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Thursday, 18 May 2023
Web Page 3069
18th May 2023
First Picture: Portrait
Second Picture: With Hattie Jacques and Eric Sykes
Third Picture: With Marilyn Munroe in The Prince and the Showgirl
Forth Picture: With Eric Sykes
RICHARD WATTIS
Richard Wattis was a British character actor who for over 40 years was the face of pompous officialdom whether he was portraying a civil servant, a secretary, or clerk.
He was the man who began a sentence with a rather disinterested "Can I help you?", would listen to you explain your predicament and then frustrate you with an equally dispassionate "I'm awfully sorry, there's absolutely nothing I can do to help you." He was the man who would look down his nose at you with an air of superiority and dismissive-ness in the safe knowledge that the wheels of bureaucracy would always turn in his favour..
Richard Cameron Wattis was born on 25th February 1912 in Wednesbury and was moved to Walsall at the age of four. His uncle was MP for Walsall in the mid-1920's and as a child Richard Wattis became star-struck, idolising the screen actor Robert Donat who he frequently wrote to asking for advice on acting.
He attended King Edward's School, Birmingham and Bromsgrove School, and upon finishing his education went to work for the family electrical engineering firm. It is doubtful that he ever showed any interest in the job and he soon left. Having avoided one lacklustre career he then managed to manoeuvre himself away from chartered accountancy and secured a position (on the advice of Robert Donat) at Croydon Rep in 1935. Here he learned his craft with the likes of John Barron, John Le Mesurier, Jon Pertwee and Dennis Price.
By the end of the decade he was acting regularly on stage as well as producing and also appeared on the BBC's pre-World War II television broadcasts. One of the first actors to do so. He made his big-screen debut with a role in the 1939 feature A Yank at Oxford with Vivien Leigh and Robert Taylor, but like most in his profession his career was interrupted by the the war serving in the Royal Medical Corp., as a Second Lieutenant. Upon being demobbed he returned to acting and soon found himself much in demand, first on radio and then in films, playing "pompous, dry, deadpan authority figures, snooping civil servants, and other comical pests."¹
During the 1950s he starred in numerous Ealing comedies as well as the St Trinian films. He also appeared in Around The World in 80 Days and made his international debut in The Prince and the Showgirl. Later he appeared in ‘Carry On's,’ Norman Wisdom films, and starred in over 100 films in all.
On television he became a comic foil for Tony Hancock, Dickie Henderson and other comedians of the day. When Eric Sykes made his first television sitcom, he wrote a character called Mr Brown; a next-door neighbour who, far from being neighbourly, was snooty, pompous and fastidious. When casting the series Eric Sykes made it quite clear that he wanted no one else but Richard Wattis. In return, Richard Wattis was delighted to be given the part, because as he developed the role, Mr Brown became much more vulnerable and amiable than the type of character he usually played.
Richard Wattis was far removed from his screen persona: "A cheerful, somewhat camp and relatively worldly bon vivant, he was a great thrower of parties and frequenter of high-class restaurants, and an avid student of history, the arts and literature. He was also quite mischievous and a good sport."
For the second series of Sykes and A... his agent asked for Richard's fee to be increased. The BBC's reaction was to ask Eric Sykes to write Mr Brown out of the series. This request was. In his autobiography, Eric Sykes wrote "...it is my firm belief that you can't buy talent on the cheap, so my cast remained unchanged, and I made sure that Richard was with us until the day he died many years later."
Richard Wattis died of a heart attack whilst dining in a Kensington restaurant on 1st February 1975, just three weeks before his 63rd birthday. His Memorial Service was held at St Pauls Church in Covent Garden (The Actor's Church), where there is a plaque in memory of him not far from his friend and colleague Hattie Jacques.
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Peter
gsseditor@gmail.com
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