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Wikipedia

Richard Beckinsale

Richard Arthur Beckinsale (6 July 1947 – 19 March 1979) was an English actor. He played Lennie Godber in the BBC sitcom Porridge (along with its sequel series Going Straight) and Alan Moore in the ITV sitcom Rising Damp. He was the father of actresses Samantha and Kate Beckinsale.

Richard Beckinsale
Beckinsale as Lennie Godber in Porridge
Born
Richard Arthur Beckinsale

(1947-07-06)6 July 1947
Died19 March 1979(1979-03-19) (aged 31)
Resting placeMortlake Crematorium, Kew, London, England
OccupationActor
Years active1962–1979
Spouses
  • Margaret Bradley
    (m. 1965; div. 1971)
  • (m. 1977)
Children

Early life edit

Beckinsale was born in Carlton, Nottinghamshire, the youngest of three children, to an Anglo-Burmese father, Arthur John Beckinsale, and an English mother, Maggie Barlow.[1] Beckinsale stated in 1977 that he may have been a distant relative of the actor Charles Laughton.[2][3]

While attending College House Junior School in Chilwell, Beckinsale appeared in his first of many school plays, playing Dopey in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.[4]: 17  As a teenager at Alderman White Secondary Modern School, he played the lead in Tobias and the Angel and also appeared as Hsieh Ping-Kuei in Lady Precious Stream, which earned him a positive review in the Nottingham Evening Post.[4]: 23  Beckinsale left school at 15 with ambitions to become a professional actor but he was still too young to go to drama school. He spent a year working in numerous manual labour jobs, including spells as an upholsterer's apprentice, a pipe inspector, and an assistant in a grocery business.[5][4]: 26-29 

At 16, Beckinsale enrolled at Nottingham College, Clarendon, taking the drama teacher's training programme and spent the next two years there, until he was old enough to apply to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.[6] After failing his first audition for RADA, Beckinsale was accepted on his second attempt, becoming just one of 31 successful applicants from a total of more than 12,500.[4]: 38  While at RADA, Beckinsale won a prize for comedy.[7]

After graduating in 1968,[8] he moved to Crewe to begin in repertory theatre. He also appeared in various other repertory productions around the country, including Hull, Leeds, London and Colchester. While at Crewe, Beckinsale played such roles as the Scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz, Sir Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night, and the title role in Shakespeare's Hamlet.[9][10][4]: 55-63  Following his stint in 1969 playing Hamlet, Beckinsale took a brief hiatus from acting and worked at a bottle factory, before returning to acting soon after.[11][12]

Career edit

First television appearances edit

Beckinsale made his television debut in 1969 as a police officer in Coronation Street, in which he had to arrest veteran character Ena Sharples.[4]: 56-57  He later had a small role in a 1970 episode of A Family at War, playing a young soldier.[13]

The Lovers edit

After being recommended by several other actors for the part, Beckinsale landed his first starring role as Geoffrey in the sitcom The Lovers (1970–71), opposite fellow newcomer Paula Wilcox.[14] The show put both leading performers in the eye of the public and a film version was made in 1973 with both Beckinsale and Wilcox reprising their roles.[15]

Porridge edit

From 1974 to 1977, Beckinsale starred as prison inmate Lennie Godber alongside Ronnie Barker in the hit BBC sitcom Porridge. Beckinsale expressed relief at landing the role, owing to his concern about being typecast as Geoffrey from The Lovers.[16] Barker had suggested actor Paul Henry for the role of Godber, owing to Henry’s being from Birmingham (as Godber was meant to be), but director Sydney Lotterby chose Beckinsale instead. Beckinsale initially played Godber with a Birmingham accent, but this was eventually abandoned.[17] Actor Brian Glover, who played the character Cyril Heslop on Porridge, stated that Heslop's line "I read a book once; green it was" from the first episode, New Faces, Old Hands, was actually Beckinsale's idea.[18]

Rising Damp edit

While appearing in Porridge on the BBC, Beckinsale simultaneously starred as naive medical student Alan Moore in the ITV sitcom Rising Damp[19] also from 1974 to 1977. Beckinsale was the only member of the cast not to have appeared in The Banana Box, the play on which Rising Damp was based. Writer Eric Chappell stated: "Although not the oldest, he was the most experienced sitcom actor of the quartet, having already appeared in The Lovers and Porridge. This allowed him to be something of a calming influence on the show – a calming influence that was often needed."[20]: 9–10  Beckinsale had previously worked with Leonard Rossiter in the 1974 Johnny Speight drama If There Weren't Any Blacks You'd Have To Invent Them.[21] Because of a scheduling conflict with the musical I Love My Wife, in which he was starring, Beckinsale was unable to appear in the fourth series of Rising Damp.[22][20]: 419 

Going Straight edit

In 1977, Porridge was brought to an end with his character of Godber being released from his prison sentence in the final episode. He subsequently starred alongside Barker in Going Straight (1978), a spin-off of Porridge in which the two criminal characters are seen on the outside rebuilding their lives. Tentative plans for further episodes of the spin-off were shelved due to Beckinsale's death in 1979.

Bloomers edit

Beckinsale starred in his final television comedy, Bloomers, the five completed episodes of which eventually aired in September and October 1979 on BBC 2. He played Stan, an out-of-work actor who takes a job as a partner at a flower shop. This was the first sitcom of Beckinsale's in which he had the leading role.[23]

Other work edit

In between series one and two of The Lovers Beckinsale starred in an ITV children's show titled Elephant's Eggs in a Rhubarb Tree. The show featured jokes, poetry, and music.[24]

He had the lead role of a young detective in the 1971 Armchair Theatre episode Detective Waiting.[25]

Beckinsale appeared in the films Rentadick (1972)[26] and Three for All (1975) and made appearances in several other television series such as the Stephen Frears-directed ITV Playhouse episode "Last Summer" in 1977.

Throughout his TV series run, Beckinsale also did a 19-month run in the West End play Funny Peculiar, for which he was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for "Actor of the Year in a New Play" and "Comedy Performance of the Year."[27] He later did a six-month run in the London debut of the Cy Coleman and Michael Stewart musical I Love My Wife.

Shortly after his 30th birthday, Beckinsale was the subject of an episode of This Is Your Life. Ronnie Barker and Fulton MacKay of Porridge, Leonard Rossiter and Don Warrington of Rising Damp, and Paula Wilcox of The Lovers all gave tributes during the show.[28]

In 1977, he starred in a radio comedy series called Albert and Me with Pat Coombs and John Comer.[29] He also appeared in an advertisement for Asda which aired in 1978 and early 1979. Beckinsale appeared in the film version of Porridge released in 1979. It was to be his last and only completed work of the year.

In October 1980, Frederick Muller Ltd. posthumously published a volume of Beckinsale's poetry entitled "With Love" (ISBN 0-584-10387-5).[30][31][32]

Personal life edit

Beckinsale was married twice. In 1965, he married his pregnant girlfriend, a local Nottingham woman named Margaret Bradley, whom he had met in 1964 while singing at a folk club. Their daughter, actress Samantha Beckinsale, was born on 23 July 1966. When Beckinsale was accepted into RADA, they moved to London. Beckinsale became immersed in student life and he and his wife grew apart.[33] They separated in 1968 when Margaret took Samantha back to live in Nottingham and Beckinsale left London to work in repertory in Crewe.[4]: 38-42  They divorced in 1971 and Beckinsale did not see his daughter for years. Margaret later remarried and her new husband raised Samantha as his daughter. Samantha was unaware that her biological father was Richard Beckinsale until she was 11.[34] Beckinsale and Samantha reconnected soon after and spent time together, before his death in 1979.[4]: 146-147 

Beckinsale met actress Judy Loe in 1968 at Crewe repertory.[4]: 44-48  They soon began dating and lived together for years. Their daughter, actress Kate Beckinsale, was born on 26 July 1973.[4]: 81  They finally married in 1977, prior to Kate starting nursery school.[4]: 124-125 

Beckinsale enjoyed playing the guitar and singing, and he performed in folk clubs in Nottingham as a teenager.[35][4]: 31-33  He also enjoyed playing football and often played in charity matches with the Entertainers XI team.[4]: 114-118  He was a fan of Manchester United football team.[36]

Beckinsale stated that towards the end of his 19th-month run with the play Funny Peculiar, he took Valium and had several instances of having to start the play over again, due to overwork and mental strain.[37] Beckinsale's widow, Loe, stated that he suffered from occasional panic attacks.[38]

Because of his good looks and his being on television so often, he received a large amount of fan mail, particularly from women.[39] Although Beckinsale was pleased with the success of the sitcoms he starred in, he expressed a desire to play more serious roles as he got older.[40]

Death edit

Beckinsale worked on the BBC sitcom Bloomers, five episodes of which were filmed prior to Christmas 1978.[41] According to his Bloomers co-star Anna Calder-Marshall, during the recording of the first episode, he told her he had suffered some kind of black-out, and had some dizzy spells. This concerned him enough to make an appointment to see a doctor, but the doctor could not find anything wrong apart from an overactive stomach lining, and slightly high cholesterol. As filming on the series progressed, Beckinsale appeared increasingly tired, and "greyer and greyer", according to co-star David Swift.[4]: 155-156  Because of an industrial dispute at the BBC in late December 1978, the filming of the sixth episode of Bloomers had to be postponed until March.[42]

In January 1979, for an insurance policy for a film, Beckinsale passed a full medical examination in which his heart, lungs, breathing, and blood pressure were checked.[43][44] He spent January and February working on the Porridge film and then prepared to start work on the film Bloody Kids in March.

A week before he died, Beckinsale complained to his wife Judy Loe of feeling unwell and said he was unable to take her to hospital. At the time, they both put it down to nerves; she was due to have an operation to increase the couple's chances of having another child.[4]: 157  Loe underwent the operation on Wednesday 14 March and while she remained in the hospital recuperating, Beckinsale continued to work on Bloody Kids and resumed work on the sixth episode of Bloomers, commuting between London by day and Southend-on-Sea by night.[43]

On the evening of Saturday 17 March, he attended a farewell party for The Two Ronnies, who were about to leave for Australia.[45] According to David Jason, who was at the party, Beckinsale left the party at around 11:30, in order to attend another friend's party.[46] Jo Apted, wife of The Lovers director Michael Apted, stated that Beckinsale attended a party at her house on Saturday night and felt unwell the next day.[43] On Sunday 18 March, he worked on Bloomers and gave Anna Calder-Marshall a lift home afterwards.[47] To her surprise, he began to talk about his fear of dying, and of being alone in the house.[4]: 158  He then took his five-year-old daughter Kate to visit Loe in hospital. Upon leaving the hospital, Beckinsale dropped his daughter off with relatives to spend the night. Afterwards, he returned to his house in Sunningdale, Berkshire. At some point that day, he called his older daughter Samantha, and made plans to spend some time with her the following weekend. Before going to bed, he telephoned a couple of friends and during the conversation, he repeated that he had been feeling unwell, and also said that he had some pain in his chest and arms. He seemed in good humour though, and made a joke out of it.[4]: 159 

 
Beckinsale's memorial plaque in St Paul's in Covent Garden

When he did not arrive at the rehearsal for the sixth and final episode of Bloomers the next morning, a member of the production team rang his house, and the phone was answered by family friend Rosana Bradley, who had been staying at the house to help take care of Kate, but who had not been there the previous night. She said Beckinsale was still sleeping, and she left the phone to wake him up. When she returned, she said that she was unable to wake him, and was advised to call a doctor. Shortly after, it was confirmed that he had died during the night, of what appeared to be a massive heart attack.

The post-mortem examination revealed that he had coronary artery disease, which caused the heart attack.[48] Beckinsale had expressed worries about his cholesterol to friend Stephen Frears over dinner just days earlier, but he seemed healthy and fit and had no cardiac problems in his medical records. According to Frears, Beckinsale's high cholesterol may have been a factor in his early death.

Beckinsale's death was met with great shock. Rising Damp co-star Frances de la Tour stated: "It is such a shock that someone as young and obviously fit as him should die so suddenly. The last time I saw him he had given up smoking, not that he smoked very much, anyway. He was always concerned about keeping fit and we used to tease him about it. He used to play a lot of charity football, but the terrible thing is that he was a family man. I am most distressed for his family."[49] The Lovers creator Jack Rosenthal stated: "He must have had one of the biggest futures any actor could hope for. He was a very honest boy and he had that same quality in his acting."[50]

Beckinsale was cremated during a private service in Bracknell, Berkshire[51] and his remains were then taken to Mortlake Crematorium.[4]: 173  Although Beckinsale left more than £65,000 (equivalent to £350,000 in 2021) in his will, only approximately £18,000 was left after taxes and other costs.[52] On 19 April 1979, one month after his death, more than 300 people attended a memorial service at the actors' church St Paul's in Covent Garden.[4]: 175  Leonard Rossiter, Fulton MacKay, Richard Briers, and Porridge writers Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais gave tributes during the service. La Frenais stated: "I was always amazed by Richard's talent. I'm convinced he would have become an international actor." Briers said: "The character of Lennie Godber had a kind of innocence which was a danger but also a kind of protection against prison life. Richard had a similar innocence. It made him vulnerable but he was never one for upstaging, scene-stealing and the kind of action which substituted technique for truth. Richard made us laugh and also charmed us. He was an effortless charmer." Beckinsale's widow, Judy, stated: "It was a celebration, not a memorial service."[53] A memorial plaque was later placed in the church in Beckinsale's honour.

Unfinished work edit

At the time of his death, Beckinsale had almost completed the BBC sitcom Bloomers. Writer James Saunders's original script reveals that Beckinsale was due to attend the sixth and last rehearsal for the final episode of the series on the day he died, with the show to be recorded the following day. The five completed Bloomers episodes were aired later in the year.[54]

Plans had been drawn up to make a film version of Rising Damp and ultimately the film was made in 1980. Christopher Strauli was recruited to replace Beckinsale, playing a different character.

He was also in the middle of making a television film, Bloody Kids, which then had to be re-cast. This role marked a change in direction for Beckinsale, playing a hard-nosed detective character in contrast to the naive characters he had played before. Although Beckinsale does not noticeably appear in the film, director Stephen Frears stated that there are a small number of scenes in which Beckinsale is just off camera, as well as a scene in which he is in a car, although indistinguishable to the viewer.[38] Some of the footage of Beckinsale, which could not be included in the film, was shown during the 2000 ITV tribute, The Unforgettable Richard Beckinsale, as well as the 2016 ITV3 documentary, Rising Damp Forever. One scene showed Beckinsale questioning a character in the film with a tough stance, and looking quite different than his usual appearance with much shorter cropped hair.

Legacy and tributes edit

Three days after Beckinsale's death, Going Straight won a BAFTA award. A clearly shaken and upset Ronnie Barker delivered a brief acceptance speech in tribute to his co-star. Beckinsale holds the distinction of having starred in three different sitcoms, each of which won the BAFTA for Best Situation Comedy, in three successive years: Porridge in 1977, Rising Damp in 1978, and Going Straight in 1979.[55]

When Beckinsale's book of poetry, With Love was published in 1980, Judy Loe, Ronnie Barker, and Richard Briers appeared on The Russell Harty Show to talk about the book and recite some of the poetry.[56]

In 2000, 21 years after his death, a documentary was broadcast on ITV in tribute, called The Unforgettable Richard Beckinsale. It featured interviews with his widow, the actress Judy Loe, as well as his father, sister, closest school friend and two daughters. Also contributing were his co-stars, Ronnie Barker of Porridge and Don Warrington of Rising Damp. Barker, remembering Beckinsale's premature death, said: "He was so loved. He hadn't done much but he was so loved that there was a universal sort of grief that went on."

In the 2006 film Venus, during a scene inside the actors' church, St Paul's, Peter O'Toole's character, an aging actor, points out Beckinsale's plaque, as an example of an actor who died in his prime.[57]

In 2007, Alan Davies nominated Beckinsale as his chosen subject for the BBC Radio 4 series Great Lives. Judy Loe and Stephen Frears participated in the discussion of Beckinsale's life and career.[38]

A biography of Beckinsale, titled The Richard Beckinsale Story was published in 2008 by author David Clayton. It featured interviews with family, friends, and co-workers of Beckinsale's.[58]

In 2013, a blue plaque in Beckinsale's memory was unveiled at his former school, College House Junior School in Chilwell. Kate Beckinsale, Judy Loe, David Walliams, and Michael Sheen attended the ceremony.[59]

UK Gold aired a three-part documentary in 2014 called Porridge: Inside Out, in celebration of Porridge's 40th anniversary. During this series, there was a memorial segment dedicated to Beckinsale, in which Judy Loe and Kate Beckinsale took part.[60]

ITV3 aired a two-part documentary in 2016 called Rising Damp Forever which looked back at the making of Rising Damp. There was a memorial segment for Beckinsale during the series in which his daughters, Samantha and Kate took part.[61]

In 2018, as part of an art project in Beckinsale's former hometown of Beeston, a mural of him was commissioned by the town council and painted by the French street artist, Zabou.[62][63]

Rising Damp co-star Frances de la Tour said of Beckinsale's acting ability: "Richard was a brilliant young actor as so many have testified. His comedy was based on the truth. That is what people mean by 'timing.' So we believed him at all times. There is no greater testament. Ronnie Barker was similar, which is why they worked so well and movingly together."[4]: 126 

Filmography edit

Film edit

Year Title Role Notes
1972 Rentadick Hobbs
1973 The Lovers! Geoffrey Scrimshaw
1974 If There Weren't Any Blacks You'd Have to Invent Them The Young Man TV film
1975 Three for All Jet Bone
1979 Porridge Lennie Posthumous release

Television edit

Year Title Role Notes
1969 Coronation Street PC Wilcox 1 episode
1970 A Family at War Private Grey Episode: "The Breach in the Dyke"
1970–1971 The Lovers Geoffrey Scrimgeor Series regular
1971 Elephant's Eggs in a Rhubarb Tree Various roles Series regular
Armchair Theatre Lewis Episode: "Detective Waiting"
Justice Terry Watson Episode: "No Flowers, by Request"
ITV Sunday Night Theatre Pete Episode: "Tales of Piccadilly: A Room Full of Holes"
1972 Dermot Episode: "Consequences"
Angus MacFee Episode: "Madly in Love"
1973 The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes Richard Frobisher Episode: "The Mysterious Death on the Underground Railway"
The Donati Conspiracy Robert Sadler 3 episodes
1974–1977 Porridge Lennie Godber Series regular
Rising Damp Alan Moore Series regular
1975 Play for Today Michael Robson Episode: "The Floater"
1976 Couples Daniel Graham Recurring role
1977 ITV Playhouse Johnny Episode: "Last Summer"
1978 Going Straight Lennie Godber Series regular
1979 Bloomers Stan Aired posthumously

References edit

  1. ^ Barratt, Nick (4 November 2006). "Family Detective". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
  2. ^ "He's A Cell-Out!". Jackie. 20 August 1977. My family's related to that famous actor, Charles Laughton. He's probably best known in his role as the Hunchback of Notre Dame," Richard explained. "He's somewhere on my great-great-grandmother's side!
  3. ^ "My mad scene: An ex-Hamlet's strange journey into musicals". Evening Standard. 30 September 1977. It is said I might be a relation of Charles Laughton. Going back a few generations the family on my mother's side were in service at the Laughton house. There was a bit of a scandal and one of the girls had a baby. The only people who really know are two elderly aunts and they don't tell me. Strange thought though.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Clayton, David (2008). The Richard Beckinsale Story. Stroud: History Press. ISBN 978-0-7509-5061-9.
  5. ^ Caisley, Sarah (21 June 1975). "Richard Beckinsale: Stage Struck – And He Was Only Nine Years Old...". My Weekly. I was too young to go to drama school so I filled in time doing various things for a year. I worked in a grocer's shop and then I made a brief attempt at being an upholsterer's apprentice and after that I worked for a firm making sewer pipes. By the time I left school – at fifteen – I definitely knew I couldn't be anything but an actor.
  6. ^ Caisley, Sarah (21 June 1975). "Richard Beckinsale: Stage Struck – And He Was Only Nine Years Old...". My Weekly. I was able to live at home in Nottingham and for two and a half years I took what was mainly an 'O' level course for teachers of drama. The idea was to take a teacher's diploma and then go to Teachers' Training College. I was one of the first students to go there and it has turned out to be quite successful. Quite a few well-known names have made their start there. But...I never intended to teach. I was still filling in time till I could be accepted at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where I went when I was 18.
  7. ^ "Scene Scope". Petticoat. 10 April 1971. I won the prize for comedy at RADA, but it's not been one of my great loves.
  8. ^ "RADA: Student & Graduate Profiles". RADA. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
  9. ^ "Personal Column". The Stage and Television Today. 13 November 1969. Richard Beckinsale is playing Hamlet in Ted Craig's production of that play now at Crewe Theatre.
  10. ^ "Bard Tops B.O, Take". The Stage and Television Today. 27 November 1969. Ted Craig's Hamlet, with Richard Beckinsale as the Prince at Crewe Theatre broke all Rep records there with audiences totalling some four thousand for its ten performances.
  11. ^ Davis, Victor (20 April 1976). "Why Richard is revealing all...". Daily Express. He was a 21-year-old Hamlet with the Crewe Rep, a part, he says, that made him a bit looney for a while. "Afterwards I took a job in a bottle factory at Parsons Green – as a form of therapy.
  12. ^ Young, Sally (22 November 1975). "OK Let's Meet Richard Beckinsale!". OK. I think the only time I've ever been depressed about my work and thought seriously about giving it all up, was just after I played Hamlet. I didn't like it at all and when the play finished I just went off and got myself a job in a bottle factory. That was almost as bad as playing Hamlet and eventually I went back to acting!
  13. ^ "Beckinsale, Richard (1947–1979)". BFI Screen Online. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  14. ^ "Two Kinds of Loving". Daily Mirror. 27 October 1970. Jack Rosenthal: I interviewed scores of young actors. Three of them told me the boy I wanted was Richard Beckinsale.
  15. ^ McGarry, Peter (16 July 1973). "Hello Young Lovers – Nice To See You Again". Coventry Evening Telegraph.
  16. ^ "He's A Cell-Out!". Jackie. 20 August 1977. 'The Lovers' was the first TV I'd ever done," Richard explained, "and I was worried that from then on everyone would think of me as a bit of an idiot like Geoffrey – which was why I was so glad when 'Porridge' came up.
  17. ^ Barker, Ronnie (1988). It's Hello From Him!. Great Britain: Hodder & Stoughton. p. 158. ISBN 0-450-50813-7. I put Paul Henry's name forward but Sydney Lotterby, the director, explained that he was thinking of Richard Beckinsale. "A new lad, very funny, remember 'The Lovers'?" "Yes," I agreed, "but he's Nottingham and Lennie Godber is from Birmingham." "Doesn't matter," said Syd, and of course it didn't. In early Porridge's Richard tried to do a Birmingham accent but he gave up about three weeks in.
  18. ^ "Writer/actor whose work conveys a distinctive tone". The Stage and Television Today. 20 September 1984. I was in the initial series of Porridge, playing a very thick character called Heslop. People still come up to me in the street and say to me "I read a book once – green it was." It was a great line but Dick Clement or Ian La Frenais didn't write it, Richard Beckinsale did. The writers set up the situation to get the line out, but it actually came from Beckinsale.
  19. ^ Murray, James (7 November 1975). "Richard's straight double". Daily Express. It's a memorable Friday for young actor Richard Beckinsale who appears on rival channels as straight man to two of the funniest characters on television. On ITV he teams up with Leonard Rossiter as the mickey-taking student in the seedy "digs" of Rigsby in "Rising Damp." And on BBC1 later in the evening, he's locked up in Slade prison again for another stretch of "Porridge" with that imperishable convict clown Fletcher, in the person of Ronnie Barker. Mr. Beckinsale makes a very impressive foil to both. There are similarities in the two characters he plays – the young listener having his ear bent by two would-be veterans of life's ugly traps. But he manages to pinch some of the thunder from the stars with a clever sense of timing of the throwaway punchline. Can it be long before he earns a show of his own?
  20. ^ a b Chappell, Eric (2002). Rising Damp: The Complete Scripts. London: Granada Media Group. ISBN 0-233-99944-2.
  21. ^ "If There Weren't Any Blacks..." British Classic Comedy. 4 September 2019. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  22. ^ Tippett, Richard (11 February 1978). "For Richard Beckinsale...There's No Business Like Show Business". Look-in. Some lines Richard won't have to consider changing in the future are on a new series of Rising Damp that's in production - he's not in the show anymore." "It's because I'm doing this play in London. Yorkshire TV (who produce Rising Damp) work the show on Fridays, and I can't get the night off.
  23. ^ "TV star Richard's last role". Daily Mirror. 23 March 1979. Judy Loe: "It was the first series in which he was playing the main part. I know people will want to see it. I think it's a very good comedy.
  24. ^ "Around the studios – Thames". The Stage and Television Today. 11 February 1971.
  25. ^ "Detective Waiting (1971)". BFI Screen Online. Retrieved 7 October 2019.
  26. ^ Tarratt, Margaret (September 1972). "Rentadick Review". Films and Filming.
  27. ^ "Olivier Winners, 1976". Official London Theatre. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  28. ^ "This Is Your Life: Richard Beckinsale". imdb.com. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
  29. ^ Matthews, Peter (5–11 November 1977). "Radio 1, Radio 2". Radio Times.
  30. ^ Morley, Janice (24 October 1980). "Message to a Wife Left Behind". Daily Express.
  31. ^ ATV Today: Richard Beckinsale. Media Archive for Central England. 27 November 1980. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
  32. ^ McGowan, Frankie (27 October 1980). "To Judy with all my love". Liverpool Echo.
  33. ^ Woodward, Ian (March 1977). "Life and Richard Beckinsale". Woman & Home. We had a child and we were both happy, but I was trying to reconcile being a student with being a husband and a father, and it wasn't easy.
  34. ^ Brennan, Zoe (16 March 1995). "Samantha has a burning need to be secretive about her life". Daily Express.
  35. ^ Fallon, Gerry (8 January 1977). "Imagine Being Arrested By Richard!". OK. Back in my College days in Nottingham I used to run the local Folk Club. I'd compere and sing there.
  36. ^ Young, Sally (22 November 1975). "OK Let's Meet Richard Beckinsale!". OK. Richard admits that work takes up most of his time, but if he gets any spare days he enjoys playing football for the showbiz team and they have matches for charity. "And I also support Manchester United," he grins.
  37. ^ "My mad scene: An ex-Hamlet's strange journey into musicals". Evening Standard. 30 September 1977. I was going out of my mind at the end of Funny Peculiar. It had been 19 months. I had been taking Valium to get me through. I brought the curtain down on three nights. I just didn't know what the play was about anymore. I was onstage for two hours every night and after 19 months I was going through mental torture with it.
  38. ^ a b c "Great Lives". BBC Radio 4. 9 January 2007.
  39. ^ Irwin, Ken (26 March 1977). "The Reluctant Virgin". Daily Mirror. Tall and extremely good-looking, Beckinsale is now a TV pin-up – and has fan mail to prove it. Letters pour in from adoring fourteen and fifteen year-old schoolgirls who ask for his photograph. They come, too from young housewives who fancy him.
  40. ^ Irwin, Ken (26 March 1977). "The Reluctant Virgin". Daily Mirror. His comedy shows – 'The Lovers,' 'Porridge,' and 'Rising Damp' – have all been winners. "I like to think I've got the knack of picking only the good ones," he smiles. "But it's pure luck, really." – "I'd like to take more serious parts as I get older," he says. "There's a character actor in me trying to get out.
  41. ^ Andrews, John (20 March 1979). "Star of television comedy Porridge dies at 31". The Guardian. A decision on whether to show the first five episodes, filmed before Christmas, will now depend on the wishes of Mr. Beckinsale's family.
  42. ^ Andrews, John (20 March 1979). "Star of television comedy Porridge dies at 31". The Guardian. The cast of Bloomers were stunned by yesterday's news. A BBC spokesman said that Mr. Beckinsale was "lively and bright" at rehearsals over the weekend which brought the cast together after a three-month delay caused by an industrial dispute. He said: "Everybody was really happy and jolly, celebrating their return together. Even with hindsight no one is saying he looked bad or anything.
  43. ^ a b c Pratt, Colin (21 March 1979). "TV Star's Last Hours, By Wife". Daily Express.
  44. ^ Barker, Ronnie (1988). It's Hello From Him!. Great Britain: Hodder & Stoughton. p. 154. ISBN 0-450-50813-7. Answering himself, Richard said, "There's nothing, absolutely nothing, when you die. It all goes black...finish." I'll never be able to convey the poignancy of that conversation with Richard Beckinsale, Lennie Godber of 'Porridge.' It took place about six weeks before his totally unexpected death from a heart attack in 1979. Richard was only thirty, and had just been declared fully fit after an exhaustive check-up connected with insurance on a film.
  45. ^ Barker, Ronnie (1988). It's Hello From Him!. Great Britain: Hodder & Stoughton. pp. 162–163. ISBN 0-450-50813-7. His passing, so suddenly and so young, was a terrible jolt. We'd been with him only the night before. Ronnie C. and I, and our families, were off to Australia for a year. – There was a farewell party at Langan's Brasserie. All our friends came along, including Richard, but he left early because he had to attend another function. My last memory of him is sitting with Joy, teasing her, pretending to whisper sweet nothings. Then it was, "Cheerio, see you in a year's time – don't stay over there forever," and he was gone, happy and full of life as ever.
  46. ^ Jason, David (2013). David Jason: My Life. Random House UK. pp. 240–241. ISBN 978-1448164202.
  47. ^ Bell, Jack (27 September 1979). "Mixed feelings for Anna". Daily Mirror. He drove me home from rehearsal. He looked a little peaky, but was very jolly," said Anna. "Next day we waited five hours for him to arrive at rehearsal – and I had a horrible premonition.
  48. ^ "Heart attack killed TV star". Reading Evening Post. 21 March 1979. TV comedy star Richard Beckinsale had coronary artery disease, a Bracknell post mortem revealed today. This led to a heart attack which killed the 31-year-old star of Porridge at his Berkshire home on Monday. Reading pathologist Dr Edmund Hemsted found that death was due to natural causes.
  49. ^ "Post-mortem on TV actor postponed". Belfast Telegraph. 20 March 1979.
  50. ^ Callister, Ian (20 March 1979). "'Porridge' star was set for a big future". The Liverpool Echo.
  51. ^ "A Last Kiss For Richard". Daily Mirror. 29 March 1979.
  52. ^ "Star leaves £18,000". Reading Evening Post. 21 July 1979. Porridge TV star, Richard Beckinsale, who lived in Devenish Road, Sunningdale, left just £18,000 in his will published today. Beckinsale, 31, died of a heart attack in March. He left £65,701, but taxes and other costs cut it to £18,074
  53. ^ "The Last Goodbye: Celebrity tributes to Porridge star Richard". Daily Express. 20 April 1979.
  54. ^ Pratt, Colin (22 March 1979). "Show must go on as a tribute says wife Judy". Daily Express.
  55. ^ "BAFTA Awards: Situation Comedy". awards.bafta.org. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  56. ^ The Russell Harty Show, 28 October 1980, BBC.
  57. ^ Cho, Seongyong (5 August 2012). "Venus if you will, send a girl for me to thrill". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved 26 April 2019.
  58. ^ Bennett, Steve (5 January 2009). "Book review: The Richard Beckinsale Story". Chortle. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  59. ^ "Kate Beckinsale unveils plaque for father Richard". BBC Online. 17 July 2013. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  60. ^ "Porridge: Inside Out". Radio Times. 21 May 2014. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  61. ^ "ITV3 to air Rising Damp Forever". British Comedy Guide. 1 March 2016. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  62. ^ . Broxtowe Borough Council. 29 October 2018. Archived from the original on 30 January 2019. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  63. ^ "Hollywood star Kate Beckinsale thanks Beeston for new mural of her dad calling it 'unbelievably wonderful'". Nottingham Post. 11 October 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2019.

External links edit

  • Richard Beckinsale at IMDb
  • Richard Beckinsale at the BFI's Screenonline
  • Website for book by Margaret Bradley

richard, beckinsale, richard, arthur, beckinsale, july, 1947, march, 1979, english, actor, played, lennie, godber, sitcom, porridge, along, with, sequel, series, going, straight, alan, moore, sitcom, rising, damp, father, actresses, samantha, kate, beckinsale,. Richard Arthur Beckinsale 6 July 1947 19 March 1979 was an English actor He played Lennie Godber in the BBC sitcom Porridge along with its sequel series Going Straight and Alan Moore in the ITV sitcom Rising Damp He was the father of actresses Samantha and Kate Beckinsale Richard BeckinsaleBeckinsale as Lennie Godber in PorridgeBornRichard Arthur Beckinsale 1947 07 06 6 July 1947Carlton Nottinghamshire EnglandDied19 March 1979 1979 03 19 aged 31 Sunningdale Berkshire EnglandResting placeMortlake Crematorium Kew London EnglandOccupationActorYears active1962 1979SpousesMargaret Bradley m 1965 div 1971 wbr Judy Loe m 1977 wbr ChildrenSamantha Kate Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 First television appearances 2 2 The Lovers 2 3 Porridge 2 4 Rising Damp 2 5 Going Straight 2 6 Bloomers 2 7 Other work 3 Personal life 4 Death 5 Unfinished work 6 Legacy and tributes 7 Filmography 7 1 Film 7 2 Television 8 References 9 External linksEarly life editBeckinsale was born in Carlton Nottinghamshire the youngest of three children to an Anglo Burmese father Arthur John Beckinsale and an English mother Maggie Barlow 1 Beckinsale stated in 1977 that he may have been a distant relative of the actor Charles Laughton 2 3 While attending College House Junior School in Chilwell Beckinsale appeared in his first of many school plays playing Dopey in Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs 4 17 As a teenager at Alderman White Secondary Modern School he played the lead in Tobias and the Angel and also appeared as Hsieh Ping Kuei in Lady Precious Stream which earned him a positive review in the Nottingham Evening Post 4 23 Beckinsale left school at 15 with ambitions to become a professional actor but he was still too young to go to drama school He spent a year working in numerous manual labour jobs including spells as an upholsterer s apprentice a pipe inspector and an assistant in a grocery business 5 4 26 29 At 16 Beckinsale enrolled at Nottingham College Clarendon taking the drama teacher s training programme and spent the next two years there until he was old enough to apply to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art 6 After failing his first audition for RADA Beckinsale was accepted on his second attempt becoming just one of 31 successful applicants from a total of more than 12 500 4 38 While at RADA Beckinsale won a prize for comedy 7 After graduating in 1968 8 he moved to Crewe to begin in repertory theatre He also appeared in various other repertory productions around the country including Hull Leeds London and Colchester While at Crewe Beckinsale played such roles as the Scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz Sir Andrew Aguecheek in Twelfth Night and the title role in Shakespeare s Hamlet 9 10 4 55 63 Following his stint in 1969 playing Hamlet Beckinsale took a brief hiatus from acting and worked at a bottle factory before returning to acting soon after 11 12 Career editFirst television appearances edit Beckinsale made his television debut in 1969 as a police officer in Coronation Street in which he had to arrest veteran character Ena Sharples 4 56 57 He later had a small role in a 1970 episode of A Family at War playing a young soldier 13 The Lovers edit After being recommended by several other actors for the part Beckinsale landed his first starring role as Geoffrey in the sitcom The Lovers 1970 71 opposite fellow newcomer Paula Wilcox 14 The show put both leading performers in the eye of the public and a film version was made in 1973 with both Beckinsale and Wilcox reprising their roles 15 Porridge edit From 1974 to 1977 Beckinsale starred as prison inmate Lennie Godber alongside Ronnie Barker in the hit BBC sitcom Porridge Beckinsale expressed relief at landing the role owing to his concern about being typecast as Geoffrey from The Lovers 16 Barker had suggested actor Paul Henry for the role of Godber owing to Henry s being from Birmingham as Godber was meant to be but director Sydney Lotterby chose Beckinsale instead Beckinsale initially played Godber with a Birmingham accent but this was eventually abandoned 17 Actor Brian Glover who played the character Cyril Heslop on Porridge stated that Heslop s line I read a book once green it was from the first episode New Faces Old Hands was actually Beckinsale s idea 18 Rising Damp edit While appearing in Porridge on the BBC Beckinsale simultaneously starred as naive medical student Alan Moore in the ITV sitcom Rising Damp 19 also from 1974 to 1977 Beckinsale was the only member of the cast not to have appeared in The Banana Box the play on which Rising Damp was based Writer Eric Chappell stated Although not the oldest he was the most experienced sitcom actor of the quartet having already appeared in The Lovers and Porridge This allowed him to be something of a calming influence on the show a calming influence that was often needed 20 9 10 Beckinsale had previously worked with Leonard Rossiter in the 1974 Johnny Speight drama If There Weren t Any Blacks You d Have To Invent Them 21 Because of a scheduling conflict with the musical I Love My Wife in which he was starring Beckinsale was unable to appear in the fourth series of Rising Damp 22 20 419 Going Straight edit In 1977 Porridge was brought to an end with his character of Godber being released from his prison sentence in the final episode He subsequently starred alongside Barker in Going Straight 1978 a spin off of Porridge in which the two criminal characters are seen on the outside rebuilding their lives Tentative plans for further episodes of the spin off were shelved due to Beckinsale s death in 1979 Bloomers edit Beckinsale starred in his final television comedy Bloomers the five completed episodes of which eventually aired in September and October 1979 on BBC 2 He played Stan an out of work actor who takes a job as a partner at a flower shop This was the first sitcom of Beckinsale s in which he had the leading role 23 Other work edit In between series one and two of The Lovers Beckinsale starred in an ITV children s show titled Elephant s Eggs in a Rhubarb Tree The show featured jokes poetry and music 24 He had the lead role of a young detective in the 1971 Armchair Theatre episode Detective Waiting 25 Beckinsale appeared in the films Rentadick 1972 26 and Three for All 1975 and made appearances in several other television series such as the Stephen Frears directed ITV Playhouse episode Last Summer in 1977 Throughout his TV series run Beckinsale also did a 19 month run in the West End play Funny Peculiar for which he was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for Actor of the Year in a New Play and Comedy Performance of the Year 27 He later did a six month run in the London debut of the Cy Coleman and Michael Stewart musical I Love My Wife Shortly after his 30th birthday Beckinsale was the subject of an episode of This Is Your Life Ronnie Barker and Fulton MacKay of Porridge Leonard Rossiter and Don Warrington of Rising Damp and Paula Wilcox of The Lovers all gave tributes during the show 28 In 1977 he starred in a radio comedy series called Albert and Me with Pat Coombs and John Comer 29 He also appeared in an advertisement for Asda which aired in 1978 and early 1979 Beckinsale appeared in the film version of Porridge released in 1979 It was to be his last and only completed work of the year In October 1980 Frederick Muller Ltd posthumously published a volume of Beckinsale s poetry entitled With Love ISBN 0 584 10387 5 30 31 32 Personal life editBeckinsale was married twice In 1965 he married his pregnant girlfriend a local Nottingham woman named Margaret Bradley whom he had met in 1964 while singing at a folk club Their daughter actress Samantha Beckinsale was born on 23 July 1966 When Beckinsale was accepted into RADA they moved to London Beckinsale became immersed in student life and he and his wife grew apart 33 They separated in 1968 when Margaret took Samantha back to live in Nottingham and Beckinsale left London to work in repertory in Crewe 4 38 42 They divorced in 1971 and Beckinsale did not see his daughter for years Margaret later remarried and her new husband raised Samantha as his daughter Samantha was unaware that her biological father was Richard Beckinsale until she was 11 34 Beckinsale and Samantha reconnected soon after and spent time together before his death in 1979 4 146 147 Beckinsale met actress Judy Loe in 1968 at Crewe repertory 4 44 48 They soon began dating and lived together for years Their daughter actress Kate Beckinsale was born on 26 July 1973 4 81 They finally married in 1977 prior to Kate starting nursery school 4 124 125 Beckinsale enjoyed playing the guitar and singing and he performed in folk clubs in Nottingham as a teenager 35 4 31 33 He also enjoyed playing football and often played in charity matches with the Entertainers XI team 4 114 118 He was a fan of Manchester United football team 36 Beckinsale stated that towards the end of his 19th month run with the play Funny Peculiar he took Valium and had several instances of having to start the play over again due to overwork and mental strain 37 Beckinsale s widow Loe stated that he suffered from occasional panic attacks 38 Because of his good looks and his being on television so often he received a large amount of fan mail particularly from women 39 Although Beckinsale was pleased with the success of the sitcoms he starred in he expressed a desire to play more serious roles as he got older 40 Death editBeckinsale worked on the BBC sitcom Bloomers five episodes of which were filmed prior to Christmas 1978 41 According to his Bloomers co star Anna Calder Marshall during the recording of the first episode he told her he had suffered some kind of black out and had some dizzy spells This concerned him enough to make an appointment to see a doctor but the doctor could not find anything wrong apart from an overactive stomach lining and slightly high cholesterol As filming on the series progressed Beckinsale appeared increasingly tired and greyer and greyer according to co star David Swift 4 155 156 Because of an industrial dispute at the BBC in late December 1978 the filming of the sixth episode of Bloomers had to be postponed until March 42 In January 1979 for an insurance policy for a film Beckinsale passed a full medical examination in which his heart lungs breathing and blood pressure were checked 43 44 He spent January and February working on the Porridge film and then prepared to start work on the film Bloody Kids in March A week before he died Beckinsale complained to his wife Judy Loe of feeling unwell and said he was unable to take her to hospital At the time they both put it down to nerves she was due to have an operation to increase the couple s chances of having another child 4 157 Loe underwent the operation on Wednesday 14 March and while she remained in the hospital recuperating Beckinsale continued to work on Bloody Kids and resumed work on the sixth episode of Bloomers commuting between London by day and Southend on Sea by night 43 On the evening of Saturday 17 March he attended a farewell party for The Two Ronnies who were about to leave for Australia 45 According to David Jason who was at the party Beckinsale left the party at around 11 30 in order to attend another friend s party 46 Jo Apted wife of The Lovers director Michael Apted stated that Beckinsale attended a party at her house on Saturday night and felt unwell the next day 43 On Sunday 18 March he worked on Bloomers and gave Anna Calder Marshall a lift home afterwards 47 To her surprise he began to talk about his fear of dying and of being alone in the house 4 158 He then took his five year old daughter Kate to visit Loe in hospital Upon leaving the hospital Beckinsale dropped his daughter off with relatives to spend the night Afterwards he returned to his house in Sunningdale Berkshire At some point that day he called his older daughter Samantha and made plans to spend some time with her the following weekend Before going to bed he telephoned a couple of friends and during the conversation he repeated that he had been feeling unwell and also said that he had some pain in his chest and arms He seemed in good humour though and made a joke out of it 4 159 nbsp Beckinsale s memorial plaque in St Paul s in Covent GardenWhen he did not arrive at the rehearsal for the sixth and final episode of Bloomers the next morning a member of the production team rang his house and the phone was answered by family friend Rosana Bradley who had been staying at the house to help take care of Kate but who had not been there the previous night She said Beckinsale was still sleeping and she left the phone to wake him up When she returned she said that she was unable to wake him and was advised to call a doctor Shortly after it was confirmed that he had died during the night of what appeared to be a massive heart attack The post mortem examination revealed that he had coronary artery disease which caused the heart attack 48 Beckinsale had expressed worries about his cholesterol to friend Stephen Frears over dinner just days earlier but he seemed healthy and fit and had no cardiac problems in his medical records According to Frears Beckinsale s high cholesterol may have been a factor in his early death Beckinsale s death was met with great shock Rising Damp co star Frances de la Tour stated It is such a shock that someone as young and obviously fit as him should die so suddenly The last time I saw him he had given up smoking not that he smoked very much anyway He was always concerned about keeping fit and we used to tease him about it He used to play a lot of charity football but the terrible thing is that he was a family man I am most distressed for his family 49 The Lovers creator Jack Rosenthal stated He must have had one of the biggest futures any actor could hope for He was a very honest boy and he had that same quality in his acting 50 Beckinsale was cremated during a private service in Bracknell Berkshire 51 and his remains were then taken to Mortlake Crematorium 4 173 Although Beckinsale left more than 65 000 equivalent to 350 000 in 2021 in his will only approximately 18 000 was left after taxes and other costs 52 On 19 April 1979 one month after his death more than 300 people attended a memorial service at the actors church St Paul s in Covent Garden 4 175 Leonard Rossiter Fulton MacKay Richard Briers and Porridge writers Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais gave tributes during the service La Frenais stated I was always amazed by Richard s talent I m convinced he would have become an international actor Briers said The character of Lennie Godber had a kind of innocence which was a danger but also a kind of protection against prison life Richard had a similar innocence It made him vulnerable but he was never one for upstaging scene stealing and the kind of action which substituted technique for truth Richard made us laugh and also charmed us He was an effortless charmer Beckinsale s widow Judy stated It was a celebration not a memorial service 53 A memorial plaque was later placed in the church in Beckinsale s honour Unfinished work editAt the time of his death Beckinsale had almost completed the BBC sitcom Bloomers Writer James Saunders s original script reveals that Beckinsale was due to attend the sixth and last rehearsal for the final episode of the series on the day he died with the show to be recorded the following day The five completed Bloomers episodes were aired later in the year 54 Plans had been drawn up to make a film version of Rising Damp and ultimately the film was made in 1980 Christopher Strauli was recruited to replace Beckinsale playing a different character He was also in the middle of making a television film Bloody Kids which then had to be re cast This role marked a change in direction for Beckinsale playing a hard nosed detective character in contrast to the naive characters he had played before Although Beckinsale does not noticeably appear in the film director Stephen Frears stated that there are a small number of scenes in which Beckinsale is just off camera as well as a scene in which he is in a car although indistinguishable to the viewer 38 Some of the footage of Beckinsale which could not be included in the film was shown during the 2000 ITV tribute The Unforgettable Richard Beckinsale as well as the 2016 ITV3 documentary Rising Damp Forever One scene showed Beckinsale questioning a character in the film with a tough stance and looking quite different than his usual appearance with much shorter cropped hair Legacy and tributes editThree days after Beckinsale s death Going Straight won a BAFTA award A clearly shaken and upset Ronnie Barker delivered a brief acceptance speech in tribute to his co star Beckinsale holds the distinction of having starred in three different sitcoms each of which won the BAFTA for Best Situation Comedy in three successive years Porridge in 1977 Rising Damp in 1978 and Going Straight in 1979 55 When Beckinsale s book of poetry With Love was published in 1980 Judy Loe Ronnie Barker and Richard Briers appeared on The Russell Harty Show to talk about the book and recite some of the poetry 56 In 2000 21 years after his death a documentary was broadcast on ITV in tribute called The Unforgettable Richard Beckinsale It featured interviews with his widow the actress Judy Loe as well as his father sister closest school friend and two daughters Also contributing were his co stars Ronnie Barker of Porridge and Don Warrington of Rising Damp Barker remembering Beckinsale s premature death said He was so loved He hadn t done much but he was so loved that there was a universal sort of grief that went on In the 2006 film Venus during a scene inside the actors church St Paul s Peter O Toole s character an aging actor points out Beckinsale s plaque as an example of an actor who died in his prime 57 In 2007 Alan Davies nominated Beckinsale as his chosen subject for the BBC Radio 4 series Great Lives Judy Loe and Stephen Frears participated in the discussion of Beckinsale s life and career 38 A biography of Beckinsale titled The Richard Beckinsale Story was published in 2008 by author David Clayton It featured interviews with family friends and co workers of Beckinsale s 58 In 2013 a blue plaque in Beckinsale s memory was unveiled at his former school College House Junior School in Chilwell Kate Beckinsale Judy Loe David Walliams and Michael Sheen attended the ceremony 59 UK Gold aired a three part documentary in 2014 called Porridge Inside Out in celebration of Porridge s 40th anniversary During this series there was a memorial segment dedicated to Beckinsale in which Judy Loe and Kate Beckinsale took part 60 ITV3 aired a two part documentary in 2016 called Rising Damp Forever which looked back at the making of Rising Damp There was a memorial segment for Beckinsale during the series in which his daughters Samantha and Kate took part 61 In 2018 as part of an art project in Beckinsale s former hometown of Beeston a mural of him was commissioned by the town council and painted by the French street artist Zabou 62 63 Rising Damp co star Frances de la Tour said of Beckinsale s acting ability Richard was a brilliant young actor as so many have testified His comedy was based on the truth That is what people mean by timing So we believed him at all times There is no greater testament Ronnie Barker was similar which is why they worked so well and movingly together 4 126 Filmography editFilm edit Year Title Role Notes1972 Rentadick Hobbs1973 The Lovers Geoffrey Scrimshaw1974 If There Weren t Any Blacks You d Have to Invent Them The Young Man TV film1975 Three for All Jet Bone1979 Porridge Lennie Posthumous releaseTelevision edit Year Title Role Notes1969 Coronation Street PC Wilcox 1 episode1970 A Family at War Private Grey Episode The Breach in the Dyke 1970 1971 The Lovers Geoffrey Scrimgeor Series regular1971 Elephant s Eggs in a Rhubarb Tree Various roles Series regularArmchair Theatre Lewis Episode Detective Waiting Justice Terry Watson Episode No Flowers by Request ITV Sunday Night Theatre Pete Episode Tales of Piccadilly A Room Full of Holes 1972 Dermot Episode Consequences Angus MacFee Episode Madly in Love 1973 The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes Richard Frobisher Episode The Mysterious Death on the Underground Railway The Donati Conspiracy Robert Sadler 3 episodes1974 1977 Porridge Lennie Godber Series regularRising Damp Alan Moore Series regular1975 Play for Today Michael Robson Episode The Floater 1976 Couples Daniel Graham Recurring role1977 ITV Playhouse Johnny Episode Last Summer 1978 Going Straight Lennie Godber Series regular1979 Bloomers Stan Aired posthumouslyReferences edit Barratt Nick 4 November 2006 Family Detective The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 22 May 2010 He s A Cell Out Jackie 20 August 1977 My family s related to that famous actor Charles Laughton He s probably best known in his role as the Hunchback of Notre Dame Richard explained He s somewhere on my great great grandmother s side My mad scene An ex Hamlet s strange journey into musicals Evening Standard 30 September 1977 It is said I might be a relation of Charles Laughton Going back a few generations the family on my mother s side were in service at the Laughton house There was a bit of a scandal and one of the girls had a baby The only people who really know are two elderly aunts and they don t tell me Strange thought though a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Clayton David 2008 The Richard Beckinsale Story Stroud History Press ISBN 978 0 7509 5061 9 Caisley Sarah 21 June 1975 Richard Beckinsale Stage Struck And He Was Only Nine Years Old My Weekly I was too young to go to drama school so I filled in time doing various things for a year I worked in a grocer s shop and then I made a brief attempt at being an upholsterer s apprentice and after that I worked for a firm making sewer pipes By the time I left school at fifteen I definitely knew I couldn t be anything but an actor Caisley Sarah 21 June 1975 Richard Beckinsale Stage Struck And He Was Only Nine Years Old My Weekly I was able to live at home in Nottingham and for two and a half years I took what was mainly an O level course for teachers of drama The idea was to take a teacher s diploma and then go to Teachers Training College I was one of the first students to go there and it has turned out to be quite successful Quite a few well known names have made their start there But I never intended to teach I was still filling in time till I could be accepted at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art where I went when I was 18 Scene Scope Petticoat 10 April 1971 I won the prize for comedy at RADA but it s not been one of my great loves RADA Student amp Graduate Profiles RADA Retrieved 21 July 2019 Personal Column The Stage and Television Today 13 November 1969 Richard Beckinsale is playing Hamlet in Ted Craig s production of that play now at Crewe Theatre Bard Tops B O Take The Stage and Television Today 27 November 1969 Ted Craig s Hamlet with Richard Beckinsale as the Prince at Crewe Theatre broke all Rep records there with audiences totalling some four thousand for its ten performances Davis Victor 20 April 1976 Why Richard is revealing all Daily Express He was a 21 year old Hamlet with the Crewe Rep a part he says that made him a bit looney for a while Afterwards I took a job in a bottle factory at Parsons Green as a form of therapy Young Sally 22 November 1975 OK Let s Meet Richard Beckinsale OK I think the only time I ve ever been depressed about my work and thought seriously about giving it all up was just after I played Hamlet I didn t like it at all and when the play finished I just went off and got myself a job in a bottle factory That was almost as bad as playing Hamlet and eventually I went back to acting Beckinsale Richard 1947 1979 BFI Screen Online Retrieved 7 October 2019 Two Kinds of Loving Daily Mirror 27 October 1970 Jack Rosenthal I interviewed scores of young actors Three of them told me the boy I wanted was Richard Beckinsale McGarry Peter 16 July 1973 Hello Young Lovers Nice To See You Again Coventry Evening Telegraph He s A Cell Out Jackie 20 August 1977 The Lovers was the first TV I d ever done Richard explained and I was worried that from then on everyone would think of me as a bit of an idiot like Geoffrey which was why I was so glad when Porridge came up Barker Ronnie 1988 It s Hello From Him Great Britain Hodder amp Stoughton p 158 ISBN 0 450 50813 7 I put Paul Henry s name forward but Sydney Lotterby the director explained that he was thinking of Richard Beckinsale A new lad very funny remember The Lovers Yes I agreed but he s Nottingham and Lennie Godber is from Birmingham Doesn t matter said Syd and of course it didn t In early Porridge s Richard tried to do a Birmingham accent but he gave up about three weeks in Writer actor whose work conveys a distinctive tone The Stage and Television Today 20 September 1984 I was in the initial series of Porridge playing a very thick character called Heslop People still come up to me in the street and say to me I read a book once green it was It was a great line but Dick Clement or Ian La Frenais didn t write it Richard Beckinsale did The writers set up the situation to get the line out but it actually came from Beckinsale Murray James 7 November 1975 Richard s straight double Daily Express It s a memorable Friday for young actor Richard Beckinsale who appears on rival channels as straight man to two of the funniest characters on television On ITV he teams up with Leonard Rossiter as the mickey taking student in the seedy digs of Rigsby in Rising Damp And on BBC1 later in the evening he s locked up in Slade prison again for another stretch of Porridge with that imperishable convict clown Fletcher in the person of Ronnie Barker Mr Beckinsale makes a very impressive foil to both There are similarities in the two characters he plays the young listener having his ear bent by two would be veterans of life s ugly traps But he manages to pinch some of the thunder from the stars with a clever sense of timing of the throwaway punchline Can it be long before he earns a show of his own a b Chappell Eric 2002 Rising Damp The Complete Scripts London Granada Media Group ISBN 0 233 99944 2 If There Weren t Any Blacks British Classic Comedy 4 September 2019 Retrieved 13 October 2019 Tippett Richard 11 February 1978 For Richard Beckinsale There s No Business Like Show Business Look in Some lines Richard won t have to consider changing in the future are on a new series of Rising Damp that s in production he s not in the show anymore It s because I m doing this play in London Yorkshire TV who produce Rising Damp work the show on Fridays and I can t get the night off TV star Richard s last role Daily Mirror 23 March 1979 Judy Loe It was the first series in which he was playing the main part I know people will want to see it I think it s a very good comedy Around the studios Thames The Stage and Television Today 11 February 1971 Detective Waiting 1971 BFI Screen Online Retrieved 7 October 2019 Tarratt Margaret September 1972 Rentadick Review Films and Filming Olivier Winners 1976 Official London Theatre Retrieved 25 May 2019 This Is Your Life Richard Beckinsale imdb com Retrieved 6 December 2021 Matthews Peter 5 11 November 1977 Radio 1 Radio 2 Radio Times Morley Janice 24 October 1980 Message to a Wife Left Behind Daily Express ATV Today Richard Beckinsale Media Archive for Central England 27 November 1980 Retrieved 13 October 2019 McGowan Frankie 27 October 1980 To Judy with all my love Liverpool Echo Woodward Ian March 1977 Life and Richard Beckinsale Woman amp Home We had a child and we were both happy but I was trying to reconcile being a student with being a husband and a father and it wasn t easy Brennan Zoe 16 March 1995 Samantha has a burning need to be secretive about her life Daily Express Fallon Gerry 8 January 1977 Imagine Being Arrested By Richard OK Back in my College days in Nottingham I used to run the local Folk Club I d compere and sing there Young Sally 22 November 1975 OK Let s Meet Richard Beckinsale OK Richard admits that work takes up most of his time but if he gets any spare days he enjoys playing football for the showbiz team and they have matches for charity And I also support Manchester United he grins My mad scene An ex Hamlet s strange journey into musicals Evening Standard 30 September 1977 I was going out of my mind at the end of Funny Peculiar It had been 19 months I had been taking Valium to get me through I brought the curtain down on three nights I just didn t know what the play was about anymore I was onstage for two hours every night and after 19 months I was going through mental torture with it a b c Great Lives BBC Radio 4 9 January 2007 Irwin Ken 26 March 1977 The Reluctant Virgin Daily Mirror Tall and extremely good looking Beckinsale is now a TV pin up and has fan mail to prove it Letters pour in from adoring fourteen and fifteen year old schoolgirls who ask for his photograph They come too from young housewives who fancy him Irwin Ken 26 March 1977 The Reluctant Virgin Daily Mirror His comedy shows The Lovers Porridge and Rising Damp have all been winners I like to think I ve got the knack of picking only the good ones he smiles But it s pure luck really I d like to take more serious parts as I get older he says There s a character actor in me trying to get out Andrews John 20 March 1979 Star of television comedy Porridge dies at 31 The Guardian A decision on whether to show the first five episodes filmed before Christmas will now depend on the wishes of Mr Beckinsale s family Andrews John 20 March 1979 Star of television comedy Porridge dies at 31 The Guardian The cast of Bloomers were stunned by yesterday s news A BBC spokesman said that Mr Beckinsale was lively and bright at rehearsals over the weekend which brought the cast together after a three month delay caused by an industrial dispute He said Everybody was really happy and jolly celebrating their return together Even with hindsight no one is saying he looked bad or anything a b c Pratt Colin 21 March 1979 TV Star s Last Hours By Wife Daily Express Barker Ronnie 1988 It s Hello From Him Great Britain Hodder amp Stoughton p 154 ISBN 0 450 50813 7 Answering himself Richard said There s nothing absolutely nothing when you die It all goes black finish I ll never be able to convey the poignancy of that conversation with Richard Beckinsale Lennie Godber of Porridge It took place about six weeks before his totally unexpected death from a heart attack in 1979 Richard was only thirty and had just been declared fully fit after an exhaustive check up connected with insurance on a film Barker Ronnie 1988 It s Hello From Him Great Britain Hodder amp Stoughton pp 162 163 ISBN 0 450 50813 7 His passing so suddenly and so young was a terrible jolt We d been with him only the night before Ronnie C and I and our families were off to Australia for a year There was a farewell party at Langan s Brasserie All our friends came along including Richard but he left early because he had to attend another function My last memory of him is sitting with Joy teasing her pretending to whisper sweet nothings Then it was Cheerio see you in a year s time don t stay over there forever and he was gone happy and full of life as ever Jason David 2013 David Jason My Life Random House UK pp 240 241 ISBN 978 1448164202 Bell Jack 27 September 1979 Mixed feelings for Anna Daily Mirror He drove me home from rehearsal He looked a little peaky but was very jolly said Anna Next day we waited five hours for him to arrive at rehearsal and I had a horrible premonition Heart attack killed TV star Reading Evening Post 21 March 1979 TV comedy star Richard Beckinsale had coronary artery disease a Bracknell post mortem revealed today This led to a heart attack which killed the 31 year old star of Porridge at his Berkshire home on Monday Reading pathologist Dr Edmund Hemsted found that death was due to natural causes Post mortem on TV actor postponed Belfast Telegraph 20 March 1979 Callister Ian 20 March 1979 Porridge star was set for a big future The Liverpool Echo A Last Kiss For Richard Daily Mirror 29 March 1979 Star leaves 18 000 Reading Evening Post 21 July 1979 Porridge TV star Richard Beckinsale who lived in Devenish Road Sunningdale left just 18 000 in his will published today Beckinsale 31 died of a heart attack in March He left 65 701 but taxes and other costs cut it to 18 074 The Last Goodbye Celebrity tributes to Porridge star Richard Daily Express 20 April 1979 Pratt Colin 22 March 1979 Show must go on as a tribute says wife Judy Daily Express BAFTA Awards Situation Comedy awards bafta org Retrieved 12 January 2021 The Russell Harty Show 28 October 1980 BBC Cho Seongyong 5 August 2012 Venus if you will send a girl for me to thrill RogerEbert com Retrieved 26 April 2019 Bennett Steve 5 January 2009 Book review The Richard Beckinsale Story Chortle Retrieved 28 November 2019 Kate Beckinsale unveils plaque for father Richard BBC Online 17 July 2013 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Porridge Inside Out Radio Times 21 May 2014 Retrieved 23 September 2019 ITV3 to air Rising Damp Forever British Comedy Guide 1 March 2016 Retrieved 23 September 2019 Icons of Beeston in Street Art Tribute Broxtowe Borough Council 29 October 2018 Archived from the original on 30 January 2019 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Hollywood star Kate Beckinsale thanks Beeston for new mural of her dad calling it unbelievably wonderful Nottingham Post 11 October 2018 Retrieved 29 January 2019 External links editRichard Beckinsale at IMDb Richard Beckinsale at the BFI s Screenonline All My Love Richard Website for book by Margaret Bradley Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Beckinsale amp oldid 1198054734, wikipedia, wiki, 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