LEONARD ROSSITER

DVD of first series of ''The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin'' starring Leonard Rossiter

'Leonard Rossiter' (21 October 1926 – 5 October 1984) was a distinguished English actor, known for his comedy roles in two British television series of the 1970s, and for his roles in two Stanley Kubrick films.
Rossiter was born in Liverpool. He began acting when he picked up a girlfriend from her amateur dramatics class and was challenged to do better when he criticised her and her fellow performers. He soon gave up his job in insurance to enroll in repertory theatre and turn professional as an actor at the comparatively late age of 27.
He broke into film roles with ''Billy Liar'' in which he plays the title character's boss. This brief role fixed him with audiences as an often flawed and inflexible authority figure - apparently similar to his real-life personality. Through the 1950s and 1960s he established himself as a hugely respected actor in theatre and film, and began to make his presence felt on television, with a semi-regular role as Det-Insp Bamber in the police series ''Z Cars'', as well as guest roles in series as diverse as ''Steptoe and Son'' ('The Lead man Cometh', 1964) and ''The Avengers'' ('Dressed to Kill', 1963). In 1968 he played the supporting role of undertaker Mr Sowerberry in the film version of Lionel Bart's musical ''Oliver!'' and further came to wider public notice when he landed one of the few speaking supporting roles in Stanley Kubrick's '' as the Russian scientist Smyslov (he was to work with Kubrick again, in ''Barry Lyndon'' seven years later). Continuing the science fiction theme, in the same year as ''2001'', he appeared in the prescient BBC TV play ''The Year of the Sex Olympics'' by ''Quatermass'' creator Nigel Kneale.
In 1969 he premiered in the UK in the title role of Brecht's ''The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui''. The part of the petty tyrant was perfectly suited to Rossiter and garnered critical and public acclaim. He returned to the BBC sitcom ''Steptoe and Son'' for the 1972 episode 'The Desperate Hours' as an escaped convict, before winning his two leading roles in sitcoms which made him a household name.
In ''Rising Damp'', on ITV, he played Rigsby, the lecherous landlord of a house converted to a block of seedy bedsits, reprising the role from its successful stage version, entitled ''The Banana Box''. While on ''Rising Damp'', he also took the eponymous lead in ''The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin'', adapted by David Nobbs from his own ''Reginald Perrin'' comic novels and aired on the BBC. His performances as Rigsby and Perrin earned him enormous critical acclaim, including from his co-stars. During this period, he was given a surprise tribute on ''This Is Your Life'' in 1975.
At the same time he starred alongside Joan Collins as her bumbling suitor in a series of successful and endearing Cinzano commercials, in which somehow the drink would be spilled down the female character's dress. In the 2000 Channel 4 programme ''The 100 Greatest TV Ads'', Terry Lovelock, the director of several of these commercials, revealed that he found Rossiter difficult to work with, and had referred to Collins as "The Prop".
In the animated adaptation of ''The Perishers'' he provided the voice for Boot the dog. He reprised Rigsby for a movie version of ''Rising Damp'' in 1980 — meaning he had now played the role on stage, TV and film — and his last TV role was that of the eponymous supermarket manager in ''Tripper's Day'', an ITV sitcom which was not up to the standards of the shows he had previously adorned.
He continued to make a steady stream of cinema appearances, including a role in Lindsay Anderson's dark parable ''Britannia Hospital'' (1982).
In 1981, Rossiter came out with a book entitled ''The Lowest Form of Wit.'' The book was a collection of biting bon mots, stinging retorts, and insults showing Rossiter's acid wit, plus a definitive guide to sarcasm. It was published later as a paperback in 1983. The book is divided into six main sections and illustrated with cartoons, and includes a history of sarcasm.
He played the title roles in the BBC Shakespeare production of ''King John'' and also in the short film ''Le Pétomane'', the stage name of Josef Pujols who, due to an unusual accident he suffered in youth, was able to take in and expel an almost limitless amount of gas through his anus, an ability he exploited to become for several years the main attraction at the Moulin Rouge.
Rossiter's last film appearance was in ''Water''.

Contents
Death
External links

Death


Rossiter died from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in 1984 while waiting to go onstage at the Lyric Theatre, London, where he was performing in Joe Orton's play ''Loot''. He left behind his second wife Gillian (he had previously been married to actress Josephine Tewson) and a daughter Camilla. His affair with broadcaster Sue MacGregor was not revealed until long afterwards. Rossiter's death came as a surprise as he was very fit — he played squash, football and tennis regularly — and had been given an 'all clear' by his doctor prior to accepting the role in ''Loot''.

External links



LeonardRossiter.com: His Life and Career

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