Brian Glover
Brian Glover | |
---|---|
Born | Sheffield, West Riding of Yorkshire, England | 2 April 1934
Died | 24 July 1997 London, England | (aged 63)
Resting place | Brompton Cemetery, London, England |
Alma mater | University of Sheffield |
Occupation(s) | Wrestler, teacher, actor, writer |
Years active | 1969–1997 |
Spouses | Elaine Foster
(m. 1954, divorced)Tara Prem (m. 1976) |
Children | 2 |
Brian Glover (2 April 1934 – 24 July 1997) was an English actor and writer. He worked as a teacher and professional wrestler before commencing an acting career which included films, many roles on British television and work on the stage. His film appearances include Kes (1969), An American Werewolf in London (1981) and Alien 3 (1992).
Described by The New York Times as a "robust character actor" who played "gruff but likable roles",[1] he had a "string of roles playing tough guys and criminals".[2] He once said, "You play to your strengths in this game, and my strength is as a bald-headed, rough-looking Yorkshireman".[3] Glover was also known as the voice of Gaffer in the Tetley tea commercials.[4] The Independent described him upon his death as "one of Britain's best-loved actors".[4]
Early life and wrestling career
[edit]Glover was born at the Women's Hospital, Sheffield, West Riding of Yorkshire[5] and he lived in Sheffield until 1937 when his parents moved to Lundwood near Barnsley. His father, Charles Glover, was a wrestler, performing as "the Red Devil". He attended Barnsley Grammar School and the University of Sheffield,[6] where he supplemented his student grant with appearances as a professional wrestler, going under the ring name "Leon Arras the Man From Paris". He adopted that name from a wrestler who didn't turn up to a match one night, for whom Glover stood in. His wrestling style incorporated a lot of comedy, including the catchphrases "ask 'im, ref" and "'ow about that then".[7][8]
In 1954 he married his first wife Elaine Foster, and became a teacher at the same Barnsley school where he had been a pupil. He taught English and French from 1954 until 1970, some of it at Longcar Central School, Barnsley, where he met Barry Hines who was also teaching there. He managed to combine this with regular performances as "Leon Arras", whose appearances included bouts on World of Sport, and in Paris, Milan, Zürich and Barcelona.[6]
Acting career
[edit]Glover's first acting job came playing Mr Sugden, the comically overbearing sports teacher in Ken Loach's film Kes (a job offered to him when Barry Hines, who wrote the film, suggested him to the director).[9] Although untrained, Glover proved to be a skilled and flexible character actor,[10] using techniques learnt during his wrestling career.[6] His large bald head, stocky build, and distinctive voice, with his Yorkshire accent, garnered him many roles as tough guys and criminals.
He played Bottom in A Midsummer Night's Dream (BBC TV, 1981) and had a recurring role in the classic sitcom Porridge as dim-witted prison inmate Cyril Heslop[11] who, when accused of being illiterate, utters the memorable line "I read a book once! Green, it was." He played Quilp in The Old Curiosity Shop, and lent his voice to a number of animated characters, including the "gaffer" of the "Tetley Tea Folk" in a long-running series of television advertisements for Tetley tea, the voice behind the advertising slogan "Bread wi' nowt taken out" for Allinson bread, and the voice of "Big Pig", the mascot for the long-running Now That's What I Call Music! album series, appearing on the TV adverts for Now 3, Now 4 and Now 5. He also appeared in An American Werewolf in London, The First Great Train Robbery, Jabberwocky, Alien 3, Leon the Pig Farmer and as General Douglas in a Bollywood hit 1942: A Love Story. He appeared seven times in Play for Today, in three of them as part of a recurring trio of Yorkshiremen: The Fishing Party, Shakespeare or Bust and Three for the Fancy.
Glover's performance in Kes led to parts at the Royal Court Theatre, London, notably in Lindsay Anderson's The Changing Room (1971). A season with Britain's Royal Shakespeare Company followed, where his roles included Charles the wrestler (and, drawing on his wrestling experience, the fight arranger) in As You Like It,[12] and a robust Peter in Romeo and Juliet. For the Royal National Theatre he appeared in The Mysteries (as God, creating the world with the help of a real fork-lift truck),[13] Saint Joan and Don Quixote.
In the film Brannigan he claimed to have lost the only fight in his acting career, fighting John Wayne.
His performance in The Mysteries secured additional work in the commercial theatre. The Canterbury Tales ("Chaucer wi' nowt taken owt"[14])(West End) was followed by a return to television and the Play for Today series, both as writer and performer and, in turn, more screen roles.[6] Glover wrote a horror themed episode of Theatre Box called Death Angel,[15] which aired in 1981.[16] He went on to play Lugg, the endearing rogue manservant to Albert Campion in the series Campion, and the role of a crook, Griffiths, in the Doctor Who story Attack of the Cybermen in 1985. He played Edouard Dindon in the original London cast of La Cage aux Folles.[17]
In 1991 he starred in the second episode of Bottom, in the episode "Gas", as the perpetually angry neighbour Mr Rottweiler. At the end of his life he acted in John Godber's rugby league comedy Up 'n' Under (1998). He was also the voice for the UNO Upholstery TV adverts in 1995 and 1996.
Glover also wrote over 20 plays and short films. In 1982 he was a guest presenter in series six of Friday Night Saturday Morning, a late-night BBC chat show.[18]
Personal life and death
[edit]Glover was married twice, secondly to television producer Tara Prem, the daughter of TV actor Bakhshi Prem, on 2 October 1976. He had two children, one daughter from his first marriage and one son from his second marriage. In September 1996, Glover developed a brain tumour and underwent an operation for it. The tumour was removed and it appeared he had made a full recovery but it returned in the summer of 1997[19] and Glover died in his sleep in a London hospital on 24 July 1997. He was buried in Brompton Cemetery, London on 30 July 1997.[4]
Film and television credits
[edit]Film
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | Kes | Mr. Sudgen | |
1972 | Joy | Extra | |
1973 | O Lucky Man! | Plantation Foreman/Bassett | |
1975 | Brannigan | Jimmy-the-Bet | |
Mister Quilp | Furnaceman | ||
1976 | Trial by Combat | ||
1977 | Sweeney! | Mac | |
Joseph Andrews | Gaoler | ||
Jabberwocky | Armourer | ||
1978 | The First Great Train Robbery | Captain Jimmy | |
Absolution | First Policeman | ||
1981 | An American Werewolf in London | Chess Player | |
1982 | Britannia Hospital | Painter: The Works | |
1984 | Ordeal by Innocence | Executioner | |
The Company of Wolves | Amourous Boy's Father | ||
1988 | To Kill a Priest | Judge | |
1991 | Kafka | Castl Henchman | |
1992 | Alien 3 | Andrews | |
Leon the Pig Farmer | Brian Chadwick | ||
1994 | Prince of Jutland | ||
1942: A Love Story | General Douglas | ||
1997 | Snow White: A Tale of Terror | Lars | |
Stiff Upper Lips | Eric | ||
1998 | Up 'n' Under | Jack |
Television
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1971 | On the House | Bagley | Episode: "Will the Real Harvey Micklethwaite Please Stand Up?" |
Paul Temple | Waites | Episode: "Party Piece" | |
1971-1974 | Play for Today | Art/Mr. Warboys | 5 episodes |
1972 | Coronation Street | Fred Henshaw | 2 episodes |
Sez Les | |||
1973 | Thirty-Minute Theatre | The Guard | Episode: "Playthings" |
Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads? | Flint | Episode: "No Hiding Place" | |
The Regiment | Sgt. Dyke | Episode: "Courtship" | |
The Protectors | Allen | Episode: "Quin" | |
1974 | Porridge | Heslop | 3 episodes |
1975 | The Sweeney | Moose | Episode: "Thin Ice" |
Not On Your Nellie | Battling Bill | Episode: "Requiem for a Heavyweight" | |
Dixon of Dock Green | Chuck Windell | Episode: "Baubles, Bangles and Beads" | |
Quiller | Sergeant | Episode: "Any Last Requests" | |
1977 | Secret Army | Corporal Emil Schnorr | Episode: "Growing Up" |
1978 | The Famous Five | Tiger Dan | Episode: "Five Go Off in a Caravan" |
Target | Labour Party Agent | Episode: "Queen's Pardon" | |
Return of the Saint | Sam Plackett | Episode: "Signal Stop" | |
1980 | Sounding Brass | Horace Gilbert Bestwick | Miniseries: Six episodes |
Minder | Yorkie | Episode: "The Beer Hunter" | |
1981 | BBC Television Shakespeare | Nick Bottom | Episode: A Midsummer Night's Dream |
1983 | Red Monarch | Khruschev | TV film |
1984-1985 | Bottle Boys | ||
1985 | Doctor Who | Charles Griffiths | Serial: "Attack of the Cybermen" |
Last of the Summer Wine | Oogie Buttercluff | Episode: "Keeping Britain Tidy" | |
1986 | Lost Empires | Tommy Beamish | Miniseries: 4 episodes |
1989 | All Creatures Great and Small | Mr. Dawson | Episode: "Here and There" |
1989-1990 | Campion | Magersfontein Lugg | 16 episodes |
1991 | Bottom | Mr. Rottweiler | Episode: "Gas" |
1992 | Press Gang | Dr. Threeways | Episode: "UnXpected" |
1993 | The Bill | Ken Farley | Episode: "Broken" |
1994 | Anna Lee | Selwyn Price | Miniseries: 5 episodes |
References
[edit]- ^ "Brian Glover, 63, British Actor; Played Gruff but Likable Roles". The New York Times. 25 July 1997. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
- ^ "Biggest Bottoms: who's made an ass of themselves?". BBC Online. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
- ^ Vallance, Tom (25 July 1997). "Obituary: Brian Glover". The Independent. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
- ^ a b c "Brian Glover dies in his sleep after fight against tumour". The Independent. 25 July 1997. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
- ^ Oxford National Biography
- ^ a b c d Dewhurst, Keith (2004). "Brian Glover (1934–1997)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- ^ "British Wrestlers Reunion". British Wrestlers Reunion. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
- ^ Garfield, Simon. The Wrestling (1996)
- ^ Golding, Simon W. (2014). Life After Kes. Andrews UK Limited. ISBN 9781910295311.
- ^ "A typical reaction was a snigger... I was making a film about the wrong kind of bird". The Guardian. 29 August 1999.
- ^ Richard Webster; Dick Clement; Ian La Frenais (2001). Porridge The Inside Story. Headline Book Publishing. ISBN 0-7472-3294-6.
- ^ "Buzz Goodbody's production As You Like It". www.rsc.org.uk. Royal Shakespeare Company.
- ^ Normington, Katie (October 2007). Modern mysteries: contemporary productions of medieval English cycle dramas. Melton, Suffolk, England: Boydell & Brewer. p. 86. ISBN 978-1-84384-128-9.
- ^ "Brian Glover as The Miller". The Times. 5 July 1994.
- ^ Glover, Brian (1981). Death Angel. Thames Methuen. ISBN 9780423003000. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
- ^ Smith, Peter (16 November 1981). "Death Angel". IMDb. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
- ^ "La Cage aux Folles Original West End Cast – 1986 West End". broadwayworld.com. Retrieved 16 July 2017.
- ^ "Friday Night, Saturday Morning: S6". www.aveleyman.com. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
- ^ "BRAIN OP AGONY OF TV BRIAN. - Free Online Library".
External links
[edit]- 1934 births
- 1997 deaths
- 20th-century English male actors
- Alumni of the University of Sheffield
- Burials at Brompton Cemetery
- Deaths from brain cancer in England
- English male film actors
- English male professional wrestlers
- English male television actors
- English male voice actors
- Male actors from Barnsley
- Male actors from Sheffield
- Neurological disease deaths in England
- Sportspeople from Sheffield
- 20th-century English sportsmen