/ Stars that died in 2023: Harry Fowler, British character actor, died he was 85.

Monday, June 9, 2014

Harry Fowler, British character actor, died he was 85.


Henry James "Harry" Fowler, MBE was an English actor in film and TV  died he was 85. Over a career lasting more than sixty years he made nearly 200 appearances on screen.

(10 December 1926 – 4 January 2012) 

Personal life

Fowler was born in Lambeth, South Lon­don on 10 December 1926. As a “near illit­er­ate news­pa­per boy” mak­ing eight shillings a week, he told film his­to­rian Brian McFar­lane, he was invited on to radio to speak­ about his life in wartime London.[1]
In 1951 Fowler mar­ried actress Joan Dowling who took her own life in 1954 after her career began to fail.[2] In 1960 he married Catherine Palmer, who survived him. [3]
Fowler died on 4 January 2012. He had no children.[3][1]

Career

Fowler made his on-screen debut as Ern in the 1942 film Those Kids from Town, a propaganda piece about wartime evacuee children from London. This role was given to him after film company executives heard him speaking on the radio about his experiences in wartime London. After a screen test at Elstree studios, Fowler was given the part to star alongside George Cole. His fee was £5 a day, compared with the 8 shillings a week he had been earning as a newspaper boy up to his audition.[1]
His early juvenile roles included Hue and Cry (1947), usually considered the first of the Ealing Comedies. Fowler later married Joan Dowling, one of his co-stars in the Ealing film. Dowling committed suicide in 1954, aged 26.[4]
During the Second World War he had been an aircraftman in the RAF and played a cheerful cockney character with the same job in the film Angels One Five (1952),[5] a portrayal he used in other contexts, often with a humorous slant, mostly especially during his year in The Army Game (1959–60) TV series.
He played Harry Danvers in the clerical comedy Our Man at St Mark’s (1965–66) opposite Donald Sinden[6] and made several appearances on children's television during the 1970s, reading on Jackanory and hosting the series Get This and Going A Bundle with Kenny Lynch.[4] He is also noted for having nar­rated Bob Godfrey Films’ Great: Isam­bard Kingdom Brunel (1975), the first British car­toon to win an Acad­emy Award.[2] His familiar voice was regularly used for TV commercials.
In 1975, Fowler took the part of Eric Lee Fung, described as "a Chinese cockney spiv", in The Melting Pot, a sitcom written by Spike Milligan and Neil Shand. The series was cancelled by the BBC after the first episode had been broadcast.[7]
He was awarded an MBE in 1970, as part of Harold Wilson's Resignation Honours.[8]
In his book British Film Character Actors 1982, Terence Pettigrew wrote that Fowler 'was as English as suet pudding...his characters were neither honest nor irretrievably delinquent, merely wise in the ways of the streets, surviving through a combination of wit and stealth. He had a certain arrogance, but there was an appealing vulnerability, too.'

Selected filmography

Selected TV appearances



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