Rodney Bewes (27 November 1937 – 21 November 2017)[2] was an English television actor and writer who portrayed Bob Ferris in the BBC television sitcom The Likely Lads (1964–66) and its colour sequel Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads? (1973–74). Bewes' later career was of a much lower profile, but he continued to work as a stage actor.[3]

Rodney Bewes
Rodney Bewes in 2004
Born(1937-11-27)27 November 1937
Died21 November 2017(2017-11-21) (aged 79)
Cadgwith, Cornwall, England
Occupations
  • Actor
  • performer
  • scriptwriter
Years active1952–2015
Spouses
Sylvia N. Tebbitt
(m. 1963, divorced)
Daphne Black
(m. 1973; died 2015)
[1]
Children4

Early life

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Bewes was born in Bingley in the West Riding of Yorkshire,[4] to Horace, an Eastern Electricity Board showroom clerk, and Bessie, who was a teacher of children with learning difficulties.[5] His family lived for a few years in the Crossflatts district of Bingley,[6] before they moved to Luton, where he attended Stopsley Secondary School.[7] Because of his early ill-health (he suffered from asthma and bronchitis), one of the reasons the family moved, his mother tended to keep him off school.[3] His illness receded, and the family eventually returned to the north.[when?]

Having seen an advertisement in the Daily Herald, Bewes auditioned for the title role in Billy Bunter of Greyfriars School just before he turned 13, and was in the last two short-listed for the role, losing to Gerald Campion.[3] However, he did appear in two early television roles for the BBC, Mystery at Mountcliffe Chase[5] and The Pickwick Papers (both 1952).[8] At 14, he moved to London to attend RADA's preparatory school.

After two years of national service in the RAF, Bewes attended RADA. He was working nights in hotels, doing the washing-up, to finance his studies at RADA during the day, and hence was frequently to be found asleep in class. He was expelled during his final year.[9]

Early career

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Bewes began appearing in repertory theatre and obtained parts in the television drama series Dixon of Dock Green (1962) and Z-Cars (1963).[1] He also appeared in the film version of Billy Liar (1963) as Arthur Crabtree, alongside his close friend Tom Courtenay. The two men shared a flat at the time; Bewes, having seen Courtenay's script, independently and successfully approached the casting director for the part.[3] The following year his Northern working-class background and natural Northern accent stood him in good stead, landing him the role of Bob Ferris in The Likely Lads (1964–66) after Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais had seen him in Billy Liar.[5]

In The Likely Lads, Ferris was the more ambitious of two Newcastle factory workers, with Terry Collier (James Bolam) being his lazy and more cynical friend.[8] The series, at first broadcast on the newly launched BBC2, proved successful both critically and in the ratings when it was shown on the BBC1 and ran for three series.[5][10] Between his two spells as a 'Likely Lad', Bewes also appeared in Man in a Suitcase (1967), Father, Dear Father (1968) and as "Mr Rodney" on The Basil Brush Show (1968–69). He starred in his own ITV sitcom Dear Mother...Love Albert (later known as Albert!, 1969–72), which he created and co-wrote with Derrick Goodwin.

Bewes appeared in the 1969 theatrical production of She Stoops to Conquer as Tony Lumpkin.[11] He also appeared in the film Spring and Port Wine (1970) which starred James Mason, and played the Knave of Hearts in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1972).[12] Bewes and Bolam reunited for the sequel that continued the Bob and Terry saga, Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads? (1973–74).[8] It ran for two series of 13 episodes, followed by a Christmas special in 1974.[13] The original series was adapted for radio (1967–68) as was the sequel (1975), and a cinema spin-off (The Likely Lads, 1976) also followed.[14]

Bewes' later film roles included Jabberwocky (1977), Unidentified Flying Oddball (1979) and The Wildcats of St Trinian's (1980). Although better known for his comedy and light entertainment roles, viewers were given an opportunity to see Bewes's serious acting ability in a made-for-TV film adaptation of John Ford's 17th century play, 'Tis Pity She's a Whore (1980).[15] Despite a guest role in the Doctor Who serial Resurrection of the Daleks in 1984, his television career had largely ended by the mid-1980s.[8]

Later career

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On the West End stage, Bewes appeared in the play Middle-Age Spread and Funny Money, a farce by Ray Cooney.[3]

In 1981, he starred in "A Very Private Man" on BBC Radio.[16][17] During 1982, he served as spokesman for the now defunct trade organisation, the British Onion Marketing Board, appearing in a number of print advertisements during the year.[18]

Bewes remained active as a stage performer in the 1990s and later with one-man versions of Three Men in a Boat and Diary of a Nobody, both of which shows he toured extensively in the UK.

Bewes final appearance on television was in 2009 when he played retired bank manager Edward Walton in the Heartbeat episode Ties That Bind.[19]

In July 2013, he was The Marshal (Philippe Pétain) in the Southwark Playhouse production of Peter Ustinov's The Moment of Truth.[20] He was back in Edinburgh again in 2015 for an autobiographical show, An Audience with Rodney Bewes... Who?[21]

Bewes' autobiography, A Likely Story, was published in September 2005.[7] In the autobiography, and on Michael Parkinson's BBC Radio 2 show in 2005, he stated that his Likely Lads co-star James Bolam had not spoken to him for the past 30 years. It had been assumed for years that Bolam and Bewes were friends off-screen as well as on; a pretence they kept up because their public expected it. However, they had comprehensively fallen out when Bewes indiscreetly related a personal anecdote about Bolam in a 1976 press interview, and they had not spoken since. He blamed Bolam's fear of having his privacy invaded, and of being eternally typecast, leading to his refusing to allow repeats of The Likely Lads. The final breach, said Bewes, occurred when, having told an anecdote about the birth of his own triplets, he followed on with a story of how Bolam's wife, actress Susan Jameson, had told him she was pregnant while he was driving, and he almost crashed the car. Bewes repeated this story, thinking it was already public knowledge; but then, on realising he might have crossed a line, phoned Bolam to forewarn him of the article, and got a frosty reaction. "There was this dreadful silence. He put the phone down. I called him back, he didn't answer. He hasn't spoken to me since."[22][23] It was reported that Bolam had never really liked Bewes.[24]

In 2010, Bewes also complained about his former co-star's refusal to allow The Likely Lads to be repeated on network television (both had to give approval), preventing him from earning anything from the repeats; "He must be very wealthy; me, I've just got an overdraft and a mortgage".[25] Shortly before he died, in an interview with the Daily Mirror, Bewes once more lamented the loss of his friendship with Bolam.[1] Bolam, however, denied such a rift ever existed, stating after Bewes' death that they "didn't talk for 40 years because of their busy schedules rather than resentment", and he had "nothing but fond memories" of Bewes.[26] Bolam denied he had the ability to block repeats of the TV series.[27]

Death

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Bewes died on 21 November 2017, six days before his 80th birthday, in his seaside home at Cadgwith in south Cornwall.[28] He is survived by a daughter and three sons.[1]

Filmography

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Film

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YearTitleRoleNotes
1962A Prize of ArmsPrivate MaynardUncredited
We Joined the NavyRecruitment intervieweeUncredited
1963Heavens Above!Milkfloat driverUncredited
Billy LiarArthur Crabtree
1964The ChaseGeorgeTV film
1965San Ferry AnnLover Boy
1968Decline and Fall... of a BirdwatcherArthur Potts
1969All Star Comedy CarnivalAlbert CourtnayTV film
1970Spring and Port WineHarold Crompton
1972Alice's Adventures in WonderlandKnave of Hearts
1973The Three MusketeersSpy
1975Jonah and the WhaleJonahTV film
1976The Likely LadsBob Ferris
1977JabberwockyThe Other Squire
1979Saint JackSmale
Unidentified Flying OddballClarence
1980'Tis Pity She's a WhoreBergettoTV film
The Wildcats of St Trinian'sPeregrine Butters
1982East LynneRaymond VaneTV film
1993Come Snow, Come BlowTV film

Television

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YearTitleRoleNotes
1952Mystery at Mountcliffe ChaseJeremy NichollsTV short
The Pickwick PapersJoe2 episodes
1961ITV PlayhouseSignals operatorEpisode: "Private Potter"
1962Dixon of Dock GreenPC ScreenEpisode: "An Escort for Harry"
Emergency Ward 10Roger Mayne1 episode
Armchair TheatreBarmanEpisode: "The Irish Boys"
1963Z-CarsSammyEpisode: "The Main Chance"
Love StorySmithEpisode: "The Wedding of Smith Seven-Nine"
Sierra NineTom BatleyEpisode: "The Q-Radiation"
The Plane MakersTim OrmistonEpisode: "Any More for the Skylark?"
First NightSam TowlerEpisode: "The Road"
PotsEpisode: "Sticks"
Drama 61-67Peter MortonEpisode: "Loop"
1964Trooper TannerEpisode: "Across the Border"
CluffJack CarsonEpisode: "The Screeching Cat"
SixGeorgeEpisode: "The Chase"
Christmas Night with the StarsBob Ferris1 episode
1964-1966The Likely LadsBob FerrisSeries regular
1966Armchair TheatreNeville StarkeyEpisode: "The Night Before the Morning After"
1966-1982JackanoryStorytellerSeries regular
1967Hicks and StokesBilly HicksTV short
Man in a SuitcaseTim GormondEpisode: "The Bridge"
1968Virgin of the Secret ServiceRajah of ChundraporeEpisode: "The Rajah and the Suffragette"
The Basil Brush ShowMr. RodneySeries regular
Father, Dear FatherCyrilEpisode: "It Won't Be a Stylish Marriage"
1969-1972Dear Mother...Love AlbertAlbert CourtnaySeries regular
1971Shirley's WorldRalphEpisode: "A Girl Like You"
1973-1974Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?Bob FerrisSeries regular
1974Whodunnit?PanellistEpisode: "Goodbye Sarge"
1975Churchill's PeopleBob PottEpisode: "Mother India"
1980Just LizReg LastSeries regular
1982Crown CourtAlistair CrichtonEpisode: "Peanuts"
BBC Play of the MonthConstableEpisode: "The Critic"
1984Doctor WhoStienEpisode: "Resurrection of the Daleks"
The Other 'ArfSam HardwickeEpisode: "Drastic Action"
1985Summer SeasonGeorgeEpisode: "Glamour Night"
1986Hudson FrontierLord HerneMini-series
1987The Adventures of a LadyLord HerneMini-series
1993SpenderNorman EllersonEpisode: "Kid"
2002A Tribute to The Likely LadsNews vendorTV short, cameo role
2004RevolverJimmy Charles1 episode
2009HeartbeatEdward WaltonEpisode: "Ties That Bind"

References

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