Bernard Bresslaw (25 February 1934 – 11 June 1993) was an
English comic actor, best remembered as a member of the Carry On films team.
Bernard Bresslaw was born the youngest of three boys into a
Jewish family in Stepney, London, on 25 February 1934. He attended the Coopers'
Company's School in Tredegar Square, Bow, London E3. His father was a tailor's
cutter and he became interested in acting after visits to the Hackney Empire.
London County Council awarded him a scholarship to train at the Royal Academy
of Dramatic Art where he won the Emile Littler Award as the most promising
actor. After Educating Archie on radio and The Army Game on television, more
television, film and Shakespearean theatre roles followed, until his big break
when he was cast in Carry On Cowboy in 1965.
He featured as Varga, the lead villain in the 1967 Doctor
Who story The Ice Warriors. Even though all the actors playing the aliens were
over six feet tall, Bresslaw towered over them. Sonny Caldinez, who played an
Ice Warrior in the story, stated in a 2004 interview that Bresslaw "was
the only man that could make me feel small."
Although officially starring in 14 Carry On films, Bresslaw
did appear in one other: Carry On Nurse. The legs of Terence Longdon were
deemed to be too thin and scrawny looking, so Bresslaw's were used as stand-ins
for the scene where Joan Sims gives him a bath.
Bresslaw's catchphrase, in his strong Cockney accent, was
"I only arsked" (sic), first used in The Army Game, and later revived
in Carry On Camping (1969). In his fleeting appearance as an angry lorry driver
in the 1970 film Spring and Port Wine, his character was dubbed.
Bresslaw, at 6 ft 7 in (2.01 m), was the tallest of the Carry On cast, head and shoulders over fellow Carry On regular, Barbara Windsor, who is 4 ft 10 in (1.47 m). Because of his height he was briefly considered for the part of the Creature in Hammer's Curse of Frankenstein (1957), which ultimately went instead to 6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) Christopher Lee. Bresslaw later made a comedy version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde for Hammer titled The Ugly Duckling (1959). He made great efforts to prepare for roles, for example learning genuine Swahili phrases for Carry On Up the Jungle (1970).
Bresslaw, together with Miriam Margolyes, appeared with
English comedienne Maureen Lipman in a series of British Telecom advertisements
in the late 1980s. Bresslaw and Margoyles played Gerald and Dolly, a nervous
couple who drop in unannounced on Lipman's character Beattie and her husband
Harry.
Bresslaw performed with the Young Vic Theatre Company,
the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre. One of his last stage
performances was as Malvolio in Twelfth Night at the Open Air Theatre, Regent's
Park (1990), where he demonstrated the fine line between pathos and comedy to
perfection. He also played the genie in the lamp in Aladdin at the Theatre
Royal, Newcastle, in the 1990s.
His song "You Need Feet" (a parody of "You
Need Hands" by Max Bygraves) was used in the Rutles' TV special,
accompanying the Yoko Ono film parody "A Thousand Feet of Film".
Bresslaw died of a sudden heart attack on 11 June 1993.
He had collapsed in his dressing room at the Open Air Theatre in Regent's Park,
London, where he was to play Grumio in the New Shakespeare Company's production
of Taming of the Shrew, the day after the death of fellow comedy performer Les
Dawson. He was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium, north London, where his
ashes were buried on 17 June 1993.(Info edited from Wikipedia)
I always liked Bernard Bresslaw - I think he was a very funny guy.
ReplyDeleteI first noticed him in a supporting role in the Tommy Steele movie, The Dream Maker (1963) - which I haven't been able to see again for a very long time...