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b.
Ronald William
George Barker OBE
,
25
September 1929,
Bedford, England.
d.
3 October 2005,
Dean, Oxfordshire, England. |
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Ronald William George Barker
popularly known as Ronnie Barker and (as a writer) Gerald Wiley
was an English comic actor and writer. His best-known
appearances were alongside his long-time comedy partner, Ronnie
Corbett, in the very popular TV variety show The Two Ronnies; as
Norman Stanley "Fletch" Fletcher in the sitcom
Porridge and its BAFTA award winning sequel Going Straight; and working with David
Jason in Open All Hours. His skills as a character actor, his love
for and facility with the English language, and his gift for
comedy made him a well-loved performer.
Barker was born in Bedford in Bedfordshire. He had two sisters and
the family moved to Oxford when his father, a clerk for Shell Oil,
was relocated, when Barker was four years old. He took to writing
plays for his family and neighbours, and often sat in the audience
of the Oxford Playhouse, his local repertory company, dreaming of
fame. Barker attended Oxford High School and at 16, he left and
took a job as a bank clerk - but the theatre called. He wrote to
the Aylesbury Repertory Company in 1948 and his show business
career began. Barker then went on to join the Playhouse Theatre,
at the time under the actor-management of Frank Shelley, as an
actor and stagehand, at £2 10s (£2.50) per week. The two appeared
together there, in Ben Travers's A Cuckoo in the Nest and,
subsequently, in a number of other venues and roles. In 1993,
Barker dedicated his autobiography to Shelley, whom he called one
of the "three wise men who directed my career; without men like
these, there would be no theatre." Barker
married Joy Tubb in 1957 and they had three children: two sons,
the actors Adam (b. 1967) and Larry (b. 1960) and one daughter,
the actress Charlotte Barker (b. 1963). He retired to Dean, a
hamlet near Chipping Norton in Oxfordshire to run an antiques shop
in 1987. He died in a local hospice from heart failure on Monday 3
October 2005, aged 76, with his wife by his side. His catchphrase
ending from The Two Ronnies provided the perfect epitaph:
"Goodnight From Him".

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