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JAMES BOLAM
 James Bolam Photo courtesy of the British Film Institute JAMES
BOLAM. Born in Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, U.K., 16 June 1938.
Attended Bede Grammar School, Sunderland; Bemrose School, Derby.
Married Susan Jameson; children: Lucy. Trained as actor at Central
School of Speech and Drama, London; stage debut, Royal Court Theatre,
London, 1959; established reputation as television star in the
long-running series The Likely Lads, 1965-69, and the sequel
Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?, 1973; subsequently
consolidated reputation as popular star of situation comedy as
well as playing straight roles and acting in films. Address: Barry
Burnett Organization Ltd, Suite 42-43, Grafton House, 2-3 Golden
Square, London W1, U.K.
TELEVISION
SERIES
1964-66
The Likely Lads
1973-74 Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?
1976-81 When the Boat Comes In
1979 The Limbo Connection
1979-83 Only When I Laugh
1985 The Beiderbecke Affair
1986 Executive Stress
1987 The Beiderbecke Tapes
1987 Room at the Bottom
1987 Father Matthew's Daughter
1988 The Beiderbecke Connection
1988 Andy Capp
1991-93 Second Thoughts
1994 Sticky Wickets
FILMS
The
Kitchen, 1961; A Kind of Loving, 1962; The Loneliness
of the Long Distance Runner, 1962; HMS Defiant, 1962;
Murder Most Foul, 1965; Half a Sixpence, 1967; Otley,
1968; Crucible of Terror, 1971; Straight on Till Morning,
1972; O Lucky Man!, 1973; In Celebration, 1974;
The Likely Lads, 1976; The Great Question, 1982; The
Plague Dogs, 1982 (voice only); Clash of Loyalties,
1983.
RADIO
Second
Thoughts, 1988.
STAGE
The
Kitchen, 1959; Events While Guarding the Bofors Gun,
1966; In Celebration, 1969; Veterans, 1972; Treats,
1976; Who Killed `Agatha' Christie?, 1978; King Lear,
1981; Run For Your Wife!, 1983; Arms and the Man,
1989; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, 1989; Victory,
1989; Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell, 1990; Glengarry Glen
Ross, 1994.
James Bolam
has proved one of the most popular and enduring character stars
of British television comedy and drama, capitalizing on his northern
background and on his natural, pugnacious charm in a variety of
roles over a 30-year period. Bolam had the good fortune to begin
his screen career at a time when there was a tremendous vogue in
British theatre, film, and television for working-class northern
drama. With his punchy but vulnerable Geordie persona and undisguised
accent, Bolam was a natural choice for such worthy though relatively
plodding films as The Kitchen, which was based on the play
by Arnold Wesker, and John Schlesinger's North Country feature A
Kind of Loving. Subsequently, among other films, he supported
fellow-northerner Tom Courtenay in Otley and played second
lead to Alan Bates in Lindsay Anderson's In Celebration (a
David Storey play set in the mining towns of Nottinghamshire in
which he and Bates had already appeared on the Royal Court stage).
It was as a
favourite of television comedy and period drama audiences, however,
that Bolam (a former trainee chartered accountant) was destined
to make his mark. Cast as the girl-chasing, anti-establishment cynic
Terry Collier opposite Rodney Bewes's diffident and socially-aspiring
Bob Ferris in the long-running and warmly realistic comedy series
The Likely Lads (1964-66), written by Ian La Frenais and
Dick Clement, Bolam cut a fine line between pathos and brash northern
cockiness. In his scorn for Bob's middle-class pretensions, Bolam's
workshy proletarian Terry typified northern prejudice and aggression,
but in his overt sensitivity to any rejection by his aspiring childhood
friend and drinking partner, he became both endearing and sympathetic,
as much a victim of a hostile class system as his soul companion.
The friendship between the two characters was in many situations
their only defence, coupled with a shared nostalgia for time-honoured
northern ways. The series, which relied heavily on the writing of
Le Frenais and Clements as well as upon the innate charm of Bolam
and Bewes, was significant in that it raised issues of greater relevance
to the viewing public than was attempted by virtually any other
sitcom of the time (and, indeed, by many in succeeding decades).
The underlying
theme of nostalgia for the values of the old north, and the comedy
inherent in two northern lads trying to keep their friendship alive
while coming to terms with the realities of life, was underlined
in the even better later series, Whatever Happened to the Likely
Lads? (1973-74), in which the pathos was strengthened by an
awareness of time passing. This revival, which took up the lives
of the two friends after Terry's return from four years in the army
and Bob's assumption of bourgeois respectability (and engagement
to the self-willed Thelma, played by Brigit Forsyth), proved as
well written and as pointed as the first series, the friendship
tottering and swaying as the two men argued heatedly about their
conflicting views on such issues as class, sexual equality, and
self-advancement.
Though identified
primarily with northern working-class characters, Bolam has managed
to vary his diet by escaping from the straitjacket of television
comedy on several occasions. Particularly notable was his success
as the indomitable entrepreneur Jack Ford in the long-running between-the-wars
period drama set in South Shields, When the Boat Comes In,
which extended to four series and finally ended with Ford's death
in the Spanish Civil War. Jessie Seaton, women's campaigner and
Ford's love interest in the series, was played by Bolam's offstage
wife, Susan Jameson.
To underline
Bolam's versatility, he also appeared with success in a BBC production
of William Shakespeare's As You Like It, and in the 1980s
forged a new variation on the sympathetic but single-minded northerner
theme as Trevor Chaplain, the inquisitive jazz-loving schoolteacher
investigating corruption in Alan Plater's The Beiderbecke Affair
and its sequels.
A long-established
favourite of low-brow television comedy, since the days of The
Likely Lads, Bolam has continued to enjoy success in such unchallenging
fare as Only When I Laugh, an unexceptional hospital sitcom
that nevertheless lasted four series, Room at the Bottom, Andy
Capp, Executive Stress, Sticky Wickets, and, most recently,
Eleven Men Against Eleven (1995) - a comedy thriller in which
Bolam played the beleaguered manager of an ailing Premier Division
football team, under crooked chairman Timothy West.
-David
Pickering
FURTHER
READING
Grant,
Linda. "The Lad Most Likely to..." The Guardian (London),
12 August 1995.
Ross,
Deborah. "What Really Happened to the Likely Lad?" Daily Mail
(London), 17 July 1993.
See
also Likely
Lads
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