
The late great Alan Rickman would have been 80 today had he not sadly died of cancer in 2016 around the same time as Prince and David Bowie. Born to a working-class family in Acton, West London, he trained at RADA and went on to become a member of the Royal Shakespeare Company before achieving Hollywood stardom. To celebrate his incredible career, we look back at Rickman’s greatest movie roles from Harry Potter to Die Hard.
Professor Severus Snape in the Harry Potter films

Rickman played strict Potions master Snape across all eight Harry Potter films from 2001 to 2011, who, despite his cold and dark appearance, turned out to be a double agent working against Lord Voldemort. Author JK Rowling once described Snape as “a gift of a character” and famously confided in Rickman the Slytherin housemaster’s secret backstory that was revealed in the final book. The reason being she was determined that he play the part and he wanted to know the character’s backstory years before it was revealed in the final book. Four days after his death, she tweeted: “I told Alan what lies behind the word ‘always’. Harry Potter fans will remember the scene Rowling is referencing – arguably Rickman’s best moment in the series – from the final film, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2. Following Snape’s death, Harry is given access to his memories and comes to see that his most hated teacher had actually always cared for him deeply.
(Image: GETTY)
Hans Gruber in Die Hard

At 42, this 1988 action classic was Rickman’s film debut, setting him up as one of the greatest Hollywood villain stars of all time. A cold criminal, Gruber and his team hold hostages ransom at the Nakatomi Plaza while Bruce Willis’ John McClane swoops in to save the day. As for Rickman’s best moment, it has to be the shot of him falling to his death – one that was more real than film fans might have first thought. The Die Hard baddie agreed to do the fall for real from 25 feet down to an airbag, so he had to prepare himself mentally for the stunt. However, on the first take, Rickman was released earlier in the countdown to capture his real shock reaction to the fall.
(Image: 20TH CENTURY STUDIOS)
Harry in Love Actually

In Christmas rom-com favourite Love Actually, Rickman played Harry the adulterous husband opposite Emma Thompson’s Karen. Perhaps his best-remembered scene is the one with Rowan Atkinson’s character, who takes forever to wrap up the necklace for Harry’s love interest while Karen is lurking nearby. Back in 2015, Love Actually director Richard Curtis’ partner, Emma Freud, responded on Twitter to a question about what happened after Karen found out about Harry’s affair. She replied: “They stay together but home isn’t as happy as it once was.”
Curtis toyed with the idea of a Love Actually sequel, but ended up making a 10-minute follow-up for the Red Nose Day charity instead, which didn’t feature Thompson’s Karen since it was made after Rickman’s death. Speaking with Empire magazine in 2017, the director said, “I did toy with the idea of doing a proper Love Actually sequel. But I wonder what I think now about love because I’ve experienced a lot of deaths and illnesses. I think, therefore, I would make a sadder film, and I’m not sure that would be great.”
(Image: UNIVERSAL)
