Richard Briers

 
Actor:

Richard Briers

  • Born: 1933 in England
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '60s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: Hamlet, Swan Song, Peter Pan
  • First Major Screen Credit: A Matter of Who (1962)

Biography

British leading man Richard Briers appeared in several TV adaptations of venerable stage plays in the 1960s. His interpretation of cross-dressing Lord Fancourt Babberly in Charley's Aunt managed to find a berth on American public television in 1968. The warm gust of applause greeting the actor's appearance indicated that he was already an audience favorite - as indeed he was, having appeared in such films as Girls at Sea (1962) and Fathom (1967). When American viewers next saw Briers, he was starring with Felicity Kendall on an agreeable BBC sitcom, Good Neighbors (Briers' second starring series). The series was a light, easy-going account of two city dwellers trying to make a go at country living; Richard Briers and his superb supporting cast made the slender material seem far funnier than it really was. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Wikipedia: Richard Briers
Richard Briers
Birth name Richard David Briers
Born 14 January 1934 (1934--) (age 73)
Raynes Park, Surrey, England

Richard David Briers, CBE (born 14 January 1934) is an English actor, whose career has encompassed the theatre, television, film and radio.

He first came to fame as George Starling in Marriage Lines in the mid-1960s. The following decade, the role of Tom Good in the BBC sitcom The Good Life made him a household name. In the 1980s he starred in Ever Decreasing Circles, and from 2000 to 2002 came back to the spotlight with a leading role in Monarch of the Glen.

Early life

Briers was born in 1934 in Raynes Park, Surrey, England, and is the second cousin of actor Terry-Thomas, and spent his childhood in Raynes Park and Guildford. His father drifted between jobs, while his mother dreamt of a career in showbiz, something she couldn't achieve due to financial reasons.[1] He attended Rokeby Prep School in Kingston upon Thames, and left at the age of 16 without any formal qualifications.[1] He then took a clerical post with a London cable manufacturer, and for a short time went to evening class to qualify in electrical engineering, but soon left and became a filing clerk.[1] At the age of 18, he was called up and for two years was a filing clerk at RAF Northwood, where he met future George and Mildred star Brian Murphy. Murphy introduced Briers, who had first been interested in acting at 14, to the Elephant and Castle Polytechnic, and when he left the RAF he joined RADA, which he attended from 1954 to 1956.[1] He won a scholarship with Liverpool Repertory Company, and he worked with them for 15 months, then moved to the Belgrade Theatre in Coventry for 6 months and then had his West End debut.

It was while at Liverpool Rep, that he met his future wife Ann Davies, who was acting as stage manager, and has acted on television since the 1960s. Soon after meeting, he borrowed £5 from his mother, bought an engagement ring and they were married within six months.[1] They have two children, one of whom, Lucy, is also an actress.

Television fame

Briers got his first leading role on television in Brothers in Law in 1962. He was cast in this role by writers Frank Muir and Denis Norden, who had spotted him in the West End. The following year Briers got the lead male role in Marriage Lines opposite Prunella Scales. His other early appearances included Dixon of Dock Green, The Seven Faces of Jim, The Morecambe & Wise Show, and the narrator in several episodes of Jackanory.

In 1975, Briers was given one of the lead roles in the successful sitcom The Good Life, where he played Tom Good, a draftsman who decides, on his 40th birthday, to give up his job and try his hand at self-sufficiency. In 1978, he starred opposite his The Good Life co-star Penelope Keith in the televised version of The Norman Conquests.

During the 1980s, he appeared in the Goodbye, Mr Kent, All in Good Faith, Tales of the Unexpected, Mr. Bean and Twelfth Night (as Malvolio). In 1987, he appeared in the Doctor Who episode Paradise Towers. From 1984 to 1987 he was the lead role of Martin Bryce in Ever Decreasing Circles, and in 1993 took the lead role of Godfrey Spry in the BBC comedy drama If You See God, Tell Him.

Other work

Briers has spent much of his career in theatre work, including appearances in plays by Shakespeare and George Bernard Shaw. In 1967, one of his earliest successes was playing alongside Michael Hordern and Celia Johnson in the London production of Alan Ayckbourn's Relatively Speaking.[1] Briers was a member of Kenneth Branagh's Renaissance Theatre Company, taking on classical and Shakespearean roles including King Lear and Uncle Vanya.

Briers is also a familiar voice actor, with numerous commercials, including adverts for the Midland Bank in which he was the voice of the company's Griffin symbol, and the animated children's series Roobarb and Bob the Builder to his credit. He also provided the voice of Fiver in the 1978 film adaptation of Watership Down.

His work in radio includes playing Bertie Wooster in a series of adaptations of Jeeves novels by P. G. Wodehouse, and later the play Not Talking, commissioned for BBC Radio 3 by Mike Bartlett. Briers has also appeared in films such as Henry V, Much Ado About Nothing and was Polonius in Kenneth Branagh's Hamlet.

Recent years

Since 1990, he has appeared in Lovejoy, If You See God, Tell Him, Inspector Morse, Midsomer Murders and Doctors. Richard Briers starred as Hector in the first three series of Monarch of the Glen from 2000 to 2002, a role which saw him return to the limelight. In 2006, he made an appearance in an episode of Extras. He will appear in Torchwood in 2008.[2]

Richard Briers was appointed the OBE in 1989, and in 2003 he became a CBE.[3] Because of Terry Thomas's Parkinson's disease, Briers became President of the Parkinson's Disease Society.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "A Celebration of The Good Life", Orion Books, 2000. 
  2. ^ BBC Press Office (15 August 2007). A new face for Torchwood and a new look for Martha. Press release. Retrieved on 2007-08-16.
  3. ^ "Richard Briers' classic career", BBC, 13 June 2003. 
  4. ^ Parkinson's Disease Society annual report 2003

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