Robin FoxMC (15 July 1913 – 20 January 1971) was an English actor, theatrical agent, and chairman of the English Stage Company, best remembered as the founder of a family of actors. His sons are Edward, James, and Robert Fox. His grandchildren include Emilia, Laurence, Jack and Freddie Fox.
Fox married Angela Worthington, an actress and the illegitimate daughter of the English playwright Frederick Lonsdale. She had been the subject of Noël Coward's song "Don't Put Your Daughter on the Stage, Mrs Worthington!" She wrote two books about her life and marriage, Slightly Foxed (1986) and Completely Foxed, and revealed that when she was newly married and first pregnant Fox told her "You do know that I have no intention of being faithful to you. I shall sleep with whoever I like".[12][13] They had three sons, Edward, James, and Robert Fox.[13]
Fox has been called "a notorious philanderer", and his conquests are reported to have included Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark, the widow of Prince George, Duke of Kent. He had a long affair with Rosalind Chatto, wife of the actor Tom Chatto, who was his secretary before she became an agent on her own account, and is claimed to be the father of her son, Daniel Chatto.[13]
At the time of his death Fox was living at Ockenden Cottage, Cuckfield, Sussex. He left an estate valued at £102,625.[14]
^Robert Morley, Robert Morley: a reluctant autobiography (1967), p. 214
^Paul Buck, Performance: the Biography of a 60s Masterpiece (2013), pp. 129, 130
^James Palmer, Michael Riley, The Films of Joseph Losey (1993), p. 42
^James M. Welsh, John C. Tibbetts, The Cinema of Tony Richardson: Essays and Interviews (1999), p. 119: "It was Richardson who gave James Fox his first part as the public school runner who wins the race, despite the fact that his friend, agent Robin Fox, was bitterly against it: "We only had one quarrel, when he forbade me to offer his son 'Willie' James Fox a small role in The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner, saying that his son had no talent and that for him to quit his job in a bank would be to disrupt his life."
^James Robert Parish, Michael R. Pitts, The Great Spy Pictures (1974), p. 308