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George A. Cooper

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British actor (1925–2018)
This article is about the actor. For the film director, seeGeorge A. Cooper (director).

George A. Cooper
Publicity still, 1963
Born
George Alphonsus Cooper

(1925-03-07)7 March 1925
Died16 November 2018(2018-11-16) (aged 93)
Liss,Hampshire, England
Occupation(s)Actor and voice artist
Years active1946–1995
Spouse(s)Anne Shirley Jones
(m. 1955–2000; (her death)

George Alphonsus Cooper (7 March 1925 – 16 November 2018)[1] was an English actor and voice artist.[2] He died in November 2018 at the age of 93.[3]

Early life

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Cooper was born in Leeds, the son of William and Eleanor (née Dobson) Cooper. His father worked on the railways as a train guard.[1] The younger Cooper began to train as an electrical engineer, but enlisted in theRoyal Artillery during the Second World War, acting with the Royal Artillery Depot Players in India.[4]

Stage career

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After a short period as a draughtsman he joinedTheatre Workshop, then based in Manchester.Joan Littlewood's company, also based in Glasgow for a time, then concentrated on performing its productions on tour. The company's permanent base became London'sTheatre Royal Stratford East in 1953, the opening production beingTwelfth Night with Cooper as Malvolio andHarry H. Corbett as Sir Andrew Aguecheek.[1] Both men were often cast in antagonist roles in Theatre Workshop productions during the next few years. Cooper left the company in 1955.[1] Cooper played Geoffrey Fisher, the stern father of the eponymous antiheroBilly Liar, in the originalWest Endstage production in 1960. According to Tom Courtenay, who took over the role of Billy from Albert Finney, immediately prior to his entrance in Act One, Scene One, while waiting in the wings, Cooper would regularly mime taking 'the most enormous shit', which would involve removing his braces, lowering his trousers and making (in)appropriate noises, a routine he timed impeccably, so that his stage entrance would immediately follow hoisting his trousers and braces back into place.[5] His wife, Shirley Jones (married 1955), who worked as a Theatre Workshop costume assistant, did not like his absences during the evenings, and Cooper himself found eight performances ofBilly Liar a week to be a strain. Increasingly he turned to television for work.[4]

Television and film career

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He had a recurring role inCoronation Street as Willie Piggott, a dubious businessman, between 1964 and 1971.[6] One of his other regular roles was as thecaretaker Mr. Griffiths in the long-running children's TV seriesGrange Hill.[7] from 1985 to 1992. He returned to the role of Geoffrey Fisher in the sitcom version ofBilly Liar (1973–74).[8]

Among Cooper's other television credits areVicky and the Sultan, Danger Man,Z-Cars,Dixon of Dock Green,No Hiding Place,Doctor Who,Angel Pavement,Softly, Softly,The Avengers,The Saint, Roll on Four O’Clock,Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased),The Troubleshooters,Steptoe and Son,A Family at War,Doomwatch,Public Eye,Budgie,Bless This House,Sykes,Rising Damp,The New Avengers,Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em,All Creatures Great and Small,Poor Little Rich Girls,Juliet Bravo,When the Boat Comes In,Terry and June,Taggart,Casualty andHeartbeat.[9]

Cooper had roles in many films including:Violent Playground (1958),Hell Is a City (1960),The Cracksman (1963),Nightmare (1964),Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968) withChristopher Lee and the film version ofBless This House (1972) withSid James.[10][11]

He also appeared in a 1976 training film forBritish Leyland entitledThe Quality Connection, where he plays the disgruntled owner of a newMorris Marina which suffers from numerous faults due to quality deficiencies in the production process.

Selected filmography

[edit]

References

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  1. ^abcdCoveney, Michael (30 November 2018)."George A Cooper obituary".The Guardian. Retrieved21 December 2018.
  2. ^"George A. Cooper".BFI. Archived fromthe original on 4 August 2012.
  3. ^"George Cooper Obituary (2018) - Petersfield, Hampshire - The Times".www.legacy.com.
  4. ^ab"George A Cooper obituary".The Times. 21 December 2018. Retrieved21 December 2018.
  5. ^Courtenay, Tom (2000).Dear Tom: Letters from Home. Black Swan. p. 355.ISBN 0-552-99926-1.
  6. ^Guide, British Comedy."Billy Liar - ITV Sitcom".British Comedy Guide.
  7. ^"Staff 1978-1990 - Grange Hill Cast".www.grangehillevents.co.uk.
  8. ^Guide, British Comedy."About Billy Liar - British Comedy Guide".British Comedy Guide.
  9. ^"George A. Cooper".www.aveleyman.com.
  10. ^"George A. Cooper movies, photos, movie reviews, filmography, and biography - AllMovie".AllMovie.
  11. ^"George A. Cooper".TV Guide.

External links

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