Eric " Ricky" Tomlinson (born 26 September 1939) is an English actor. He is best known for his television roles as Bobby Grant in the soap opera Brookside (1982–1988), DCI Charlie Wise in Cracker (1993–2006) and Jim Royle in The Royle Family (1998–2012). He also played the titular character in the 2001 football mockumentary .
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Tomlinson played banjo in bands known as the Guitanjos, Hobo Rick & The City Slickers, and Hobo Rick and the Hi-Free Three. For a time, the band's pianist was John "Duff" Lowe, a former member of The Beatles forerunner the Quarrymen.
A plasterer by trade, Tomlinson worked on various building sites for many years.
In 2001 Tomlinson starred in the BBC Series Nice Guy Eddie playing a Liverpool private investigator. Using down-to-earth cases — actually based upon real-life ones from Liverpool private investigator Tony Smith — the show also starred Tom Ellis and John Henshaw.
Tomlinson featured heavily in series two of Paul Abbott's series Clocking Off, in a BAFTA-nominated episode written by Danny Brocklehurst.
Tomlinson has fronted a series of television adverts for the utility company Centrica. In January 2010, he began to appear in a series of advertisements for the frozen food chain Farmfoods. In 2017, he provided a voiceover for an advert for McCain Foods.
On 19 June 2006, Tomlinson made his début as the guest celebrity in Dictionary Corner on the long-running UK Channel 4 game show Countdown.
In December 2006, he presented a programme in Channel Five's Disappearing Britain series entitled "When Coal Was King".
In March 2007, Tomlinson presented BBC's One Life: Guilty My Arse, detailing his version of the "Shrewsbury Two" case, in which he compared his political activism as a trade unionist to the work of the .
In March 2011, Tomlinson appeared in an advertising campaign for UK retail chain The Range.
The BBC broadcast a programme in its Who Do You Think You Are? series 13 on Tomlinson's ancestors, which traced his family back through a number of carters working around Liverpool at a time when the city was a bustling port.
In 2020, Tomlinson, alongside his Royle Family co-star Ralf Little, presented a travel series called Ricky & Ralf's Very Northern Road Trip for Gold.
In 2023, Tomlinson appeared at Eurovision 2023 reciting a poem dedicated to the Beatles. He also reprised his role as the character Bobby Grant, and was seen putting up Ukrainian-themed bunting outside the Grant home on Brookside Close.
In 2017, Tomlinson starred in the LGBT short film Tellin' Dad (2017) (co-starring actor Carl Loughlin as his son) which was the first LGBT project he has been involved in and followed the journey of his son building up courage to come out to him. The film was released on DVD, Amazonplay and distributed by Peccadillo Pictures worldwide on several platforms and on their Boys on Film DVD collection.
During 2008 and 2009, Tomlinson took his Laughter Show theatrical revue on a UK tour with fellow comedians Tony Barton, Duncan Norvelle and Pauline Daniels.
In 2009, he took a lead role as the Head Judge in the "VMH Club Star Talent Trail", a local talent-based competition held at the VMH Club in Garston. A large number of North West-based performers entered the competition, which was ultimately won by 14-year-old Shaun Walsh from Liverpool.
In May 2010, Tomlinson opened his own cabaret club the Green Room, in Liverpool, teaming up with brothers Richard and Simon Wallace, from Liverpool production company Red Hot Media, to open the 250-seater cabaret lounge on Duke Street.
In 2003, he published an autobiography, entitled Ricky, which spent five weeks at the top of the UK best-selling new books chart. In the book, Tomlinson admitted to having affairs as well as describing in detail his time in prison.
On 19 October 2007, Tomlinson had quadruple heart bypass surgery at Liverpool's Cardiothoracic Centre. Consultant cardiac surgeon Aung Oo said: "The operation went according to plan and he is now recovering within the hospital's critical care unit." "Actor Tomlinson has heart surgery", BBC News, 19 October 2007
Tomlinson suffers from nodular prurigo, which was the subject of an interview in the Daily Mirror in October 2013.
Tomlinson still resides in Liverpool, stating "I will never, ever move away from Liverpool, I love it here."
In 1972, he joined the in a building workers' dispute in Shrewsbury. Following allegations of violence during this protest, in 1973 Tomlinson was charged with "conspiracy to intimidate" as one of the Shrewsbury Two. Despite pleading his innocence at Shrewsbury Crown Court, he was found guilty and sentenced to two years in prison, alongside fellow picket Des Warren. After his release in 1975, he disrupted the TUC conference by shouting from the wings after he had been prevented from speaking on the stage. In 2012, Tomlinson and others sought to have the convictions overturned by the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC). In 2013 a paper petition was launched, alongside the existing e-petition, for an Early Day Motion by MP John McDonnell to be brought. In July 2013, at the Durham Miners' Gala, he again campaigned against the convictions. In May 2020 it was announced that the CCRC had referred a number of convictions relating to the Shrewsbury dispute, including Tomlinson's, to the Court of Appeal which subsequently overturned the convictions in March 2021.
Tomlinson is a close friend of Arthur Scargill and often appears on party political broadcasts for Scargill's Socialist Labour Party, most recently for the 2009 European Parliament elections. He is a long-time member of the Socialist Labour Party, and is the party's most prominent celebrity supporter since its formation in 1996.
He has also expressed support for the Campaign for a New Workers' Party. A public meeting was hosted by the CNWP in Liverpool on Monday 12 February 2007, which Tomlinson addressed alongside Tommy Sheridan and Tony Mulhearn in which he used the slogan: "New Labour My Arse".
On 5 February 2010, Tomlinson revealed his plan to stand as the Socialist Labour Party candidate for the Liverpool Wavertree constituency at the 2010 general election in protest at the selection of Luciana Berger, a 28-year-old London as the Labour Party candidate. Kim Singleton was ultimately selected for the seat; in a statement, the SLP said that he could not contest the election due to "personal and contractual commitments". Tomlinson added: "I am disappointed not to be able to stand. But I am pleased to give the chosen candidate my wholehearted support." He also commented, "People say you could be letting the Tory in. But there is no difference between the Conservatives and New Labour". Singleton ultimately finished sixth out of seven candidates, with Berger winning the seat.
In a guest appearance on an episode of the ITV lunchtime chat show, Loose Women, broadcast on 17 August 2015, while discussing the forthcoming Labour Party leadership election, Tomlinson said:
I know both of them and I know Andy Burnham quite well, and he was my choice right up until I went to listen to Jeremy Corbyn and I went to the Adelphi Hotel where there was 3,000 people there, the room holds 800 and were out into the streets, they couldn't get in. And everything he said with I agreed with you know, leave the National Health Service alone, get rid of Trident, stuff like that, so it doesn't matter to me who gets the Labour leadership, it really doesn't matter. But whatever happens both of them will be in the Shadow Cabinet.
In the 2020 Labour Party leadership election, Tomlinson endorsed Sir Keir Starmer, who he said he had worked with during the Shrewsbury 24 justice campaign.
In November 2010, it was reported that Tomlinson had donated £1 million to the Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool two years previously.
1981 | Play for Today | Dennis | Episode: "United Kingdom" |
1982 | Crown Court | Clerk of Court | 3 episodes |
Boys from the Blackstuff | Hospital Doctor | Episode: "George's Last Ride" | |
1982–1988 | Brookside | Bobby Grant | 193 episodes |
1989 | Dear Sarah | Warder #1 | Television film |
1993 | The Bill | Ray Hickey | Episode: "Home to Roost" |
1994 | Where the Buffalo Roam | Glyn Hunter | Television film |
1995 | The All New Alexei Sayle Show | Man Selling Chicken in Pub | Episode: #2.2 |
1994–1995 | Roughnecks | Cinders | 13 episodes |
1994–1996 | Cracker | DCI Charlie Wise | 15 episodes |
1996 | Hillsborough | John Glover | Television film |
1997 | The Fix | Gordon | Television film |
10x10 | Episode: "Johnny Watkins Walks on Water" | ||
1998–2002 | Playing the Field | Jim Pratt | 29 episodes |
1998–2012 | The Royle Family | Jim Royle | 25 episodes |
1999 | Dockers | Macca Macaulay | Television film |
Cold Feet | Cabbie | Episode: #2.5 | |
The Greatest Store in the World | Santa | Television film | |
Hooves of Fire | Santa Claus (voice) | Television film | |
2000 | Safe as Houses | Lawrence Davidson | Television film |
2001 | Clocking Off | Ronnie Anderson | 4 episodes |
Nice Guy Eddie | Eddie McMullen | Television film | |
My Beautiful Son | Uncle Alfred | Television film | |
2002 | Nice Guy Eddie | Eddie McMullen | 6 episodes |
2004 | Dalziel and Pascoe | Rowan Priestley | Episode: "The Price of Fame" |
Monkey Trousers | Various roles | Television film | |
2004–2005 | Down to Earth | Tony Murphy | 18 episodes |
2005 | Mike Bassett | 6 episodes | |
2006 | Animal Spies | Ted (voice) | Television series |
2008 | Stepdad | Grandad | Television film |
2013 | Great Night Out | Warren | 6 episodes |
Jim Royle | Television film | ||
2013–2014 | In the Flesh | Ken Burton | 4 episodes |
2016 | The Last Dragonslayer | Moobin | Television film |
2019 | Matopulas | Terry McGlocklin | Television film |
2020 | Ricky & Ralf's Very Northern Road Trip | Himself | 6 episodes. With Ralf Little |
2022 | The Witchfinder | Crockett | Episode: #1.5 |
2024 | Ricky, Sue and a Trip or Two | Himself | 3 episodes. With Sue Johnston |
DNA Journey With Ancestry | Himself | 1 episodes. With Sue Johnston |
1987 | Out of Order | Decorator | |
1991 | Riff-Raff | Larry | |
1993 | Raining Stones | Tommy | |
1995 | Butterfly Kiss | Robert | |
1996 | Bob's Weekend | Jack | |
1997 | Life Is All You Get | Bruno 'Buddy' Budenski | aka Das Leben ist eine Baustelle |
Preaching to the Perverted | Fibbin' Gibbins | ||
Mojo | Ezra | ||
1999 | Nasty Neighbours | Harold Peach | |
The Greatest Store in the World | Santa | ||
2000 | Lounge Act | (voice) | Short film |
2001 | Mike Bassett | ||
The 51st State | Leopold Durant | ||
2002 | Once Upon a Time in the Midlands | Charlie | |
Al's Lads | Billy | ||
Five Ways John Wayne Didn't Die | Dead Man (voice) | ||
2003 | The Virgin of Liverpool | Frank Conlon | |
2007 | Learning to Walk | Granddad | Short film |
Plenty More Fish | Compere | Short film | |
2009 | Nativity! | Lord Mayor | |
2011 | Flutter | Freddie | |
2014 | Psyched | Brian the Ghost Union President | Short film |
Northern Soul | John's Grandad | ||
2015 | The Hound & the Rabbit | William | Short film |
Him Upstairs | Frank Conroy | Short film | |
2016 | Grimsby | Paedo Pete | |
Mike Bassett: Interim Manager | Mike Bassett | ||
2017 | Tellin' Dad | Dad | Short film |
Gloves Off | Mick | ||
2018 | Fighter from the Docks | Grandad | |
The More You Ignore Me | Bert Wildgoose | ||
2022 | Tales of the Creeping Death | Dad | |
2023 | Our Kid | Phil Reilly |
|
|