Alan Wheatley (19 April 1907 – 30 August 1991) was an English actor. He was a well known stage actor in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, appeared in forty films between 1931 and 1965 and was a frequent broadcaster on radio from the 1930s to the 1990s, and on television from 1938 to 1964. His most prominent television role was the Sheriff of Nottingham in the 1950s TV series The Adventures of Robin Hood, with Richard Greene as Robin Hood; Wheatley played the sheriff in 54 episodes between 1955 and 1959. Earlier, he had played Sherlock Holmes in the first television series featuring the great detective.
In addition to acting, Wheatley was a radio announcer during the Second World War, broadcasting to occupied Europe, where he became a well known voice. Poetry was another of his interests: he translated the poetry of Federico García Lorca and was a frequent reader of poems on air. In his later years he worked mainly in radio, as a narrator, a verse-reader and an actor.
In November 1931 Wheatley performed in London at the Embassy and St Martin's theatres, as the Journalist in Britannia of Billingsgate. In other London productions in 1932–33 he played the Guide in Miracle at Verdun, Master Klaus in The Witch and Godfrey Perry in Wild Justice. He appeared at the Malvern Festival in August 1933, before returning to the West End, where his roles included Edgar in King Lear to the Lear of William Devlin."A Young King Lear", The Illustrated London News, 27 October 1934, p. 666
For nine months in 1934–35 Wheatley was leading man at the Croydon Repertory Theatre, and in 1936 he made his first appearance with the Old Vic company. He made his Broadway theatre debut in the same year, in the Old Vic's production of St Helena, playing Las Cases to the Bonaparte of Maurice Evans. St Helena, Internet Broadway Database. Retrieved 25 September 2020 He subsequently toured in Scandinavia and adjoining countries, as Major Petkoff in Arms and the Man and Arnold Champion-Cheney in The Circle.
After returning to London, Wheatley's last stage roles of the 1930s were Disraeli in Mr Gladstone, with Devlin; Mosca in Volpone, with Donald Wolfit,; Frank Harris in Oscar Wilde with Francis L. Sullivan; Sebastian in Walk in the Sun, with Terence de Marney; and Sir Patrick Cullen in The Doctor's Dilemma, with Clifford Evans. He appeared in several films in the 1930s (see Filmography below), and, already a frequent broadcaster on BBC radio, he made his first television appearance in August 1938, playing Lane in The Importance of Being Earnest. "The Importance of Being Earnest", BBC Genome. Retrieved 25 September 2020 In the same year he played Sam Weller in Bardell against Pickwick, adapted from The Pickwick Papers.
While serving with the European Service Wheatley met Rafael Nadal, a friend of Federico García Lorca, and developed an interest in the poet's works.Notes to Argo LP RG19, 1953 He made English translations of several of them; "Lament on the Death of a Bullfighter" was the first to be completed, and was broadcast by the BBC in 1946. He recorded nine of his translations for the gramophone in 1953, released in Britain on the Argo label and in the US by Westminster Records.WorldCat and
When BBC television resumed after its suspension during the war, Wheatley played a wide range of characters, from Sam Weller again (1946), to the humorously cynical schoolmaster Rupert Billings in The Happiest Days of Your Life (1949) and the tragic king in Richard II (1950). The Manchester Guardian called the last "a brilliant performance: television acting at its best"."King Richard II", The Manchester Guardian, 8 November 1950, p. 3 Wheatley's film credits in the 1940s include Caesar and Cleopatra (1945), The Rake's Progress (1945), Appointment with Crime (1946), Brighton Rock (1947) and Calling Paul Temple (1948).
In 1945 Wheatley rejoined the Old Vic company, touring as Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet. At the end of the year he joined the company at the Mercury Theatre, London, where his roles included the Greek and Tegeus in a double bill of W. B. Yeats's The Resurrection and Christopher Fry's A Phoenix Too Frequent,"The Mercury", The Stage, 2 May 1946, p. 7 Julian in Ronald Duncan's This Way to the Tomb (which the cast also played at the Studio Champs-Elysées in Paris and the Garrick Theatre, London), and Harry in T. S. Eliot's The Family Reunion. In 1949 he played the title role in Hamlet at the Richmond Theatre. The reviewer in The Stage thought Wheatley displayed "a good voice and presence" in the role but was "rather lightweight"."At Richmond", The Stage, 16 June 1949, p. 7
Between 1955 and 1959 Wheatley is recorded by the British Film Institute as appearing in 54 episodes of the ABC television series The Adventures of Robin Hood as the Sheriff of Nottingham, the perpetual adversary of Robin Hood (Richard Greene). "Alan Wheatley", British Film Institute. Retrieved 25 September 2020 He played the role "with many a villainous smile", as The Times said, but eventually withdrew from it. His colleague Peter Cotes said that the part made him into a well known "personality",Cotes, Peter. "Holmes and Machiavelli", The Guardian, 3 September 1991, p. 35 and although he was regarded by colleagues as "the best high comedy actor in Britain",Basil Ashmore, quoted in "Entertainment", Buckinghamshire Examiner,14 November 1975, p. 12 and "daring", "haunting" and "moving" in various roles, nonetheless, after the Robin Hood series he was, in the words of an obituarist, "more inclined to be cast as a suave villain than as a hero"."Alan Wheatley", The Times, 4 September 1991, p. 16 Concurrently with some of the Robin Hood series, Wheatley played Pontius Pilate in a BBC television religious drama series, Jesus of Nazareth first shown in 1956. His other television roles of the 1950s included Rupert Cadell in Rope (1953) and the murderous Jonathan Brewster in the comedy Arsenic and Old Lace (1958). His film roles included Inspector Braddock in The Limping Man (1953) and Inspector MacLennan in The House Across the Lake (1954).
Wheatley's entry in Who's Who in the Theatre records no stage appearances by him between 1952 and 1959. In February 1959 he played Edgar Marr in an American thriller, House Without Windows. In December of the same year he played Abanazar in Aladdin, a lavish show at the London Coliseum, with songs by Cole Porter, production and choreography by Robert Helpmann, and co-starring Bob Monkhouse, Ian Wallace and Ronald Shiner."Aladdin at the Coliseum", The Sphere, 26 December 1959, p. 28
In later years, Wheatley worked mostly on radio, as narrator and poetry-reader as well as actor. In 1975, he played Judas Iscariot in the 12-part cycle The Man Born to be King by Dorothy L. Sayers. He acted in adaptations of plays by writers including Noël Coward and Somerset Maugham, and of novels by Alexandre Dumas, James Hilton, Anthony Powell and C. P. Snow among others. "Alan Wheatley", BBC Genome. Retrieved 26 September 2020 He made his final appearance in 1991 in a BBC Radio 4 adaptation of A Day by the Sea, with Wendy Hiller and Michael Hordern, both old friends of his.Gauld, Graham. "Alan Wheatley", The Times, 22 October 1991, p. 16
Wheatley died of a heart attack in Westminster, London on 30 August 1991, aged 84.GRO Register of Deaths; SEP 1991 15; 1514 Westminster; Alan Wheatley; DoB = 19 Apr 1907; aged 84
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> "Bardell against Pickwick", British Film Institute. Retrieved 25 September 2020
War and post-war
1950s
Later years
Filmography
1931 Out of the Blue Extra Uncredited 1931 The Love Race Extra Uncredited 1936 The Conquest of Air Borelli 1937 William Tindale William Tindale 1944 Love Story Partygoer Uncredited 1945 The Rake's Progress Edwards Caesar and Cleopatra Persian 1946 Appointment with Crime Noel Penn Spring Song Menelli 1947 Jassy Sir Edward Walker The End of the River Irygoyen Brighton Rock Fred Hale 1948 Corridor of Mirrors Edgar Orsen Counterblast M.W. Kennedy Calling Paul Temple Edward Lathom Sleeping Car to Trieste Karl / Charles Pool 1949 It's Not Cricket Felix For Them That Trespass Librarian Uncredited 1951 Home to Danger Hughes 1952 Whispering Smith Hits London Reith The Pickwick Papers Fogg 1953 Spaceways Dr Smith The Limping Man Inspector Braddock Small Town Story Nick Hammond 1954 The Javenese Dagger Victor Short The Diamond Thompson Blake The House Across the Lake Inspector MacLennan Delayed Action Mark Cruden Elizabethan Express Narrator Joint Narrator, with Howard Marion Crawford. 1955 Simon and Laura Adrian Lee 1958 The Duke Wore Jeans King of Ritallia 1960 Inn for Trouble Harold Gaskin 1961 Frederic Chopin Unknown short film The Shadow of the Cat Inspector Rowles 1963 Master Spy Paul Skelton Tomorrow at Ten Assistant Commissioner Bewley 1964 A Jolly Bad Fellow Epicene Clash By Night Ronald Grey-Simmons
References and sources
Sources
External links
|
|