Sir Michael Caine regalled the press with some great stories -- he's one of the more reliable actors around today that can be tied back to the so-called 'Classic' era, ie pre-67...
He said that the greatest part he never did was one pitched to him by Orson Welles, a film adaptation of Ronald Harwood's play 'The Dresser' in the late 70s... He didn't elaborate on why he didn't jump at it, but it was eventually put to the screen by Oscar nominee Tom Courtney and Albert Finney (as 'Sir', the role OW would have taken on).
Caine, who is as big a fan of Hollywood as any actor around, also mentioned that his friendship with Alfred Hitchcock was one based on their similar roots. It was a short-lived one, however, as Hitchcock never talked to him after he turned down the role of 'The necktie Killer' in Frenzy.
