Bernard Hepton obituary
He was not on the list.
Never on the front cover, but always somehow familiar, Bernard Hepton, who has died aged 92, was one of those actors you were always glad to see again. He could be plain and morose, or authoritative and stern, or he could be extremely funny, but he never let you down, whether as the German Kommandant with a human streak in the popular TV series Colditz (1972-74), or as an ordinary, humdrum “television watcher” in Jack Rosenthal’s sitcom Sadie, It’s Cold Outside (1975), with Rosemary Leach.
The 1970s was Hepton’s decade of greatest activity and exposure. He was hardly off our small screens, appearing as Thomas Cranmer in two BBC Tudor blockbusters, The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1970), starring Keith Michell, and Elizabeth R (1971), with Glenda Jackson in the title role.
Then he popped up as the Greek freedman, Pallas, in I, Claudius (1976), and the high-ranking intelligence officer Toby Esterhase in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1979), starring Alec Guinness, a role he repeated with subtler inflections and a less English accent (the Hungarian-born character had retired and was running an art gallery) in Smiley’s People, also with Guinness, three years later.
In addition, he was a flustered press officer in Philip
Mackie’s The Organisation (1972), a satire on power games co-starring Peter
Egan and Donald Sinden; an incompetent, very funny boss figure in Eric
Chappell’s The Squirrels (1975), set in a television rental company; and a
Belgian resistance fighter, Albert Foiret, running a restaurant patronised by
Nazis while smuggling out prisoners of war in the BBC’s Secret Army (1977-79).
As an actor, he could transform himself without makeup into a king or a countryman. His voice was strong, Yorkshire-tinged, his bearing firm, his timing impeccable, his range quietly stupendous. Chronically shortsighted, he could hide effectively behind spectacles, but without them he bared an unusual moon-like face, curiously blank and expressive at the same time.
He was born in Bradford and grew up in the same street as JB Priestley 20 years before, the son of Bernard Heptonstall, an electrician, and his wife, Hilda, who came from a family of mill workers. The tedium of his duty as a teenage fire-watcher in wartime was relieved by some one-act plays the woman in charge brought along, and this led him to join the amateur drama company based at Bradford Civic Playhouse.
His eyesight exempted him from the call-up, so he trained as
an aircraft engineer, and a draughtsman. But he continued with the playhouse
and when the incoming director, Esmé Church, founded her short-lived drama
school in 1945, he was her first student; Robert Stephens, another of her
proteges, said of Hepton, “immediately, you could see that he was brilliant”.
He went straight into fortnightly rep in York for two years, worked at Windsor and hung around Birmingham Rep, the most talked about regional theatre of the day. Barry Jackson, its founder, became his second great mentor after Church, and he graduated from small roles in 1952 to director of productions for Jackson in 1955.
He had eased this promotion by accidentally becoming
proficient as a fight director with a fellow Rep actor, and he was invited down
to the Old Vic in London to arrange the fights for Richard Burton’s Hamlet in
1953. Back in Birmingham, he directed RC Sherriff’s The Long Sunset and Peter
Ustinov’s Romanoff and Juliet, and undertook Beckett’s monologue of
reminiscences in Krapp’s Last Tape.
Now well-established, after Jackson departed from the Rep, Hepton took on the directorship of Liverpool Playhouse in 1963, only to run into disagreements with a conservative board over his daring choice of repertoire, including Max Frisch’s The Fire-Raisers and John Osborne’s Luther. He also took up cudgels in the Guardian with Peter Hall, arguing that there should be six national theatres throughout Britain, and not just one in London, all funded equally and of equal status.
For someone so highly regarded within his profession it is surprising that he never worked with the National Theatre or the Royal Shakespeare Company. Instead, leaving Liverpool within a year, he joined the newly founded BBC2 channel in 1964, with ideas of producing and directing there.
But he was soon back in front of the camera, having made his TV debut as Sir Thomas More in Robert Bolt’s A Man for All Seasons in a live broadcast in 1957; this was an earlier version (first broadcast on radio in 1954) of the 1960 play (and subsequent film) starring Paul Scofield.
He played Wemmick in a Hugh Leonard 1967 serialisation of Great Expectations, and Mr Farebrother in a 1968 version of George Eliot’s Middlemarch. And in 1969 he was a fascinating Caiphas in Dennis Potter’s controversial Son of Man, in which Colin Blakely was a disconcertingly real, socialist-minded Jesus, inevitably incurring an accusation of blasphemy from Mary Whitehouse and her Clean-Up TV campaign. It was one of the finest Wednesday Plays in that hallowed BBC single-play slot.
In the 80s Hepton achieved a lifelong ambition in playing Inspector Goole in a BBC production of Priestley’s An Inspector Calls and resumed his association with BBC classic serials as Sir Thomas Bertram in Mansfield Park (Sylvestra Le Touzel was Fanny Price, an 11-year-old Jonny Lee Miller little Charles) and as the withered rag-and-bone man Krook in Bleak House (Diana Rigg as Lady Dedlock, Denholm Elliott as Jarndyce).
He chilled us on Christmas Eve, 1989, as the landowner Sam
Toovey in Herbert Wise’s production of Susan Hill’s The Woman in Black, and
delighted us further in Andrew Davies’s adaptation of Kingsley Amis’s wonderful
The Old Devils in 1992.
The BBC’s Emma, again adapted by Davies, in 1996 was thought by many far superior to the Hollywood take on the same Jane Austen novel in the same year, starring Gwyneth Paltrow; the BBC cast a lively Kate Beckinsale as the headstrong heroine, with Hepton as her hypochondriac father, Mr Woodhouse, and notable support from Samantha Morton, Olivia Williams and Mark Strong.
On stage he landed Tesman in Hedda Gabler at the Bristol Old Vic and Shylock in The Merchant of Venice at the Yvonne Arnaud, Guildford, but other classical roles eluded him. He made amends of a sort in the 1982 London premiere of Alan Ayckbourn’s Season’s Greetings, first at Greenwich and then at the Apollo, Shaftesbury Avenue, in which he was the self-effacing star of the show as the muddled doctor with aspirations to puppetry. This was a brilliant performance in a galaxy of comic turns, including those by Diane Bull, Marcia Warren and Peter Vaughan as a self-styled lounge fascist.
His film career was limited, too, embracing a third go at Thomas Cranmer in Waris Hussein’s big-screen follow-up to the BBC series, Henry VIII and his Six Wives (1972), and small roles in two Michael Caine movies, Mike Hodges’s terrific Get Carter (1971) and John Frankenheimer’s The Holcroft Covenant (1985).
Hepton married in 1957 the actor Nancie Jackson, who played his wife Alice in A Man for All Seasons, and they settled in Barnes, south-west London, with a fine collection of paintings.
Two years after Nancie’s death in 1977, he married Hilary Liddell. She died in 2013, and he is survived by a niece and nephew.
Bernard Hepton
(Heptonstall), actor, born 19 October 1925; died 27 July 2018.
Film credits
A Boy, a Girl and a Bike (1949) as Cyclist (uncredited)
Richard III (1955) as Soldier, uncredited and credited as
Master of Horse
Get Carter (1971) as Thorpe
Henry VIII and His Six Wives (1972) as Archbishop Thomas
Cranmer
Barry Lyndon (1975) as Man selling painting to Barry
Voyage of the Damned (1976) as Milton Goldsmith
The Plague Dogs (1982) as Stephen Powell (voice)
Gandhi (1982) as G.O.C, British army in India
The Holcroft Covenant (1985) as Commander Leighton
Shadey (1985) as Captain Amies
Stealing Heaven (1988) as Bishop
Eminent Domain (1990) as Slovak
The Baroness and the Pig (2002) as Soames
Television credits
A Man for All Seasons (1957) as Sir Thomas More
The Life of Henry V (1957) as Chorus
Compact (1964) - director, two episodes
Swizzlewick (1964) - producer, 20 episodes
Thursday Theatre (1965) - producer, two episodes
United! (1965–1966) - producer, 28 episodes
Play of the Month: The Devil's Eggshell (1966) as Lord
Portmanteau
Great Expectations (1967) as Wemmick
The Spanish Farm (1968) as Captain Dormer
Out of the Unknown: The Fosters (1969) as Harry Gerwyn
The Wednesday Play: Son of Man (1969) as Caiaphas
The Gold Robbers (1969) as Harold Oscroft
The Elusive Pimpernel (1969) as Chauvelin
W. Somerset Maugham: Lord Mountdrago (1969) as Dr Audlin
Play For Today: Robin Redbreast (1970) as Fisher
The Six Wives of Henry VIII (1970, in four episodes) as
Archbishop Thomas Cranmer
Elizabeth R (1971) as Archbishop Thomas Cranmer
Omnibus: Paradise Restored (1971) as Oliver Cromwell
The Organization (1972) as Rodney Spurling
Follow the Yellow Brick Road (1972) as Colin Sands
Colditz (1972–1974) as Kommandant
Play of the Month: The Adventures of Don Quixote (1973) as
Village Priest
A Pin to See the Peepshow (1973) as Herbert Starling
Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em (1973) as Webster
The Squirrels (1974–1977) as Mr Fletcher
Sadie, It's Cold Outside (1975) as Norman Potter
Orde Wingate (1976) as Palmer
I, Claudius (1976) as Pallas
Secret Army (1977–1979) as Albert Foiret
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1979) as Toby Esterhase
Blood Money (1981) as Det Chief Supt Meadows
Kessler (1981) as Albert Foiret
An Inspector Calls (1982) as Inspector Goole
Smiley's People (1982) as Toby Esterhase
Mansfield Park (1983) as Sir Thomas Bertram
Dear Box Number (1983) as Walter Cartwright
Cockles (1984) as Sergeant Naughton
A Profile of Arthur J. Mason (1984) as Arthur J. Mason
Bleak House (1985) as Krook
Bergerac (1985) as Sir Geoffrey Newton
Honour, Profit and Pleasure (1985) as Bishop of London
The Disputation (1986) as Raymund de Penjaforte
The Life and Loves of a She-Devil (1986) as Judge Bissop
The Lady's Not for Burning (1987) as Hebble Tyson
The Charmer (1987) as Donald Stimpson
The Contract (1988) as Henry Carter
The Woman in Black (1989) as Sam Toovey
A Perfect Hero (1991) as Arthur Fleming
The Old Devils (1992) as Malcolm Cellan-Davies
Dandelion Dead (1994) as Mr Davies
Emma (1996) as Mr Woodhouse
Midsomer Murders: Death of a Hollow Man (1998) as Harold
Winstanley
Heartbeat: Bread & Circuses (2002) as Colonel
Barber/James Barker

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