Walter Frederick George Williams (8 October 1928 – 30 March 2018), Heartbeat actor Bill Maynard dies after fall better known by his stage name Bill Maynard, was an English comedian and actor. He began working in television in the 1950s, notably starring alongside Terry Scott in Great Scott – It's Maynard! (1955–56). In the 1970s and 1980s, he starred in the successful British sitcoms Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt and The Gaffer and appeared in five films in the Carry On series. After a hiatus from television work in the late 1980s, Maynard starred as Claude Jeremiah Greengrass in the long-running television series Heartbeat from 1992 to 2000, reprising the character in the spin-off The Royal in 2003.
In 1971, Maynard entered into acting, securing a role on Dennis Potter's television play Paper Roses, which was about the last day in the life of a reporter, and then securing another role for Colin Welland's television play, Kisses at Fifty in 1973. Around the same year, he worked with television actor and comedian Ronnie Barker in the (original) "Football Blues", which aired as "Spanners Eleven", and was part of a series called Seven of One. In 1974, Maynard became a subject of This Is Your Life, when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews. Around the same time, Maynard went to work for ITV Yorkshire, starring in a pilot episode for a new sitcom. In 1975, he published his autobiography, The Yo-Yo Man, with Leicester's Golden Eagle books.
In 1981, Maynard starred in three series of the ITV sitcom The Gaffer until its conclusion two years later in 1983. In The Gaffer, Maynard played Fred Moffat, a downbeat, cynical and cunning character focused on survival who runs a struggling engineering firm, and who is constantly trying to avoid his creditors, the tax man, the bank manager, trade unionists at his engineering firm, and indeed seeking to avoid anyone who might want him to pay for something. The character of Fred Moffat was in contrast to the high profile, upbeat, good hearted, bumbling, casual labourer Selwyn Froggitt from his earlier sitcom, with the contrasts between the two even going as far as Fred Moffat having a beard and Selwyn Froggitt being clean shaven.
During the 1970s, Maynard secured roles in a number of films: he starred in five of the Carry On films, including Carry On Matron (1972) and Carry On Dick (1974). He starred as Mr. Lea alongside Anthony Booth, Robin Askwith and Doris Hare in all four films in the Confessions series of sex comedy and appeared in the 1976 film It Shouldn't Happen to a Vet.
In April 1992, he returned to Yorkshire Television as lovable rogue Claude Jeremiah Greengrass in Heartbeat, a new ITV drama series set in the 1960s. It was a major success, consistently drawing over 10 million viewers. Maynard published a new book, Stand Up...And Be Counted, in 1997 with Breedon Books.
In October 2009, he made a return to the stage when he appeared as the main guest of honour at the Pride of Bridlington Awards held in the East Riding of Yorkshire. By then, his career slowly wound down due to his age and impaired mobility from his strokes, whereupon his final television appearance was made on 14 April 2018 for an episode of Pointless Celebrities; filming took place prior to his death, while the episode aired 15 days after his death.
Maynard married Muriel Linnett on 5 November 1949, and they had two children. She died in June 1983. He was a vegetarian. His son is musician Martin Maynard Williams.
Maynard was a supporter of the Labour Party, but in March 1984 he stood against Tony Benn in the by-election at Chesterfield as an Independent Labour candidate, after objecting to the way that Benn became the official Labour Party candidate in a safe seat. Maynard took fourth place in the by-election.
On 4 September 1989, Maynard married actress and singer Tonia Bern, the widow of Donald Campbell, at Hinckley Registry Office. They divorced in 1998. Bern died on 14 June 2021.
In later life, having suffered multiple strokes which resulted in a reduction in his mobility, he used a scooter or wheelchair. He died in hospital on 30 March 2018, not long after falling and breaking his hip.
| Oldham |
| Scene cut |
| Voice |
| 1957 | Pantomania: Babes in the Wood | Babe | TV film |
| 1960 | No Hiding Place | Vic Wilson | Episode: "The Head Case" |
| You Too Can Have a Body | Chick Wade | TV film | |
| 1969 | The Ugliest Girl in Town | Vladimir | Episode: "The Track Star" |
| 1970 | Coronation Street | Mickie Malone | 5 episodes |
| Up Pompeii! | Parcantus | Episode: "The Actors" | |
| 1971 | ITV Sunday Night Theatre | Clarence Hubbard | Episode: "Paper Roses" |
| Thirty-Minute Theatre | Zink | Episode: "Psychological Warfare" | |
| 1972 | Sykes | Jim the Policeman | Episode: "Journey" |
| Til Death Us Do Part | Bert | 2 episodes | |
| 1973 | Comedy Playhouse | Frank Potter | Episode: "Elementary, My Dear Watson: The Strange Case of the Dead Solicitors" |
| Play for Today | Harry | Episode: Kisses at Fifty | |
| Love Thy Neighbour | Police Sergeant | Episode: "The G.P.O." | |
| Seven of One | Councillor Todd | Episode: "Spanner's Eleven" | |
| Armchair Theatre | Reg Turnbull | Episode: "The Death of Glory" | |
| 1974-1978 | Oh No It's Selwyn Froggitt | Selwyn Froggitt | Television series |
| 1974 | Father Brown | Mr. Carver | Episode: "The Man With Two Beards" |
| 1975 | The Life of Riley | Frank Riley | Television series |
| The Sweeney | Det. Chief Insp. Stephen Quirk | Episode: "Supersnout" | |
| 1977 | Paradise Island | Rev. Alexander Goodwin | Television series |
| 1980 | Worzel Gummidge | Sergeant Beetroot | 3 episodes |
| Tales of the Unexpected | Merv Pottinger | Episode: "A Picture of a Place" | |
| 1981-1983 | The Gaffer | Fred Moffatt | Television series |
| 1984 | Minder | Barney Todd | Episode: "The Second Time Around" |
| 1989 | In Sickness and in Health | Bert Luscombe | Christmas Special |
| 1991 | Screen One | George Trout | Episode: "Fillipina Dreamgirls" |
| 1992-2000 | Heartbeat | Claude Jeremiah Greengrass | Television series (155 episodes) |
| 2002 | Dalziel and Pascoe | Councillor Cyril Steel | Episode: "Dialogues of the Dead" |
| 2003 | The Royal | Claude Jeremiah Greengrass | Television series (seven episodes) |
| 2017 | The Moorside | Cecil | TV film |
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