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Ken Campbell, RIP

Posted By Ian Jones On Monday, September 1, 2008 @ 10:01 pm In blog,upfront | Comments Disabled

Ken Campbell, 1941-2008

Ken Campbell, 1941-2008

Although his heart, and much of life, lay on the stage, Ken Campbell graced a succession of high-class TV series with equally convincing bit parts, cameos and supporting roles.

He was the kind of character actor you’d be hard pushed to see emerge to prominence now, not just because the worlds of theatre and screen are more mutually exclusive, but also due to the broadcasting industry’s latterday self-conscious mistrust of such unaccommodating mavericks and outspoken entrepreneurs.

Campbell’s 40-year TV career began back in the 1960s, with occasional appearances in the likes of Dr Finlay’s Casebook, Redcap and The Wednesday Play.

He then concentrated on theatre until the late ’70s, when turns in Law and Order (as Alex Gladwell), The Professionals and Fawlty Towers began to hand him small screen ubiquity.

The ’80s was the decade Campbell really muscled his way into the public consciousness, however, with his hirsute and expressive features gracing episodes of Home to Roost, Supergran, The Gentle Touch, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Bulman, Rockcliffe’s Babies, Colin’s Sandwich and Minder. He also had a semi-regular stint as Fred Johnson, alongside his old mate Warren Mitchell, in In Sickness and in Health.

If he’d become Doctor Who in 1987 instead of Sylvester McCoy, a role for which he auditioned, his career would taken a very different turn, most likely seeing him eek out his days doing the rounds of sci-fi conventions and tiny radio studios for the recording of little-heard audio adventures.

Instead, while he never enjoyed such concentrated TV exposure again, more recent years found him winning sporadic guest roles in Casualty, Judge John Deed, Heartbeat and The Bill – all high profile productions, reflecting the esteem and respect he still commanded.

Throughout all of this, Campbell strode the stage, as he had done ever since joining RADA and the Colchester Repertory Theatre in the 1950s. He founded the Ken Campbell Roadshow, an experimental travelling band of performers and entertainers which at one point boasted Bob Hoskins and McCoy among its number, and also the Science Fiction Theatre of Liverpool. This latter project involved co-founder Chris Langham, Jim Broadbent, David Rappaport and Campbell’s wife Prunella Gee, and was responsible for treating the world to a brave if rather hapless stage production of The Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to The Galaxy, with Langham as Arthur Dent.

While Campbell undoubtedly inspired many fellow actors and writers through his astonishingly creative work as writer, director and improviser, he unquestionably entertained millions whenever his slightly impish yet avowedly homely face loomed into view on the box.


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