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1-50 of 66
- Actor
- Music Department
- Writer
Unassuming, innocent-eyed and undeniably ingratiating, Brit comedy actor Ian Carmichael was quite the popular chap in late 50s and early 60s film. He was born in Hull, Yorkshire, England on June 18, 1920, the son of Arthur Denholm Carmichael, an optician, and his wife Kate (Gillett). After receiving his schooling at Bromsgove High School and Scarborough College, he was accepted into the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and trained there, making his stage debut as a mute robot in "RUR". in 1939. That same year he also appeared as Claudius in "Julius Caesar" and was appearing a revue production of "Nine Sharp" (1940) when his young career was interrupted by WWII. He served in Europe for many years with the Royal Armoured Corps as a commissioned officer in the 22nd Dragoons.
Ian returned to the theatre in 1947 with roles in four productions: "She Wanted a Cream Front Door", "I Said to Myself", "Cupid and Mars" and "Out of the Frying Pan". He also sharpened his farcical skills in music hall revues where he worked with such revue legends as Hermione Baddeley and Dora Bryan. Given his first film bit as a waiter in Bond Street (1948), he continued in rather obscure roles for several years. While he was sincerely capable of playing it serious, which would include roles in the U.S. film Betrayed (1954) starring Clark Gable and Lana Turner, as well as the war-themed adventures The Colditz Story (1955) and Storm Over the Nile (1955), it was his association with late 50s "silly-ass" comedy that gave his cinematic career a noticeable boost. After repeating his stage success (the only cast member to do do) playing David Prentice in the film version of Simon and Laura (1955) opposite Kay Kendall and Peter Finch, he co-starred in a series of droll satires for the Boulting Brothers and Ealing Studios. While he might have been upstaged on occasion by a motley crew of scene-stealers (Terry-Thomas, Peter Sellers, Raymond Huntley, Margaret Rutherford), Ian was sublimely funny himself as the hapless klutz caught up in their shenanigans. Private's Progress (1956), the service comedy which got the whole ball rolling, and its sequel, I'm All Right Jack (1959), along with the Boulting's Lucky Jim (1957) Brothers in Law (1957) and Happy Is the Bride (1958) firmly established Ian as a slapstick movie star.
The inane fun continued into the 60s with ripe vehicles in Skywatch (1960), School for Scoundrels (1960), Double Bunk (1961), The Amorous Mr. Prawn (1962) and Heavens Above! (1963). During the late 1960s and 1970s, he found more fulfillment playing wry, bemused, upper-crust characters on comedy TV, particularly his Bertie Wooster in The World of Wooster (1965) which reunited him with frequent Boulting Brothers co-star Dennis Price as Jeeves, Wooster's chilly-mannered personal valet. Ian's leading role as the Bachelor Father (1970), based on the story of a real-life perennial bachelor who took on several foster children, only added to his popularity. In later years, he was frequently heard on the BBC radio.
Ian made vigilant returns to the comedy stage whenever possible in such lightweight vehicles as "The Tunnel of Love", "The Gazebo", "Critic's Choice", "Birds on the Wing", "Darling, I'm Home", "Springtime for Henry" and appeared in his last musical "I Do! I Do!" in 1968. Earlier, in 1965, he made his Broadway debut starring in "Boeing-Boeing", which lasted only a few weeks. A more successful revival of this show showed up on Broadway in 2008.
Semi-retired since the mid-1980s, Ian continued to show elderly spryness here and there with a smattering of films including The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins (1971), From Beyond the Grave (1974), The Lady Vanishes (1979) and Diamond Skulls (1989). On TV, he was quite popular in the role of the gentleman detective Lord Peter Wimsey in several crime mystery mini-series: Clouds of Witness (1972), The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club (1972), Murder Must Advertise (1973), The Nine Tailors (1974) and Five Red Herrings (1975), and had a recurring role on the TV series Strathblair (1992).
To cap his career off, he was honored as an OBE in the 2003 Queen's Birthday Honours List. Made a widower after 40 years by his first wife Jean (Pym) McLean, he married novelist/radio producer Kate Fenton, who is over thirty years his junior, in 1992. He has two daughters, Lee and Sally, from his first marriage. In 1979, his autobiography, "Will the Real Ian Carmichael?...", was published.
A charmer to the end, his last (recurring) appearance was on the TV series The Royal (2003) in 2009. The actor died on February 7, 2010, following a month-long illness.- Being illegitimate, he had an unsettled childhood due to his mother not being around much during the first 10 years of his life. Consequently he was brought up by an aunt. Eventually he met his father, a German named Karl, when he was 28. After leaving school, he was apprenticed for 5 years to a Yorkshire firm that built diesel engines. In 1960, he joined the Merchant Navy with a dream of seeing the world but all he saw was the engine room. After 4 years, he settled in London where his first job was with a crew digging the London Victoria tube line tunnel. Relaxing in a folk club, he got talking to a man putting on plays with an amateur group, and did an audition, resulting in him getting a part which led him to be in the last 15 in a drama school in Loughton, Essex. After 3 years, he got steady work in the theatre and television including the series Lucky Feller (1975). Soon after, he went to Australia where he spent 2 years touring on a motorbike and busking with his guitar before returning to England, but all his agent could get him was a TV ad for Yellow Pages which was seen by Granada producers who thought him right for the part of Bill Webster in Coronation Street (1960).
- Alf Wight ("James Herriot") was born on 3 October 1916 in Sunderland, near Newcastle. However the family moved to Yoker, a suburb of Glasgow, when Alf was three weeks old. He attended Glasgow Veterinary School. He moved to Thirsk, North Yorkshire, in 1940, to work for Donald Sinclair ("Siegfried Farnon") at his practice at 23 Kirkgate. He married Joan Danbury ("Helen Alderson") on 5 November 1941 at St Mary Magdalene church in Thirsk. They had two children, Jim (born 1943) and Rosie (born 1947): Jim is a vet who used to work in the Sinclair/Wight practice and Rosie is a General Practitioner (family doctor). Alf died on 23 February 1995 of prostate cancer at his house, "Mirebeck", in the village of Thirlby near the town of Thirsk that became famous in his books as "Darrowby".
- Actress
- Writer
- Director
Jane Arden was born in Wales in 1927 and left for London in her teens.
She trained at RADA and quickly began working as an actress and playwright. It was there that she met her future husband, Philip Saville, who is now perhaps most known for his work Boys from the Blackstuff (1982) and The Life and Loves of a She-Devil (1986). They had 2 children, Sebastian Saville and Dominic Saville and one step- child, Elizabeth Saville.
Jane Arden's plays include The Thug (1959) which starred Alan Bates, The Party (1958) which was directed by Charles Laughton and gave Albert Finney his first role in the theatre, Post Mortem (1999), _The New Communion For Freaks, Prophets and Witches (1999)_, The Illusionist (1983) and Vagina Rex and the Gas Oven (1969).
Jane Arden began tracing female oppression in 1966 when she wrote a script for the film The Logic Game (1965). It was described as a "surrealist puzzle" attempting to locate the isolation of women in the context of bourgeois marriage.
Arden's film career includes her original script and her performance in Separation (1968), which featured the song "Salad Days" by Procol Harum and was directed by Jane Arden's collaborator Jack Bond. In this film, women's' exploitation was exposed as their personal dilemma began to take on a political context.
Arden formed the feminist theatre group "Holocaust" and then wrote a play with the same name. In 1972, she adapted and directed this for the cinema as The Other Side of Underneath (1972).
Before her involvement with the Women's Liberation Movement, she appeared on TV talk programmes like Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life (1964) as a speaker on women and politics. As an actress, she was best known for her performance as "Inez" in a BBC-TV production of Jean-Paul Sartre Huis clos (1965), opposite Harold Pinter as "Garcia".
Two more films, both co-directed with Jack Bond, followed in the later 1970s, the experimental Vibration (1974), made in the USA in 1974, and Anti-Clock (1979) which opened the 1979 London Film Festival. It was the fist film to use video techniques in an experimental way. Her poetry books include "You Don't Know What You Want, Do You?". Jane Arden committed suicide on Dec. 20, 1982 in North Yorkshire and is buried in Darlington West Cemetary. She was 55 years old.- Johnny Allan was born on 21 March 1930 in Halifax, West Yorkshire, England, UK. He was an actor, known for The Practice (1985), The Fourth Protocol (1987) and Emmerdale Farm (1972). He died on 11 January 2013 in Pickering, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- The youngest of the talented Brontë siblings, Anne was born January 17th, 1820 to Rev. Patrick Brontë and Maria Branwell Brontë. Her mother died of cancer when she was only a year old, and growing up Anne was especially close to her elder sister Emily Brontë. Along with their other sister, Charlotte Brontë and their only brother, Branwell Brontë, Anna and Emily invented the imaginary realms of Gondal and Angria, which absorbed most of their childhoods on the lonely Moors.
Despite her fragile health, Anne worked as a governess for some years before her brother, Branwell, entered the service of the same family she worked for. He was supposed to tutor the family's elder sons, but was dismissed in 1845 after having an affair with his employer's wife. Anne also resigned her position, and took up writing with her sisters, publishing "Poems" in 1846, a compilation of the Brontë girls' poetry. Encouraged by her literary success, Anne published two more novels, "Agnes Grey" and "The Tenant of Wildfell Hall".
After her brother Branwell and sister Emily died within three months of one another in 1848, Anne herself came down with consumption. She was taken to the seaside, which she adored, by her sole surviving sister Charlotte, in the hopes of finding a cure. Anne Brontë died at Scarborough in 1849, a victim of tuberculosis. - Nicholas Rhea was born on 18 May 1936 in Glaisdale, North Yorkshire, England, UK. He was a writer, known for HeartBeat: Changing Places (1998), Heartbeat (1992) and Britain's Best Drives (2009). He was married to Rhoda Smith. He died on 21 April 2017 in Ampleforth, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Ronald Herdman was born on 18 September 1932 in Hartlepool, County Durham, England, UK. He was an actor, known for Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994), The Prince and the Pauper (1976) and McVicar (1980). He was married to Susan Uebel. He died on 31 December 2004 in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Writer
- Director
- Producer
Sid Waddell was born on 10 August 1940 in Alnwick, Northumberland, England, UK. He was a writer and director, known for The Flaxton Boys (1969), The Indoor League (1973) and Screen Test (1970). He was married to Irene. He died on 11 August 2012 in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- The actor Helene Palmer, donned a black wig and frumpy overalls in the television soap opera Coronation Street to play Ida Clough, one of a triumvirate of stroppy machinists who tested Mike Baldwin's patience at his denim garment factory in Weatherfield in the 1970s. With Ivy Tilsley and Vera Duckworth, Ida featured from 1978 until 1988 as a militant unionist at Baldwin's Casuals - in a decade when strikes and lockouts were the order of the day in the real world.
The loudmouthed Ida challenged Ivy for the role of shop steward in 1980 but lost the election. She lost her job when, eight years later, she shopped Mike for drink-driving and he received a ban. At various times, Ida's children - the even louder Muriel (Angela Catherall) and the dopey van driver Bernard (Jeffrey Longmore) - worked at the factory.
Palmer was written out after asking to leave, having reached the age of 60, with plans to retire. However, she returned in 1995 for Ivy's screen funeral and was persuaded to do another stint (1996-98), with Ida working at Mike's new underwear factory. Once more, there was conflict when Ida complained that Sally Webster had been promoted to supervisor over her head. Palmer left Coronation Street again after insisting that she wanted to enjoy her retirement, but was persuaded to return to television one last time, in 2002, when she was enticed by the opportunity to play Eric Sykes's screen wife in the comedy-drama Stan the Man, starring John Thomson as a small-time crook.
Palmer was born Helene Mapplebeck in Bolton upon Dearne, near Barnsley, South Yorkshire. Her father, George, was a miner who also had some success as a boxer. On leaving school, Mapplebeck teamed up with her sister, Betty, to form the Beck Sisters, singing in pubs and clubs. Eventually, she went solo, as Helen Beck, and had a successful career on the northern club circuit, appearing on the same bill as comedians such as Les Dawson and Freddie Starr, and the singers Lynne Perrie and Elizabeth Dawn - who both later joined Coronation Street as Ivy Tilsley and Vera Duckworth.
She had married Alex Palmer in 1948. In 1970, she and her husband took over the New Inn pub, at Stainforth, near Doncaster, and she gave up her singing engagements. She started getting acting roles when the director Ken Loach scoured Yorkshire and County Durham to cast Days of Hope (1975), Jim Allen's epic tale of the labour movement from 1916 to 1926. Acting under the name Helen Beck, she played Martha Matthews, the mother of Ben (Paul Copley), who deserts from the British army after serving in Ireland and joins the Communist party, and Sarah (Pamela Brighton), who helps him in his cause during the general strike.
Then came the role of a pools winner's mother in a BBC Play for Today, Spend Spend Spend (1977), Jack Rosenthal's adaptation of a book based on the true story of Viv Nicholson, a Yorkshire housewife who won the pools in 1961 and found herself unable to handle the sudden wealth. In 1977, Palmer and her husband started running the Britannia hotel, in the Balby suburb of Doncaster, and she continued to perform as a singer once they had converted the first floor into a nightclub.
After joining Coronation Street, she always used her married name, Helene Palmer, for acting work. While drifting in and out of the serial, she also appeared on television in the Alan Bennett play All Day on the Sands (1979), as the surly boarding-house waitress who refuses to serve meals until an entire family is seated, and the Fay Weldon drama Life for Christine (1980), as the mother of a jailed 14-year-old girl, which was based on a true story. There was also a small role in the film Yanks (1979), Colin Welland's tale of American troops stationed in Yorkshire during the second world war, directed by John Schlesinger and starring Richard Gere.
From 1986, Palmer and her husband ran the Nags Head in Bridlington. On his retirement four years later, they moved to nearby Sewerby and enjoyed time spent at their holiday home in Spain. Palmer was survived by her husband and their son, David. - Agnes Savile was born on 1 November 1886 in Burnley, Lancashire, England. She was married to Vincent Joseph Marie Savile. She died on 9 October 1972 in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Bruce Gordon was born on 20 June 1923 in Lambeth, London, England, UK. He was an actor, known for Doublecross (1956), At Your Service, Ltd. (1951) and BBC Sunday-Night Theatre (1950). He died in 1994 in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Director
- Producer
- Writer
Early in his career, John was asked by Laurence Olivier to direct the National Theatre Company in the award-winning film of Chekhov's Three Sisters (1970) with Olivier, Joan Plowright and Alan Bates. He then went on to direct Olivier in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice (1976) and Alec Guinness and Ralph Richardson in Twelfth Night (1970).
His experience as a commissioner and director of drama and drama-documentaries enabled him to work with some of the world's finest actors including Derek Jacobi, Helen Mirren, Anthony Hopkins, Sean Connery and Michael Caine. He has also worked as a director and trainer at several of the UK's leading theatres and institutions including the Young Vic, Guildhall School of Drama, RADA, Shaw Theatre, Italia Conti, London Film School, Edinburgh Festival. For the latter part of his career he established ARTTS Skillcentre, a training facility supporting artists in employment with the film and television industry.- Costume Designer
- Costume and Wardrobe Department
- Art Department
Beatrice Dawson was born on 26 January 1908 in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England, UK. She was a costume designer, known for Woman of Straw (1964), The Pickwick Papers (1952) and Of Human Bondage (1964). She died on 16 April 1976 in North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Peter Scott was born on 14 April 1932 in Ilford, Essex, England, UK. He was an actor, known for Billy Bunter of Greyfriars School (1952), The Browning Version (1949) and Wall of Death (1951). He died on 18 July 2022 in Craven, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Henry Emery was born in 1936 in Bromley, London, Greater London, England, UK. Henry was an assistant director, known for Over the Odds (1961) and The Missing Note (1961). Henry was married to Valerie Duffew. Henry died in 2004 in Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Additional Crew
- Director
- Writer
Stanley Forman was born on 26 December 1921 in East London, England, UK. He was a director and writer, known for Compañero: Victor Jara of Chile (1975), School Daze (1988) and The World at War (1973). He was married to Hilda Davies. He died on 7 February 2013 in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Director
- Producer
Graham Watts was born in 1923 in Twickenham, Middlesex, England, UK. Graham was a director and producer, known for Working Together (1971), Murder Bag (1957) and Farmhouse Kitchen (1971). Graham was married to Mary Robin and Pat Griffiths. Graham died in July 2020 in Wensleydale, North Yorkshire, England, UK(undisclosed).- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Stephen Cleobury was born on 31 December 1948 in Bromley, Kent, England, UK. He is known for Joy (2015), Martyrs Lane (2021) and Home on Sunday (1979). He was married to Emma Disley, Emma and Penny Holloway. He died on 22 November 2019 in York, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Jack Escott was born on 16 June 1920 in Wandsworth, Surrey, England, UK. He was an actor, known for The Flaxton Boys (1969) and Justice (1971). He died on 4 December 1987 in Whitby, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Deborah Clements died on 21 September 2008 in Staxton, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Arnold Toynbee was born on 14 April 1889 in London, England, UK. He died on 22 October 1975 in York, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Geoffrey Smith was born on 31 December 1928 in Barningham Park, Swaledale, North Yorkshire, England, UK. He died on 27 February 2009 in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Additional Crew
- Director
- Producer
Alma Player was born in 1933 in Holborn, London, England, UK. Alma was a director and producer, known for The Old Grey Whistle Test (1971) and Saturday Review (1986). Alma died on 8 November 2023 in Thornton-le-Dale, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Hugo Charteris was born on 11 December 1922 in London, England, UK. He was a writer, known for Mystery and Imagination (1966), Menace (1970) and ITV Saturday Night Theatre (1969). He was married to Virginia Mary Forbes Adam. He died on 21 December 1970 in Elvington, North Yorkshire, England.
- Actress
Eve Fairfax was born on 10 October 1871 in Tadcaster, Yorkshire, England, UK. She was an actress. She died on 27 May 1978 in York, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Derrick Boothroyd was born on 7 February 1921 in Yorkshire, England, UK. He was a writer, known for Value for Money (1955) and BBC Sunday-Night Play (1960). He died in 1996 in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Florence Hunter was born on 12 August 1914 in London, England, UK. She was an actress, known for Wuthering Heights (1920), A Fallen Star (1916) and Carnival (1921). She was married to Kenyon, Eric. She died on 9 January 2000 in Ripon, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Music Department
- Sound Department
- Editorial Department
Alan Willis was born on 12 January 1937 in Hillingdon, Middlesex, England, UK. He is known for Das Boot (1981), Department S (1969) and Space: 1999 (1975). He died on 25 April 2015 in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Additional Crew
Jack Watkinson was born in Westmorland, England, UK. He is known for All Creatures Great and Small (1978), James Herriot's Yorkshire (1993) and Stars Reunited (2003). He died on 22 May 2013 in Leyburn, Richmondshire, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Barbara Simpson was an actress, known for The Ken Dodd Show (1959) and The Good Old Days (1953). She died on 20 September 2016 in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Patrick Nuttgens was born on 2 March 1930 in Monks Risborough, Bedfordshire, England, UK. He was a writer, known for The Flight from Utopia (1985), Spirit of the Age (1975) and Network (1974). He was married to Biddy Badenoch. He died on 15 March 2004 in Wiggington Road, York, North Riding, Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Reg Thompson was born in 1923 in Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, England, UK. He was an actor, known for ITV Playhouse (1967), Airline (1982) and Benny Hill (1962). He died on 31 October 2010 in Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Keith Schellenberg was born on 13 March 1929 in Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, England, UK. He died on 28 October 2019 in Richmond, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Director
- Actor
Harry Alfred Rée, DSO, OBE, was a British educationist and wartime member of the Special Operations Executive. Of the more than 400 SOE agents who worked in France during World War II, M.R.D. Foot, the official historian of the SOE, named Rée as one of the half-dozen best male agents.
Harry Rée was born in England, the son of Dr. Alfred Rée, a chemist who was from a Danish Jewish family, and Lavinia Elisabeth Dimmick, the American-born great granddaughter of chemist and industrialist Eleuthère Irénée du Pont. He was educated at Shrewsbury School, St John's College, Cambridge, and the Institute of Education, University of London. In 1937 he became a language master at Bradford Grammar School, and later at Beckenham and Penge County School for Boys. In 1940 he married Hetty, daughter of Eardley Vine, of Beaconsfield. They had three children, Janet, Brian and the philosopher Jonathan.
In the Second World War Rée was registered in 1940 as a conscientious objector conditional upon working in the National Fire Service, but in 1941 re-registered for military service and was called up into the army. He later volunteered for the Special Operations Executive, receiving a captaincy in the Intelligence Corps and the codename "César". In April 1943 he was parachuted into France and joined the Acrobat Network around Montbéliard. Later he became active in the Stockbroker Network around Belfort.
Rée spoke against RAF bombing in France, arguing that it was turning French public opinion against the Allies. He suggested that SOE agents could organise effective sabotage of factories on the ground. He organised the destruction of the Peugeot factory at Sochaux by convincing the local director, who was already resisting, to co-operate with SOE. The local director's sabotage was more efficient, and he managed to share tactical information on the Wehrmacht projects they had had to become involved in (especially the V-1). On 5 November 1943 Rée organised a decoy attack on compressors and transformers at Sochaux to transfer the blame. Therefore, the RAF did not bomb the factory.
The Germans tried to capture Rée, who escaped a Feldgendarmerie group after being shot four times and, according to his own account, had to swim across a river and crawl through a forest. He managed to reach Switzerland and still keep some contact with his organisation. In May 1944 he was replaced by an American officer, E.F. Floege, and returned to Britain. He starred in the film School for Danger (1947) (aka School for Danger), produced by the RAF Film Unit, which told the story of SOE's activities in France.
The Imperial War Museum has an online recording of Rée praising the role of the passive supporters who also risked their lives.
In 1951, Rée became headmaster of Watford Grammar School for Boys. He appeared occasionally on television shows such as the BBC's The Brains Trust (1955) programme. In 1962 he became the first professor of education at the University of York.
Rée wrote a biography of the educator and inventor of Village Colleges, Henry Morris titled "Educator Extraordinary: The Life and Achievements of Henry Morris" (Longman, 1973). He also produced a compilation of Morris' talks and articles titled "The Henry Morris Collection" (Cambridge University Press, 1984). In 1983 "The Three Peaks of Yorkshire" a walking guide he wrote was published.- Martin Fitzalan-Howard was born on 22 October 1922 in the UK. Martin was married to Bridget Keppel. Martin died on 1 August 2003 in Carlton, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Earle Couttie was born on 28 November 1922 in Yorkshire, England, UK. He was a writer, known for Watch Your Stern (1960). He was married to Joan Clarke-Thomas, Joan Lomas and Patricia Bennett Edwards. He died on 25 November 2005 in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Wilfred Mellers was born on 26 April 1914 in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, England, UK. He was married to Peggy Pauline Lewis. He died on 17 May 2008 in Scrayingham, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- C.J. Cutcliffe-Hyne was born on 11 May 1865 in Arlington, Bibury, Gloucestershire, England, UK. C.J. was a writer, known for The Desert Island (1914), The Girl and the Gold Mine (1914) and An Innocent Thief (1914). C.J. died on 10 March 1944 in Kettlewell, Yorkshire North Riding, England, UK.
- Soundtrack
Georgina Anderson was born on 22 October 1998 in Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Georgina died on 14 November 2013 in Marske-by-the-Sea, Redcar, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Andrew Hutt was an actor, known for Is That It? (2008). He died on 22 May 2006 in North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Actor
Murray Ashford was born on 28 September 1886 in Islington, London, England, UK. He was an actor. He died on 29 September 1945 in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Ernest Lush was born on 23 January 1908 in Bournemouth, England, UK. He died on 12 May 1988 in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Lawrence Byford was born on 10 August 1925 in Normanton, Yorkshire, England, UK. He was married to Muriel Campbell Massey. He died on 10 February 2018 in Pannal, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Paul Clements died on 21 September 2008 in Staxton, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Andrew Dow was born on 1 December 1943 in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, England, UK. He was a producer, known for The Little Train to Lynton (1987) and Speed Machines (2003). He was married to Stephanie Murphy. He died on 24 April 2015 in Newton-on-Ouse, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Bob Appleyard was born on 26 June 1924 in Yorkshire, England, UK. He died on 17 March 2015 in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Christopher Rowe was born in 1942. He died on 4 September 2001 in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England, UK.
- Director
- Cinematographer
Alan Sidi was born in 1931 in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, UK. Alan was a director and cinematographer, known for 8 O'Clock Special (1962). Alan died on 14 June 2011 in Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK.- Paul Anderson was born on 8 March 1967 in County Durham, England, UK. Paul was married to Helen Anderson. Paul died on 12 September 2017 in Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, England, UK.