Graham Stark | |
Birth Name: | Graham William Stark |
Birth Date: | 20 January 1922 |
Birth Place: | Wallasey, Cheshire, England |
Death Place: | London, England |
Yearsactive: | 1939 - 1999 |
Spouse: | [1] |
Children: | 3 |
Graham William Stark (20 January 1922 – 29 October 2013) was an English comedian, actor, writer and director.
The son of a purser on transatlantic liners,[2] Stark was born in New Brighton[3] (part of Wallasey) in Wirral, Cheshire, England. He attended Wallasey Grammar School and made his professional stage debut aged 13 in pantomime at the Lyceum Theatre in London.
During the Second World War he served in 334 company of the BEF in Salonika, Greece, where he was a turner in group workshops.[4] While there he first met Dick Emery, Tony Hancock and Peter Sellers, the latter two as fellow members of Ralph Reader's Gang Shows. Sellers would become a long-lasting close friend. With the Gang Shows, Stark toured the locations where military personnel were seeing active service.[4] After the war he studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art,[5] and joined the regulars at Grafton's, a pub in Victoria run by Jimmy Grafton, a venue at which soon-to-be-prominent entertainers of the next few decades regularly gathered.[2]
Stark began to work on BBC Radio in the postwar years, helped by Tony Hancock's connections,[3] making his debut in Happy Go Lucky and going on to Ray's a Laugh, thanks to the intervention of Sellers.[2] For a time, Stark was a regular in Educating Archie, and substituted for Spike Milligan on The Goon Show[6] [7] when the comedian was ill. Stark was a regular supporting player on TV with Sellers in A Show Called Fred and Son of Fred, and with Benny Hill. Stark's profile was sufficient for him to gain his own, albeit short-lived, sketch series, The Graham Stark Show (BBC 1964).[2] Now entirely lost,[8] it was scripted by Johnny Speight with each episode featuring a different group of supporting actors, including Deryck Guyler, Arthur Mullard, Derek Nimmo, Patricia Hayes and Warren Mitchell. An episode of Till Death Us Do Part, called "In Sickness and in Health", 1967, where Stark plays decrepit Dr. Kelly, survives.
Adept at comic French accents, Stark stole scenes as a hapless gendarme in Hammer's 1961 comedy A Weekend with Lulu. He became a regular performer in the Pink Panther film series. His first role in the series was as Hercule Lajoy, Inspector Clouseau's stonefaced assistant, in A Shot in the Dark (1964). Along with Herbert Lom and Burt Kwouk, he appeared in more Pink Panther films than any other actor, playing a variety of characters, including reprising Lajoy in Trail of the Pink Panther (1982) and twice playing Dr Auguste Balls (in Revenge of the Pink Panther, 1978; and Son of the Pink Panther, 1993). He was cast as the hotel clerk in the "Does your dog bite" scene in The Pink Panther Strikes Again. Stark, as well as Lom and Kwouk, each appeared in seven titles from the series.
In the film Alfie (1966), Stark was Humphrey, a timid bus conductor who takes on a woman (Julia Foster) and her child when the title character (played by Michael Caine) refuses commitment. He also played the role of Lord Fortnum's physician, Captain Pontius Kak, in the original stage play of The Bedsitting Room, which opened at the Mermaid Theatre on 31 January 1963.[6] [9] [10] Following the death of James Beck in 1973, Stark took over the role of Private Joe Walker in the radio adaptation of Dad's Army.
In 1982, Stark appeared in a cameo role as a butler, alongside Dandy Nichols, in the music video for Adam Ant's UK No. 1 hit "Goody Two Shoes".[11] He played the character of Mr Nadget in the 1994 BBC adaptation of Martin Chuzzlewit.
In 1959 he married Audrey Nicholson, who survived him with their two sons and a daughter. Stark was also an accomplished stills photographer. He was the last known performer to have appeared on The Goon Show during its original run. In 2003 he published an autobiography, Stark Naked.[2] He died in London on 29 October 2013 at age 91, after suffering a stroke.[12] [13]