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b.
John Edward Thaw CBE, 3 January 1942,
Longsight, Manchester, England
d.
21 February 2002,
Wiltshire, England. |
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John Thaw was a British actor who
achieved his first starring role in the military police television
drama Redcap 1964 – 1966, and subsequently appeared in a range of
television, stage and cinema roles.
Thaw came from a working class background, having been born in
Longsight, Manchester to parents John and Dorothy. He studied at
the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art where he was a contemporary of
Tom Courtenay. On leaving RADA, Thaw was awarded a contract with
the Liverpool Playhouse. His first film role was a bit part in the
1962 adaptation of The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner
starring Tom Courtenay; and he also guested in an early episode of
The Avengers. Thaw will perhaps be best remembered for two roles:
the hard-bitten Flying Squad detective Jack Regan in the
television series (and two films) The Sweeney (1975 – 1978), which
established him as a major star in the United Kingdom, and as the
quietly-spoken, introspective and bitter detective Inspector Morse
(1987 – 2001), with specials in 1995 – 1998 and 2000.He won two
BAFTA awards for Inspector Morse.
He subsequently played liberal barrister James Kavanagh in
Kavanagh QC (1995 – 1999), with a special in 2001. Thaw also tried
his hand at comedy with his own sitcom called Home to Roost (1985
– 1988).His only screen projects not considered a popular success
were the BBC series A Year in Provence and the LWT series Mitch,
in which he played a journalist.
Thaw appeared in a number of films, including Cry Freedom, for
which he received a BAFTA nomination for Best Supporting Actor,
and Chaplin for director Richard Attenborough.In 1964 Thaw married Sally Alexander, but they divorced four years
later. He married actress Sheila Hancock in 1973 and remained with
her until his death from cancer in 2002, aged 60.
Thaw had two daughters: Abigail Thaw from his first marriage, and
Joanna Thaw from his second.
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