Gordon Peters Explained

Gordon Peters
Birth Name:Gordon Peter Wilkinson
Birth Date:29 November 1926
Birth Place:Shildon, County Durham, England[1]
Death Place:Surrey, England[2]
Occupation:Actor
Spouse:[3] [4]
Children:1[5]

Gordon Peter Wilkinson (29 November 1926 – 15 June 2022), known professionally as Gordon Peters, was an English actor and comedian.

Early life

Peters was born in Shildon, County Durham, England on 29 November 1926. His mother was a piano teacher and his father a tenor-voiced butcher, both enthusiastic amateur performers. Peters spent much of his early childhood as a chorister at Durham Cathedral.[6] [7] Peters began his early career as a junior bank clerk after national service in the Royal Navy, at the Standard Bank of South Africa, in Harare, (Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe). It was there he entered a talent contest, his comic miming to two songs securing him second place.[8]

Career

Returning to the UK in 1951, he found his first job, a summer season with the Vincent Tildsley’s Mastersingers at Blackpool’s Opera House, after responding to an advert in The Stage.[9]

Peters starred in a BBC TV comedy series in 1973 called The Gordon Peters Show, which was a situation comedy in which he played a character with his own name. The series was cancelled after one season.

He devised and hosted a children’s quiz Around the World in 48 Hours for Westward Television in 1976.[10]

Peters had many roles in other television shows over the years, including Oh Brother!, two episodes of Hi-de-Hi!, four episodes of Dad's Army, two episodes of Are You Being Served?, one episode of Grace & Favour (also called Are You Being Served? Again! in the United States).[11] He played Victor and Margaret Meldrew's family friend Ronnie in three episodes of the long-running BBC sitcom One Foot in the Grave during the 1990s,[12] five episodes of Never the Twain. Moreover, he featured in one episode of Little Britain in 2005, as a booking clerk in an episode of the BBC sitcom Keeping Up Appearances and in one episode of HBO's Tales from the Crypt. He voiced the narrator, male characters and all the Mr. Men in the 1995–1997 series Mr. Men and Little Miss save for the 1998 special The Christmas Letter, where the roles of the narrator and Santa Claus were taken up by Geoffrey Palmer.

Personal life and death

Peters married Joan Mann in 1959, however the marriage ended in divorce. In 1969 he married Patrica Fraser and they had one daughter together.[13]

He published an autobiography, From Choirboy to Comic, in 2004.

Peters died on 15 June 2022, aged 95.[14]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Harrison, Tim (11 October 2019) "Who do you think you are kidding Mr Peters?". The Good Life. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  2. Web site: Gordon Peters . .
  3. Harrison, Tim (11 October 2019) "Who do you think you are kidding Mr Peters?". The Good Life. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  4. Web site: Obituary: Comedian Gordon Peters .
  5. Web site: Obituary: Comedian Gordon Peters .
  6. Web site: Obituary: Comedian Gordon Peters .
  7. https://www.gordonpeters.co.uk/TVPlaysCabaret.html
  8. Web site: Obituary: Comedian Gordon Peters .
  9. Web site: Obituary: Comedian Gordon Peters .
  10. Web site: Obituary: Comedian Gordon Peters .
  11. Web site: Gordon Peters . British Comedy Guide . 24 June 2022.
  12. Book: Webber, Richard. The Complete One Foot in the Grave. Orion. London. 2006. 0-7528-7357-1.
  13. Web site: Obituary: Comedian Gordon Peters .
  14. Quinn, Michael (13 September 2022). "Obituary: Gordon Peters". The Stage. Retrieved 29 October 2022.