1996 Atlantic hurricane season and Earl Cameron: Difference between pages

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{{Infobox actor
{{Infobox hurricane season | name=1996 Atlantic hurricane season
| name = Earl Cameron
| first storm formed=June 17, 1996
| image =
| last storm dissipated=November 24, 1996
| caption =
| strongest storm=[[Hurricane Edouard (1996)|Edouard]] - 933 [[Bar (unit)|mbar]] (27.33 [[Inch of mercury|inHg]]), 125 knots (145 mph)
| birthname =
| total storms=13
| birthdate = {{bda|1917|08|08|df=y}}
| Total hurricanes=9
| birthplace = Pembroke, [[Bermuda]]
| major storms=6
| deathdate =
| total damages=$3.8+&nbsp;billion&nbsp;(1996&nbsp;[[United States dollar|USD]])<br>$4.6&nbsp;billion&nbsp;(2005&nbsp;USD)
| deathplace =
| total fatalities=179
| occupation = [[actor]]
| basin=Atlantic hurricane
| website =
| five seasons=[[1994 Atlantic hurricane season|1994]], [[1995 Atlantic hurricane season|1995]], '''1996''', [[1997 Atlantic hurricane season|1997]], [[1998 Atlantic hurricane season|1998]]
| spouse =
}}
}}
<!-- Created with subst: of [[Template:Hurricane season single]]. -->The '''1996 Atlantic hurricane season''' officially began on June 1, 1996, and lasted until November 30, 1996. These dates conventionally delimit the period of each year when most [[tropical cyclone]]s form in the [[Atlantic basin]].


'''Earl Cameron''' (born [[8 August]] [[1917]]) is a [[United Kingdom|British]] [[actor]]. He is known as one of the first [[Black people|black]] actors to break the "colour bar" in the [[United Kingdom]]. He also had repeated appearances on many British [[science fiction]] programmes of the 1960s, including ''[[Doctor Who]]'', ''[[The Prisoner]]'' and ''[[The Andromeda Breakthrough]]''.
This season was very active. A total of 13 storms formed; nine storms attained hurricane status, of which six became major hurricanes. Notable storms of the season include Hurricanes Bertha, Cesar, Fran, and Hortense. [[Hurricane Bertha (1996)|Hurricane Bertha]] caused moderate to heavy damage in North Carolina, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico in early to mid July. [[Hurricane Cesar]] killed at least 51&nbsp;people in northern [[South America]] and [[Central America]]. [[Hurricane Fran]] caused an estimated $3.2&nbsp;billion in damage, primarily in [[North Carolina]]. [[Hurricane Hortense]] caused large amounts of flood damage to [[Puerto Rico]] and the [[Dominican Republic]] before heading north and grazing [[Nova Scotia]].


==Early career==
== Seasonal activity ==
Cameron was born in Pembroke, [[Bermuda]]. As a young man, he joined the British Merchant Navy, and sailed mostly between New York and South America. When war broke out he found himself stranded in London, arriving on 29th October 1939. As he himself put it in an interview for The Royal Gazette Newspaper “I arrived in London on 29 October, 1939. I got involved with a young lady and you know the rest. The ship left without me, and the girl walked out too.”
[[Image:TSArthur96NCRadar.png|200px|thumb|right|120px|Image of Arthur impacting North Carolina.]]
His first acting role came in 1942 when he talked his way into a part in a West End production of Chu Chin Chow. He went on to act in a number of plays in London, including ''The Petrified Forest''.
{{Cleanup|date=October 2006}}
In 1946 Cameron returned to Bermuda for five months but decided to return to work as an actor in the UK. He then took a job on the London stage as an understudy in the play ''Deep are the Roots''. This play was staged in London for some months and then went on tour. It was during this tour that Earl first met, and worked alongside, [[Patrick McGoohan]] during a production of that play in [[Coventry]].
The above-average 1996 season produced thirteen storms. The season started with [[Tropical Storm Arthur (1996)|Tropical Storm Arthur]] forming on June 19 and striking the [[North Carolina]] coast. The month of July brought along [[Hurricane Bertha (1996)|Hurricane Bertha]] and [[Hurricane Cesar-Douglas|Hurricane Cesar]], Bertha hitting the same place as Arthur and Cesar, killing 51. August was a high month for activity as [[Hurricane Dolly (1996)|Dolly]], [[Hurricane Edouard (1996)|Edouard]], [[Hurricane Fran|Fran]], and [[1996 Atlantic hurricane season#Tropical Storm Gustav|Gustav]] all formed during this month. Edouard, Fran, and Gustav all lasted into the month of September.


He understudied with Amanda Ira Aldridge, an opera singer, singer, teacher and composer. She was also the daughter of the famed [[Ira Aldridge]], the legendary black American actor. His breakthrough acting role was in ''The Pool of London'', a 1951 film set in postwar London involving racial prejudice, romance, and a diamond robbery. He won much critical acclaim for his role in the film.
Activity was high in September where five of the thirteen storms were active in the month, Edouard, Fran, Gustav, [[Hurricane Hortense|Hortense]], and [[1996 Atlantic hurricane season#Hurricane Isidore|Isidore]]. Hortense battered the [[Dominican Republic]] causing $127&nbsp;million in damage. October brought along a moderate amount of activity as Isidore, [[Tropical Storm Josephine (1996)|Josephine]], [[1996 Atlantic hurricane season#Tropical Storm Kyle|Kyle]], and [[Hurricane Lili (1996)|Lili]] were all active. Kyle was a weak storm which made landfall near [[Nicaragua]]. Lili lasted 15&nbsp;days (13 tropical), reached Category&nbsp;3 status, and made landfall in [[Cuba]]. November was a quiet month with only [[Hurricane Marco (1996)|Hurricane Marco]] forming. Marco never made landfall but killed eight people.


== Film career ==
The names Cesar, Fran, and Hortense were retired after this year.
His next major film role following his work in ''The Pool of London'' was in the 1955 film ''Simba''. This was a drama about the [[Mau Mau]] uprising in [[Kenya]] in which Earl Cameron played the role of Peter Karanja, a doctor trying to reconcile his admiration for Western civilisation with his Kikuyu heritage.


From the 1950s to the present day he had major parts in many films including: ''The Heart Within'' (1957) in which he played a character Victor Conway in a crime movie yet again set in the London docklands; and ''Sapphire'' (1959) in which played Dr Robbins, the brother of a murdered girl; and ''The Message'' (1976) - the story of the Prophet Muhammad.
== Storms ==
=== Tropical Storm Arthur ===
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Tropical Storm Arthur (1996).gif
| Track=Arthur 1996 track.png
| Formed=June 17
| Dissipated=June 21
|1-min winds=45|Pressure=990
}}
{{hurricane main|Tropical Storm Arthur (1996)}}
Arthur formed as a tropical depression over [[Grand Bahama]] on June 19. The storm moved north and reached tropical storm strength, and made landfall near [[Cape Lookout, North Carolina]] on June 20. Arthur turned to the east and back out into the [[Atlantic Ocean]]. It weakened to a tropical depression, became extra tropical, and was absorbed by another system on June 23. Arthur was a minimal tropical storm, and no significant damage was reported. <div style="clear: both"></div>


His other film appearances have included: ''Tarzan the Magnificent'' (1960) in which he played Tate; ''Flame in the Streets'' (1961) in which he played Gabriel Gomez; ''Tarzan's Three Challenges'' (1963) in which he played Mang; ''Guns at Batasi'' (1964) in which he played Captain Abraham; ''Battle Beneath the Earth'' (1967) in which he played Sargeant Seth Hawkins; ''Sandwich Man'' (1966) in which he played a bus conductor; and the [[James Bond]] movie ''[[Thunderball (film)|Thunderball]]'' (1965) in which he played Bond's Caribbean assistant Pinder Romania.
=== Hurricane Bertha ===
{{hurricane main|Hurricane Bertha (1996)}}
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Hurricane Bertha 1996.gif
| Track=Bertha 1996 track.png
| Formed=July 5
| Dissipated=July 14
|1-min winds=100
|Pressure=960
}}
A very early season [[Cape Verde-type hurricane]], the tropical depression that became Bertha formed in the central Atlantic on July 5. Bertha traveled westward, and reached hurricane strength on July 8 as it approached the [[Leeward Islands]]. Hurricane Bertha passed [[Antigua and Barbuda]] later in the day as a Category&nbsp;1 storm, then passed across many of the other Leeward Islands. Its track shifted more to the north, and Bertha passed far enough from [[Puerto Rico]] that only tropical storm force winds were recorded there.


His most recent film appearances include a major role in ''[[The Interpreter]]'' (2005) in which he played the fictitious [[dictator]] Edmond Zuwanie. His performance was universally praised. ''The Baltimore Sun'' wrote: "Earl Cameron is magnificent as the slimy old fraud of a dictator..." ''The Rolling Stone'' described Mr. Cameron's appearance as "subtle and menacing." Philip French in ''The Observer'' referred to "that fine Caribbean actor Earl Cameron." In 2006 he appeared in the film ''The Queen'', alongside [[Helen Mirren]].
As Bertha moved on, it passed just east of the [[Bahamas]], and continued its slow turn, reaching Category&nbsp;3 north of Hispaniola, but weakened into a Category&nbsp;1 later. It's movement then slowed before it recurved northeast, making landfall near [[Wrightsville Beach, North Carolina]] on July 12 as a cat. 2 with 105&nbsp;mph winds and a pressure of 975&nbsp;milibars. Bertha weakened to a tropical storm, and traveled up the east coast of the [[United States]]. Bertha finally moved into [[New Brunswick]] on July 14, and was declared extratropical. It was tracked to near [[Greenland]].


== TV career ==
There were many indirect deaths associated with Bertha, but few were caused directly by the storm. Damage to the United States and its possessions is estimated at $270&nbsp;million. Estimates of damage in other affected areas are not available.
He has had roles in a wide range of TV shows but one of his earliest major roles was a starring part in the BBC 1960 TV drama ''The Dark Man'', in which he played a West Indian cab driver in the UK. The show examined the reactions and prejudices he faced in his work. In 1956 he had a smaller part in another BBC drama exploring racism in the workplace, ''Man From The Sun'', in which he appeared as community leader Joseph Brent.


He appeared in a range of popular TV shows including five episodes of the TV series ''[[Dangerman]]'' (''Secret Agent'' in the US) alongside series star [[Patrick McGoohan]]. He worked with McGoohan again in 1967 when he appeared in the TV series ''[[The Prisoner]]'' as the Haitian supervisor in the episode "''The Schizoid Man''".
=== Hurricane Cesar ===
{{hurricane main|Hurricane Cesar-Douglas}}
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Hurricane Cesar 28 july 1996 1217Z.jpg
| Track=Cesar 1996 track.png
| Formed=July 24
| Dissipated=July 29
|1-min winds=75
|Pressure=985
}}
Hurricane Cesar formed off the coast of [[Venezuela]], near [[Curaçao]], on July 25. It traveled west, and landfall occurred near [[Bluefields]], [[Nicaragua]] on July 28, with Cesar at Category&nbsp;1 strength. A weakened Cesar moved into the [[Pacific Ocean]] where it was renamed Hurricane Douglas. The previous hurricane to strike Nicaragua, 1988's [[Hurricane Joan]], also made the transition to a Pacific hurricane.


His other television work includes ''[[Emergency Ward 10]]'', ''[[The Zoo Gang]]'', ''Crown Court'' (two different stories , each 3 episodes long in 1973), ''[[Jackanory]]'' (a BBC children's series in which he read five of the [[Brer Rabbit]] stories in 1971), ''[[Dixon of Dock Green]]'', ''[[Doctor Who]]'', ''[[Neverwhere]]'', ''[[Waking the Dead (TV series)]]'', ''Kavanagh QC'', ''Babyfather'', ''[[EastEnders]]'' (a small role as a Mr Lambert), ''[[Dalziel and Pascoe]]'', and ''[[Lovejoy]]''.
There were 51&nbsp;deaths caused by Cesar, 26 of which were in [[Costa Rica]]. Most deaths were due to flooding and mud slides caused by Cesar's heavy rainfall.{{clear}}


He also appeared in a number of other one-off TV dramas including: ''Television Playhouse'' (1957); ''A World Inside'' BBC (1962); ITV ''Play of the Week'' (two stories - ''The Gentle Assassin'' (1962) and ''I Can Walk Where I Like Can't I?'' (1964); the BBC's ''Wind Versus Polygamy'' (1968); ITV's ''A Fear of Strangers'' (1964) in which he played Ramsay, a black saxophonist and small-time criminal who is detained by the police on suspicion of murder and who is also racially abused by a Chief Inspector Dyke played by [[Stanley Baker]]; ''Festival: the Respectful Prostitute'' (1964); ITV ''Play of the Week - The Death of Bessie Smith'' (1965); ''Theatre 625: The Minister'' (1965); ''The Great Kandinsky'' (1994); and two episodes of ''Thirty-Minute Theatre'' (''Anything You Say'' 1969 and another in 1971).
=== Hurricane Dolly ===
{{hurricane main|Hurricane Dolly (1996)}}
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Hurricane Dolly (1996).gif
| Track=Dolly 1996 track.png
| Formed=July 15
| Dissipated=July 14
|1-min winds=70
|Pressure=989
}}
Dolly was named on August 19 in the western Caribbean Sea between [[Jamaica]] and [[Honduras]]. Dolly strengthened and was a minimal hurricane at landfall near [[Chetumal]], [[Quintana Roo]] on August 20. Weakened to a tropical storm, Dolly continued out into the [[Bay of Campeche]], and it regained hurricane strength before a second landfall near [[Tampico]], [[Tamaulipas]] on August 23. The storm's remnants continued across [[Mexico]] before dissipating over the Pacific on the 25th.


== Personal life ==
Fourteen people were reported dead in Mexico, six of them drowning victims in [[Veracruz]]. Hundreds of homes were destroyed, and large areas of crop land were flooded. A monetary estimate of the damage is not available.{{clear}}
Cameron is a practitioner of the [[Bahá'í Faith]],<ref>[http://www.onecountry.org/e171/e17104as_Earl_Cameron_story.htm Veteran actor Earl Cameron brings a sense of world citizenship to UN role] by Robert Weinberg, One Country, Volume 17, Issue 1 / April-June 2005</ref> and held a reception in London in 2007 to honour his 90th birthday.<ref>[http://www.theunmutual.co.uk/reviewsearl.htm Earl Cameron's 90th birthday]</ref>
He currently lives in Warwickshire in England. He is married to Barbara Cameron. His first wife, Audrey Cameron, died in 1994. He has five children.


==References==
=== Hurricane Edouard ===
{{reflist}}
{{hurricane main|Hurricane Edouard (1996)}}
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Hurricane Edouard 26 aug 1996 1744Z.jpg
| Track=Edouard 1996 track.png
| Formed=August 19
| Dissipated=September 3
|1-min winds=125
|Pressure=933
}}
A tropical wave that moved off the African coast formed into a tropical depression 300 n mi southeast of Cape Verde on August 19. This depression moved west, and on August 22 strengthened into a tropical storm. The next day it was at hurricane strength. As Hurricane Edouard continued across the Atlantic, its winds increased to 145&nbsp;mph, making it a Category&nbsp;4 storm and the strongest of the season. It remained an intense hurricane for nearly eight days, an unusual occurrence. Hurricane Edouard's track took it well north of the [[Antilles]], and on August 29, it began turning north. At this time, Edouard was observed to have three concentric [[eye (cyclone)|eye wall]]s, also an unusual occurrence. Now on a northward track, Edouard passed midway between [[Cape Hatteras]] and [[Bermuda]] on September 1. The storm approached [[Nantucket, Massachusetts]], but turned to the east before reaching land. Its closest approach was 75 n mi from the island. On September 3, the storm weakened and became extra tropical. It was absorbed by a larger system on the September 7. Edouard was the strongest storm of the season.

There are two deaths attributed to Edouard, both from high surf. Damage was largely limited to boats in southeastern [[Massachusetts]], and totaled to $4.25&nbsp;million (2005&nbsp;USD).

=== Hurricane Fran ===
{{hurricane main|Hurricane Fran}}
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Hurricane Fran sept 1996.jpg
| Track=Fran 1996 track.png
| Formed=August 23
| Dissipated=September 8
|1-min winds=105.5
|Pressure=946
}}
A Cape Verde-type hurricane, Fran formed as a tropical depression southeast of Cape Verde on August 23. The depression moved west for several days before reaching tropical storm strength on August 27 while 900 n mi east of the [[Lesser Antilles]]. Fran tracked north of the Antilles, and on September 4 was northeast of the Bahamas and moving north-northwest as a Category&nbsp;3 hurricane. Fran made landfall near [[Cape Fear]], [[North Carolina]] on September 6 as a 115&nbsp;mph storm.

Fran weakened and moved inland. Its remnants moved over the [[Great Lakes (North America)|Great Lakes]] and were absorbed by a front on September 10.

Hurricane Fran was responsible for 26&nbsp;deaths, most from inland flooding. Property damage was estimated at $3.2&nbsp;billion (1996&nbsp;dollars).
<div style="clear: both"></div>

=== Tropical Storm Gustav ===
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Gustav 1996 gibbsimage.JPG
| Track=Gustav 1996 track.png
| Formed=August 26
| Dissipated=September 2
|1-min winds=40
|Pressure=1005
}}
Gustav was a weak tropical storm that formed near Cape Verde on August 29. It moved northwest, and dissipated on September 2. Gustav caused no damage and did not affect land. Its strength was at first limited by the outflow of Hurricane Fran, then the shear from a cut-off low caused it to dissipate.<div style="clear: both"></div>

=== Hurricane Hortense ===
{{hurricane main|Hurricane Hortense}}
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Hurricane Hortense 12 sept 1996 1800Z.jpg
| Track=Hortense 1996 track.png
| Formed=September 3
| Dissipated=September 15
|1-min winds=120
|Pressure=935
}}
Hortense reached tropical storm status on September 7 while east of the Lesser Antilles. It moved west over [[Guadeloupe]], and once in the Caribbean Sea reached hurricane strength. Hortense turned northward, and crossed southwestern Puerto Rico near [[Guánica, Puerto Rico|Guánica]] on September 10. Hortense then grazed the eastern coast of the [[Dominican Republic]] and headed north.

Hortense then brought hurricane force winds to the [[Turks and Caicos Islands]]. The storm continued strengthening, and briefly peaked at Category&nbsp;4 strength. Its northward motion accelerated, and a weakened Hortense became extra tropical near [[Newfoundland (island)|Newfoundland]] on September 15.

There were 21&nbsp;people killed, and another 21 reported missing. Damage in Puerto Rico was estimated at $127&nbsp;million. Property damage in the Dominican Republic was severe but isolated, and no dollar figure is available.
<div style="clear: both"></div>

=== Hurricane Isidore ===
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Hurricane Isidore (1996).JPG
| Track=Isidore 1996 track.png
| Formed=September 24
| Dissipated=October 1
|1-min winds=100
|Pressure=960
}}
Isidore formed southwest of Cape Verde on September 25, and reached hurricane strength the next day. It continued strengthening, and became the 5th major hurricane of the season before turning northward on the 27th. By the 30th, Isidore was heading due north and had weakened to a tropical storm. It became extra tropical northwest of the Azores on October 2. No damages were reported. <div style="clear: both"></div>

=== Tropical Storm Josephine ===
{{hurricane main|Tropical Storm Josephine (1996)}}
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Tropical Storm Josephine (1996).gif
| Track=Josephine 1996 track.png
| Formed=October 4
| Dissipated=October 8
|1-min winds=60
|Pressure=981
}}
A broad area of low pressure caused by a stalled cold front organized into a tropical depression on October 4 in the western Gulf of Mexico. As it drifted to the northeast, upper level shear inhibited development, though a strong pressure gradient allowed it to strengthen to a tropical storm on the 6th. Josephine intensified greatly as it accelerated to the northeast, and struck the [[Florida Panhandle]] in [[Taylor County, Florida|Taylor County]] on the 8th as a 70&nbsp;mph tropical storm. Upper level shear weakened it, and caused the storm to become extra tropical over Georgia later that day. The extra tropical storm continued rapidly to the northeast over the East Coast of the United States and Canada before ultimately merging with another extra tropical low near [[Iceland]] on the 16th.

Tropical Storm Josephine brought heavy rainfall across the Florida Panhandle, amounting to a maximum of 8.5&nbsp;inches in [[Foley, Florida|Foley]]. The storm produced a storm surge of up to 9&nbsp;feet in [[Levy County, Florida|Levy County]], and spawned 16 tornadoes, most of which caused only minor damage. [http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/1996josephin.html] The storm also caused severe beach erosion in [[Texas]] [http://www-ocean.tamu.edu/Quarterdeck/QD5.1/allison-5.1.html], as well as severe flooding in the Carolinas. Some of those locations had already dealt with hurricanes [[Hurricane Bertha (1996)|Bertha]] and [[Hurricane Fran|Fran]]. [http://www.usatoday.com/weather/wjosdmg.htm] In all, Josephine caused an estimated $130&nbsp;million in damage, and caused no direct deaths in its path.
<div style="clear: both"></div>

=== Tropical Storm Kyle ===
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Trop Storm Kyle 1996.JPG
| Track=Kyle 1996 track.png
| Formed=October 11
| Dissipated=October 12
|1-min winds=45|Pressure=981
}}
Kyle was a minimal tropical storm that formed in the western [[Caribbean Sea]] on October 11. It moved onshore near the border between [[Guatemala]] and [[Honduras]] as a weakening tropical depression. Tropical Storm Kyle caused no reported damage. <!--Add more info to remove spacing--><div style="clear: both"></div>

=== Hurricane Lili ===
{{hurricane main|Hurricane Lili (1996)}}
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Hurricane Lili (1996).JPG
| Track=Lili 1996 track.png
| Formed=October 14
| Dissipated=October 27
|1-min winds=100
|Pressure=960
}}
Hurricane Lili was a strong storm that took a track to the northeast for most of its existence. The tropical depression that would become Lili formed off the east coast of Nicaragua on October 14, and moved slowly to the northwest. On October 16, as it was north of Honduras, it reached tropical storm strength and was named Lili. A well-organized storm, Lili reached hurricane strength the next day. Lili grazed the [[Isle of Youth]] on October 18, then hit [[Matanzas Province]], [[Cuba]] eight hours later at Category&nbsp;2 strength. The storm's path turned eastward, and Lili emerged over water twelve hours later on Cuba's northern coast. Lili maintained most of its strength during its trip over Cuba, and as the storm approached the [[Bahamas]], it strengthened further. The center passed over [[San Salvador Island]] and [[Great Exuma]] on October 19 before heading into the open ocean. Over open water, Lili reached Category&nbsp;3 strength, and continued its northeastward track. It continued across the Atlantic until it was finally declared extra tropical 300 n mi north of the Azores on October 27. The extra tropical storm retained tropical storm force winds and crossed [[Ireland]] and [[Great Britain]] on October 28.

The storm caused eight deaths in Central America from flooding during its formative stages. Two direct deaths were reported in the United Kingdom. No deaths were reported in Cuba. Damage in Cuba and the United Kingdom totaled to $804&nbsp;million (2005&nbsp;USD), and was reported as severe in the Bahamas and Central America.

=== Hurricane Marco ===
{{hurricane main|Hurricane Marco (1996)}}
{{Infobox Hurricane Small
|Basin=Atl
| Image=Hurricane Marco (1996).gif
| Track=Marco 1996 track.png
| Formed=November 16
| Dissipated=November 24
|1-min winds=65
|Pressure=983
}}
Marco formed in the southwestern Caribbean between Jamaica and Honduras on November 16. It achieved tropical storm status on November 19 while slowly moving south. It then turned to the east and strengthened into a minimal hurricane on November 20. It turned to the northeast, but on November 23 it weakened rapidly to a tropical depression while southeast of Jamaica. The depression moved west and restrengthened into a tropical storm, but a cold front caused it to dissipate on November 26 while south of western Cuba.

Although Hurricane Marco never made landfall, it was a large storm and caused heavy rainfall in Central America and Hispaniola. Flooding and mud slides caused by this rain were responsible for eight reported deaths. Property damage is unknown.
{{clear}}



== Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) Rating ==
{|class="wikitable" align=right style="margin:0 0 0.5em 1em;"
|-
!colspan=12|ACE (10<sup>4</sup>kt²) – Storm: [[Talk:Accumulated Cyclone Energy/Atlantic by year|Source]]
|-
! 1
| 49.31 || [[Hurricane Edouard (1996)|Edouard]]
! 5
| 17.38 || [[Hurricane Bertha (1996)|Bertha]]
! 9
| 3.90 || [[Hurricane Dolly (1996)|Dolly]]
! 13
| .052 || Kyle
|-
! 2
| 22.88 || [[Hurricane Fran|Fran]]
! 6
| 12.88 || Isidore
! 10
| 2.35 || Gustav
|-
! 3
| 22.63 || [[Hurricane Lili (1996)|Lili]]
! 7
| 6.08 || [[Hurricane Marco (1996)|Marco]]
! 11
| 1.61 || [[Tropical Storm Josephine (1996)|Josephine]]
|-
! 4
| 21.82 || [[Hurricane Hortense|Hortense]]
! 8
| 3.96 || [[Hurricane Cesar-Douglas|Cesar]]
! 12
| .081 || [[Tropical Storm Arthur (1996)|Arthur]]
|-
!colspan=12|Total=164.933 (165)
|}

The table on the right shows the [[Accumulated Cyclone Energy|ACE]] for each storm in the season. The ACE is, broadly speaking, a measure of the power of the hurricane multiplied by the length of time it existed for, so hurricanes that lasted a long time have higher ACEs (such as Edouard).

{{clear}}

== Storm names ==
The following names were used for named storms that formed in the north Atlantic in 1996. The names not retired from this list were used again in the [[2002 Atlantic hurricane season|2002 season]]. This is the same list used for the [[1990 Atlantic hurricane season|1990 season]] except for Dolly and Kyle, which replaced [[Hurricane Diana|Diana]] and [[Hurricane Klaus|Klaus]]. A storm was named Kyle for the first time in 1996 (the name Dolly had been previously used in the [[1953 Atlantic hurricane season|1953]], [[1954 Atlantic hurricane season|1954]], [[1968 Atlantic hurricane season|1968]], and [[1974 Atlantic hurricane season|1974]] seasons). Names that were not assigned are marked in {{tcname unused}}.

{| width="80%"
|
* [[Tropical Storm Arthur (1996)|Arthur]]
* [[Hurricane Bertha (1996)|Bertha]]
* [[Hurricane Cesar-Douglas|Cesar]]
* [[Hurricane Dolly (1996)|Dolly]]
* [[Hurricane Edouard (1996)|Edouard]]
* [[Hurricane Fran|Fran]]
* Gustav
|
* [[Hurricane Hortense|Hortense]]
* Isidore
* [[Tropical Storm Josephine (1996)|Josephine]]
* Kyle
* [[Hurricane Lili (1996)|Lili]]
* [[Hurricane Marco (1996)|Marco]]
* {{tcname unused|Nana}}
|
* {{tcname unused|Omar}}
* {{tcname unused|Paloma}}
* {{tcname unused|Rene}}
* {{tcname unused|Sally}}
* {{tcname unused|Teddy}}
* {{tcname unused|Vicky}}
* {{tcname unused|Wilfred}}
|}

=== Retirement ===
{{seealso|List of retired Atlantic hurricane names}}
The [[World Meteorological Organization]] retired three names in the spring of 1997: Cesar, Fran, and Hortense. They were replaced in the [[2002 Atlantic hurricane season|2002 season]] by Cristobal, Fay, and [[Tropical Storm Hanna (2002)|Hanna]].

==See also==
{{tcportal}}
*[[List of Atlantic hurricanes]]
*[[List of Atlantic hurricane seasons]]
*[[1996 Pacific hurricane season]]
*[[1996 Pacific typhoon season]]
*[[1996 North Indian Ocean cyclone season]]
*South-West Indian Ocean cyclone seasons: [[1995–96 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season|1995–96]], [[1996–97 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season|1996–97]]
*Australian region cyclone seasons: [[1995–96 Australian region cyclone season|1995–96]], [[1996–97 Australian region cyclone season|1996–97]]
*South Pacific cyclone seasons: [[1995–96 South Pacific cyclone season|1995–96]], [[1996–97 South Pacific cyclone season|1996–97]]

== References ==
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
<references /></div>


== External links ==
== External links ==
* [http://www.onecountry.org/e171/e17104as_Earl_Cameron_story.htm Feature on Earl Cameron at onecountry.org]
* [http://www.aoml.noaa.gov/general/lib/lib1/nhclib/mwreviews/1996.pdf Monthly Weather Review]
* {{imdb name|name=Earl Cameron|id=0131565}}
* [http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/1996.html National Hurricane Center 1996 Atlantic hurricane season summary]
* [http://www.theroyalgazette.com/siftology.royalgazette/Article/article.jsp?articleId=7d73a2f30030000&sectionId=80 Royal Gazette interview with Earl Cameron]

* [http://www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/475450/index.html Biography details on Screenonline]
{{1996 Atlantic hurricane season buttons}}
* [http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/individual/6092?view=credit Detailed filmography at the British Film Institute]
{{1990-1999 Atlantic hurricane seasons}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Cameron, Earl}}
[[Category:Atlantic hurricane seasons|1996]]
[[Category:1996 Atlantic hurricane season| ]]
[[Category:1917 births]]
[[Category:Bermudian actors]]
[[Category:British Bahá'ís]]
[[Category:British film actors]]
[[Category:British stage actors]]
[[Category:British television actors]]
[[Category:Living people]]


[[fi:Earl Cameron]]
[[fr:Saison cyclonique 1996 dans l'océan Atlantique Nord]]
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[[sv:Atlantiska orkansäsongen 1996]]

Revision as of 18:57, 10 October 2008

Earl Cameron
Occupationactor

Earl Cameron (born 8 August 1917) is a British actor. He is known as one of the first black actors to break the "colour bar" in the United Kingdom. He also had repeated appearances on many British science fiction programmes of the 1960s, including Doctor Who, The Prisoner and The Andromeda Breakthrough.

Early career

Cameron was born in Pembroke, Bermuda. As a young man, he joined the British Merchant Navy, and sailed mostly between New York and South America. When war broke out he found himself stranded in London, arriving on 29th October 1939. As he himself put it in an interview for The Royal Gazette Newspaper “I arrived in London on 29 October, 1939. I got involved with a young lady and you know the rest. The ship left without me, and the girl walked out too.” His first acting role came in 1942 when he talked his way into a part in a West End production of Chu Chin Chow. He went on to act in a number of plays in London, including The Petrified Forest. In 1946 Cameron returned to Bermuda for five months but decided to return to work as an actor in the UK. He then took a job on the London stage as an understudy in the play Deep are the Roots. This play was staged in London for some months and then went on tour. It was during this tour that Earl first met, and worked alongside, Patrick McGoohan during a production of that play in Coventry.

He understudied with Amanda Ira Aldridge, an opera singer, singer, teacher and composer. She was also the daughter of the famed Ira Aldridge, the legendary black American actor. His breakthrough acting role was in The Pool of London, a 1951 film set in postwar London involving racial prejudice, romance, and a diamond robbery. He won much critical acclaim for his role in the film.

Film career

His next major film role following his work in The Pool of London was in the 1955 film Simba. This was a drama about the Mau Mau uprising in Kenya in which Earl Cameron played the role of Peter Karanja, a doctor trying to reconcile his admiration for Western civilisation with his Kikuyu heritage.

From the 1950s to the present day he had major parts in many films including: The Heart Within (1957) in which he played a character Victor Conway in a crime movie yet again set in the London docklands; and Sapphire (1959) in which played Dr Robbins, the brother of a murdered girl; and The Message (1976) - the story of the Prophet Muhammad.

His other film appearances have included: Tarzan the Magnificent (1960) in which he played Tate; Flame in the Streets (1961) in which he played Gabriel Gomez; Tarzan's Three Challenges (1963) in which he played Mang; Guns at Batasi (1964) in which he played Captain Abraham; Battle Beneath the Earth (1967) in which he played Sargeant Seth Hawkins; Sandwich Man (1966) in which he played a bus conductor; and the James Bond movie Thunderball (1965) in which he played Bond's Caribbean assistant Pinder Romania.

His most recent film appearances include a major role in The Interpreter (2005) in which he played the fictitious dictator Edmond Zuwanie. His performance was universally praised. The Baltimore Sun wrote: "Earl Cameron is magnificent as the slimy old fraud of a dictator..." The Rolling Stone described Mr. Cameron's appearance as "subtle and menacing." Philip French in The Observer referred to "that fine Caribbean actor Earl Cameron." In 2006 he appeared in the film The Queen, alongside Helen Mirren.

TV career

He has had roles in a wide range of TV shows but one of his earliest major roles was a starring part in the BBC 1960 TV drama The Dark Man, in which he played a West Indian cab driver in the UK. The show examined the reactions and prejudices he faced in his work. In 1956 he had a smaller part in another BBC drama exploring racism in the workplace, Man From The Sun, in which he appeared as community leader Joseph Brent.

He appeared in a range of popular TV shows including five episodes of the TV series Dangerman (Secret Agent in the US) alongside series star Patrick McGoohan. He worked with McGoohan again in 1967 when he appeared in the TV series The Prisoner as the Haitian supervisor in the episode "The Schizoid Man".

His other television work includes Emergency Ward 10, The Zoo Gang, Crown Court (two different stories , each 3 episodes long in 1973), Jackanory (a BBC children's series in which he read five of the Brer Rabbit stories in 1971), Dixon of Dock Green, Doctor Who, Neverwhere, Waking the Dead (TV series), Kavanagh QC, Babyfather, EastEnders (a small role as a Mr Lambert), Dalziel and Pascoe, and Lovejoy.

He also appeared in a number of other one-off TV dramas including: Television Playhouse (1957); A World Inside BBC (1962); ITV Play of the Week (two stories - The Gentle Assassin (1962) and I Can Walk Where I Like Can't I? (1964); the BBC's Wind Versus Polygamy (1968); ITV's A Fear of Strangers (1964) in which he played Ramsay, a black saxophonist and small-time criminal who is detained by the police on suspicion of murder and who is also racially abused by a Chief Inspector Dyke played by Stanley Baker; Festival: the Respectful Prostitute (1964); ITV Play of the Week - The Death of Bessie Smith (1965); Theatre 625: The Minister (1965); The Great Kandinsky (1994); and two episodes of Thirty-Minute Theatre (Anything You Say 1969 and another in 1971).

Personal life

Cameron is a practitioner of the Bahá'í Faith,[1] and held a reception in London in 2007 to honour his 90th birthday.[2] He currently lives in Warwickshire in England. He is married to Barbara Cameron. His first wife, Audrey Cameron, died in 1994. He has five children.

References

  1. ^ Veteran actor Earl Cameron brings a sense of world citizenship to UN role by Robert Weinberg, One Country, Volume 17, Issue 1 / April-June 2005
  2. ^ Earl Cameron's 90th birthday

External links