John Comer
John Comer | |
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Died | 1983 (aged 59) |
Occupation | actor |
Years active | 1940s - 1980s |
John Comer (d. 1983) was a British comedic actor. He starred in the television series I Didn't Know You Cared, Last of the Summer Wine and All Our Saturdays.
Early life
Raised in Stretford, Lancashire,[1] Comer gained an engineering apprenticeship at Metropolitan-Vickers, Trafford Park.[2]
Early career
Comer began his career performing a comedy routine around local social clubs and pubs in the 1930s and 1940s. In 1952, with his younger brother Tony, he performed in a children's theatre production for local schools in Stretford. The siblings then formed a double act named The Comer Brothers.[1] In 1957 the brothers began a regular slot at the Manchester Apollo, performing a variety act entitled Comer's Cottage.
In 1958 the Comer Brothers participated in an ITV talent show called Bid For Fame and began working for Butlin's. In 1959 they won first prize in the Butlin's National Talent Contest, winning £1,000 and a film contract[1] with the Boulting Brothers.[2]
Success
In 1959 the Boulting Brothers cast John and Tony Comer in the film I'm All Right Jack, in which they starred alongside Peter Sellers and Richard Attenborough as trade union shop stewards. Their next film roles were in 1961, when they featured alongside Rita Tushingham in A Taste of Honey. However shortly afterwards Tony decided to leave showbusiness and returned to full-time work at Metropolitan-Vickers, while John decided to continue pursuing his film career. He appeared in the Boulting Brothers' 1967 film The Family Way as a father-of-the-bride to Hayley Mills's character, whose father John Mills portrayed her father-in-law.
He gained a recurring role in 1973 as the primary supporting role of Sid in the new BBC sitcom Last of the Summer Wine. He also starred in a long-running advertising campaign for Home Brew Beer.[2] 1977 saw him appear as Bill Malley in the BBC series "Murder Most English".
Death
Comer died of throat cancer in 1983, at the age of 59.[1] The disease had so affected his voice that in his final television appearance, as cafe owner Sid, in the Last of the Summer Wine Christmas film Getting Sam Home, his lines had to be dubbed by another actor, Tony Melody. His funeral was held at Carleton Crematorium, Blackpool, where he is commemorated at rose-bed no. 18. After the death of Comer's wife, Mollie, in 2010, his estate was finalised; in 2013 the Comer family donated £245,000 to the hospice in Blackpool where John Comer was treated before his death.[1]
Film roles
Year | Title | Role |
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1959 | I'm Alright Jack | Union Shop Steward |
1960 | Hell Is a City | Police Driver |
1963 | Heavens Above! | Butcher |
1965 | Rotten to the Core | Police Sergeant |
1966 | The Family Way | Leslie Piper |
1968 | Happy Deathday | Briggs |
1969 | Battle of Britain | Policeman |
1970 | Wuthering Heights | |
1970 | There's a Girl in My Soup | John |
1971 | Mr. Forbush and the Penguins | Police Sergeant |
1971 | Villain | Waiter |
1972 | Dr. Phibes Rises Again | Ship's Officer |
1973 | The Lovers! | Geoffrey's Dad |
Television roles
Year | Title | Role |
---|---|---|
1962-63 | Coronation Street | Mr. Birtles |
1965 | Coronation Street | Taxi Driver |
1966 | Pardon the Expression | Policeman |
1967 | Turn out the Lights | Policeman |
1968 | Coronation Street | Wilf Jones |
1973 | Bless This House | The Landlord |
1972-74 | Play For Today | Various |
1973 | All Our Saturdays | Wilf |
1973-83 | Last of the Summer Wine | Sid |
1975 | The Life of Riley | George Pollitt |
1975-79 | I Didn't Know You Cared | Les Brandon |
1976-78 | Potter's Picture Palace | Sidney Bogart |
1977 | Murder Most English | Recurring role as a police sergeant |
1977 | Survivors | Les Norton |
1978 | All Creatures Great and Small | Mr. Dimmock |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Banks, Kate (11 April 2013). "Late Last of the Summer Wine actor's family to donate £245,000 to cancer hospice". UK: Messenger Newspapers. Archived from the original on 17 January 2016. Retrieved 28 March 2016.
- 1 2 3 "The Comer Brothers". St Ann's Stretford Parish Magazine. Christmas 200. p. 14. Check date values in:
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External links
- John Comer at the Internet Movie Database
- John Comer at the BBC Comedy Guide