LOS ANGELES: Australian actor Rod Taylor, famous for his role in Alfred Hitchcock’s iconic 1963 thriller “The Birds,” has died in Los Angeles aged 84, industry media said on Thursday.

Taylor, who died of a heart attack on Wednesday, according to Variety, was also known for performances in “The Time Machine” and “The Train Robbers. “More recently, Taylor played Britain’s wartime prime minister Winston Churchill in Quentin Tarantino’s “Inglourious Basterds”.

“The Birds” co-star Tippi Hedren told People magazine: “Rod was a great pal to me and a real strength. We were very, very good friends.

“He was one of the most fun people I have ever met, thoughtful and classy, there was everything good in that man,” the 84-year-old added in a statement cited by the weekly.

He died at home surrounded by his family, People said.

Taylor won a Screen Actors Guild (SAG) award in 2010 for “Inglourious Basterds,” which won the prize for outstanding performance by a cast in a motion picture.

Born in Sydney, Taylor made a variety of film and television appearances in the 1950s. But his big break in Hollywood came with his starring role in director George Pal’s “The Time Machine” in 1960.

He went on to make dozens of films, including lending his voice to Disney’s animated “101 Dalmatians. “He appeared with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton in “The V.I.P.s”, which was released the same year as “The Birds,” in which he portrayed Hedren’s love interest Mitch Brenner.

Published in Dawn, January 10th, 2015

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