-time-giggling-over-silly-love-letters’,-and-who-was-labelled-‘on-the-road-to-failure’Alert – Can you match the celebrity to their withering school report? Answer which star was called ‘imbecilic, lunatic, impertinent & smug’, who was accused of ‘spending too much time giggling over silly love letters’, and who was labelled ‘on the road to failure’

He was the first actor to direct himself in an Oscar-winning performance and the first to be sent to the House of Lords.

But Laurence Olivier’s theatre debut, aged 16, as Puck in A Midsummer Night’s Dream didn’t attract a rave review. The budding thespian was a ‘little too robust and jovial’, according to Robert Mortimer, his teacher at St Edward’s School in Oxford.

Mortimer’s review, which recently emerged from the school’s archive after 100 years, was just one example of a teacher failing to spot a future great’s budding talent. Take Etan Smallman’s quiz and match the following withering verdicts to the correct celebrity…

Jilly Cooper on the Russell Harty Plus Show in 1973

Jilly Cooper on the Russell Harty Plus Show in 1973

English singer Cilla Black in a London dressing room in circa 1966

English singer Cilla Black in a London dressing room in circa 1966

JK Rowling at the Broadway opening night of Harry Potter and The Cursed Child in April 2022

JK Rowling at the Broadway opening night of Harry Potter and The Cursed Child in April 2022

1. ‘I have never met anybody who so persistently writes words meaning the exact opposite of what is intended.’

A. Roald Dahl

B. Spike Milligan

C. Donald Trump

D. Lord Lucan

2. ‘He must devote less of his time to sport if he wants to be a success.’

A. Andy Murray

B. David Beckham

C. Gary Lineker

D. Anthony Joshua

3. ‘Reads tolerably — writes indifferently. Knows nothing of grammar, geography, history or accomplishments.’

A. William Shakespeare

B. JK Rowling

C. Charles Dickens

D. Charlotte Bronte (below)

4. ‘He is certainly on the road to failure if this goes on.’

A. Simon Cowell

B. John Lennon

C. Alan Sugar

D. Tony Blair

5. ‘Not university material.’

A. Lord (David) Blunkett

B. Lord (David) Puttnam

C. Lord (Kenneth) Baker

D. Lord (Ian) Botham

6. ‘Some good work, but generally sets it down badly. He must remember that Cambridge will want sound knowledge rather than vague ideas.’

A. Isambard Kingdom Brunel

B. Stephen Hawking

C. Alan Turing

D. Brian Cox

7. ‘Rebellious, objectionable, idle, imbecilic, inefficient, antagonising, untidy, lunatic, albino, conceited, inflated, impertinent, underhand, lazy and smug.’

A. Sacha Baron Cohen

B. Michael Heseltine

C. Michael McIntyre

D. Nigel Farage

Michael Heseltine addressing a Conservative Party conference in Blackpool

Michael Heseltine addressing a Conservative Party conference in Blackpool

British engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1857

British engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel in 1857

A portrait of Beatles member John Lennon in 1966

A portrait of Beatles member John Lennon in 1966

8. ‘Possesses a bubbly disposition which is most disconcerting. She spends far too much time in corners, giggling over silly love letters with the other girls.’

A. Jilly Cooper

B. Stacey Solomon

C. Adele

D. Phoebe Waller-Bridge

9. ‘With so much in her favour, this student is hampered by the weakness of her voice. She seems to lack the confidence to project and make use of the amount of voice she does possess. If she will make up her mind to cast away all fear and self-consciousness and speak out she will find her confidence increasing, and the unsure element in her acting will disappear. Otherwise it is ‘the Films’ for her and that would be such a pity.’

A. Dame Judi Dench

B. Dame Maggie Smith

C. Dame Helen Mirren

D. Dame Joan Collins

10. ‘He is a constant trouble to everybody and is always in some scrape or other. He cannot be trusted to behave himself anywhere.’

A. Ronnie Biggs

B. Ronnie Wood

C. Winston Churchill

D. Jonathan Ross

11. ‘She must try to be less emotional in her dealings with others.’

A. Maria Callas

B. Meghan Markle

C. Princess Diana

D. Celine Dion

Diana Spencer leaving for Riddlesworth Hall, Norfolk after the holidays

Diana Spencer leaving for Riddlesworth Hall, Norfolk after the holidays

Laurence Olivier's debut as Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream didn't attract rave reviews (pictured here in Shakespeare's Henry V)

Laurence Olivier’s debut as Puck in A Midsummer Night’s Dream didn’t attract rave reviews (pictured here in Shakespeare’s Henry V)

12. ‘Determined but slow, with above-average intelligence.’

A. Harry Styles

B. Eric Morecambe

C. Ed Sheeran

D. The King

13. ‘Suitable for office work.’

A. Ricky Gervais

B. Margaret Thatcher

C. Cilla Black

D. Tracey Emin

14. ‘Must learn to speak politely when her requests are refused.’

A. Amy Winehouse

B. Sharon Osbourne

C. Olivia Colman

D. Joanna Lumley

15. ‘Sorely lacks the intellectual equipment to translate [his] feelings into sound buildings.’

A. Richard Rogers

B. Norman Foster

C. Charles Rennie Mackintosh

D. Christopher Wren

16. ‘He has the most distorted ideas about wit and humour.’

A. Sir Lenny Henry

B. Sir PG Wodehouse

C. Peter Kay

D. Ronnie Barker

17. ‘Bottom in Latin and maths, second bottom in geography and French, languished 13th out of his class of 13.’

A. Rishi Sunak

B. David Cameron

C. James Cleverly

D. Jeremy Hunt

A portrait of novelist Charlotte Bronte, best known for Jane Eyre

A portrait of novelist Charlotte Bronte, best known for Jane Eyre

18. ‘Lazy, but improves with the weather.’

A. Sir Keir Starmer

B. Rachel Reeves

C. Peter Mandelson

D. Ed Miliband

So, are YOU top of the class?

1. Roald Dahl: The view of one of the author’s English teachers at Repton School in Derbyshire was perhaps prophetic. For his book The BFG, Dahl went on to create 238 new nonsensical words (including crumpscoddle, swallomp and snozzcumber), forming his own language, which he called Gobblefunk.

2. Gary Lineker: An earlier review had noted that his academic work was ‘handicapped by excessive juvenility’. He is now the BBC’s highest paid star (on up to £1,354,999), having retired as England’s second-highest goalscorer.

3. Charlotte Bronte: This tepid assessment of the Jane Eyre author was recorded in the Register at the Clergy Daughters’ School in Cowan Bridge, Lancs, in 1824, and concluded: ‘Altogether clever for her age but knows nothing systematically.’

4. John Lennon: The Beatle was 15 and a pupil at Quarry Bank High in Liverpool when he received this criticism from his maths teacher, who added: ‘His term marks amounted to 17 per cent of the maximum and he missed the final exams.’ On religious instruction: ‘Work fair — and his attitude in class most unsatisfactory.’

5. Lord (David) Puttnam: The producer behind Oscar-winning Chariots Of Fire said: ‘At age 11, I was awarded a scholarship to my local grammar school. I turned up on my first day eager to impress. However, my teachers failed to respond to this enthusiasm and quickly dismissed my capabilities.’ He would become Chancellor of the Open University and receive more than 50 honorary degrees.

6. Alan Turing: The World War II hero who helped crack the Nazis’ Enigma Code failed to wow his physics teacher at Sherborne School in Dorset. However, aged nine he had impressed his headmistress at St Michael’s Primary School in Hastings who wrote to his parents: ‘I have had clever boys and hard-working boys. But Alan is a genius.’

7. LORD (Michael) Heseltine: He would go on to be Margaret Thatcher’s deputy, but BLH Wilson at Shrewsbury School did not pull his punches (although he sugared the pill by adding: ‘But cheerful and probably rudimentarily good-natured’).

8. Jilly Cooper: In a report on the future ‘queen of the bonkbuster’ from Moorfields Primary School in Ilkley, Yorks, her teacher also wrote: ‘Jilly has set herself extremely low standards, which she has failed to maintain.’ And: ‘Please remind your daughter that boys can be very distracting for young ladies and romance is most certainly not a suitable subject for polite conversation in this school.’ Her interest in sex would help her sell 11 million books in the UK.

9. Dame Joan Collins: ‘What irony!’ the actress wrote in her autobiography, of her report from Rada. She would go on to find fame and fortune in ‘the films’ and on TV’s Dynasty. Of her alma mater’s attitude towards movies, she said: ‘Frankly they disapproved. Art was only possible in the theatre.’

10. Winston Churchill: That was the report from his headmaster in 1884, when he was nine and, according to the International Churchill Society, ‘was showing improvement in his academic subjects but his conduct was deteriorating’. Another report on the man who galvanised the nation against the Nazis bemoaned: ‘He has no ambition.’

11. Princess Diana: Her report came from West Heath Girls’ School in Kent. Another read: ‘Unfortunately, Diana has a defeatist attitude where her weaknesses are concerned, which must change if she is to achieve an overall improvement.’ She would later be immortalised as the ‘People’s Princess’ by PM Tony Blair.

12. The King: This early report was from Hill House prep in London. The headmaster also said Charles was ‘full of go, full of physical courage — a damned good lad’. He was the first British monarch to receive a university degree.

13. Cilla Black: The singer and TV star left school with this report in 1958, when she was still Priscilla White. She took her teacher’s advice, doing a secretarial and shorthand course at Anfield Commercial College. After being signed by Beatles’ manager Brian Epstein, she would become the top-selling British female singer of the 1960s.

14. Joanna Lumley: Her teachers at St Mary’s Convent School near Hastings were not convinced Lumley was Absolutely Fabulous. They also wrote ‘her manner of speech needs care’, she was ‘still rather aggressive’, ‘still rather noisy’ and ‘she should try to be more unobtrusive’. What the nuns would have made of her chain-smoking, alcoholic character Patsy Stone in sitcom AbFab is anyone’s guess.

15. Richard Rogers: His 1958 report from the Architectural Association School of Architecture said he would never amount to much ‘while his drawing is so bad, his method of works so chaotic and his critical judgment so inarticulate’. Lord Rogers answered his teachers with the Millennium Dome, the Pompidou Centre and the Lloyd’s of London building.

16. Sir PG Wodehouse: In 1899, AH Gilkes, head at Dulwich College, wrote that Pelham Grenville Wodehouse — who found fame with his Jeeves stories — ‘draws over his books in a most distressing way and writes foolish rhymes in other people’s books. One is obliged to like him in spite of his vagaries’.

17. Lord (david) Cameron: His grades at Heatherdown School in Berkshire in 1978, published in 2010, revealed Cameron to be bottom of the class. None of this would stop the current Foreign Secretary going on to gain a first class degree… and become PM.

18. Peter Mandelson: This was from the Labour spin doctor’s fourth-form report at Hendon County grammar school, North London. Headmaster Maynard Potts later said: ‘Eventually he will wish to undertake some great task on behalf of humanity.’ Weeks later, Mandelson joined the Young Communist League.

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