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PALMER, GEOFFREY
 Geoffrey Palmer Photo courtesy of the British Film Institute GEOFFREY
PALMER. Born in London, England, 4 June 1927. Married: Sally;
children: Charles and Harriet. Began career as unpaid trainee assistant
stage manager at the Q Theatre, London; subsequently became popular
star of situation comedies; has also appeared on stage, in films
and on the radio. Address: Marmont Management, Langham House, 302/308
Regent Street, London W1R 5AL, England.
TELEVISION
SERIES
1976-79
The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin
1978-82 Butterflies
1984-86 Fairly Secret Army
1986 Executive Stress
1986-88 Hot Metal
1992- As Time Goes By
MADE-FOR-TELEVISION
MOVIE
1991
A Question of Attribution
FILMS
O
Lucky Man!, 1973; The Riddle of the Sands, 1978; The
Outsider, 1979; The Honorary Consul, 1983; A Zed and
Two Noughts, 1985; Clockwise, 1985.
STAGE
(selection)
A
Friend Indeed; Tishoo; Saint Joan; The Mask of Moriarty; Kafka's
Dick; Piano.
British Actor
Geoffrey
Palmer is one of British television's most reliable supporting actors,
appearing in several of the most popular situation comedies of the
last 20 years or so and on occasion taking the lead role himself.
With
his bloodhound features and lugubrious voice and manner, Palmer
is instantly familiar in whatever role he plays. Not only is his
face at once recognizable from the situation comedies he has appeared
in, but his voice is doubly well known from his frequent employment
as a voice-over artist for television commercials (notably for Audi
cars). After serving his apprenticeship as an actor in the theater,
Palmer emerged as an accomplished and individual performer in television
situation comedy through his casting as the absent-minded eccentric
Jimmy, brother-in-law to Leonard Rossiter's Perrin in The Rise
and Fall of Reginald Perrin. Forever apologizing for turning
up at the Perrin household in search of a meal after yet another
"cock-up on the catering front," Palmer's Jimmy was manifestly appealing,
though divorced from reality and pathetically woebegone. These qualities
were clearly ideal for situation comedy and, soon after the end
of the Perrin series, Palmer was back on the screen on a regular
basis playing Wendy Craig's other half in Carla Lane's hit series
Butterflies. As manic-depressive dentist Ben Parkinson, Palmer
provided extremely sturdy support to Craig herself, alternately
bewildered at his wife's outbursts and endearingly patient and clumsy
in his efforts to understand her frustrations--though he could also
be stubborn, tactless and impervious to suggestion when he chose.
Palmer
returned to the dottiness of Jimmy in the Perrin series when he
went on to play the comically unhinged Major Harry Kitchener Wellington
Truscott, the central character in Fairly Secret Army. Convinced
that the country was on the brink of chaos due to the machinations
of the political left, Truscott was committed to forming his own
army to counter the revolution that he feared was just around the
corner. Thanks largely to Palmer's performance as Truscott this
seemingly unpromising scenario fared reasonably well, with the dotty
major proving surprisingly lovable in his futile attempts to muster
a competent force, despite his reactionary views and rabidly bigoted
attitude towards those of differing political opinions.
His subsequent series, Executive Stress and As Time Goes
By, both saw Palmer back in more familiar sitcom territory,
playing belligerently adorable partners in support of strong female
stars, in the first instance Penelope Keith (in the role of her
husband, Donald Fairchild) and in the latter case Judi Dench (in
the role of her old flame, Lionel Hardcastle). Executive Stress
proved a mixed success, though Palmer gave good value as always,
but As Time Goes By settled in well as the plot traced the
reunion of the two erstwhile lovers. Palmer played a returned colonial
planning to write his memoirs, to be typed up by Dench's secretarial
agency. This led to the gradual rebirth of their romance, culminating
in their marriage in the 1995 series.
Palmer
has occasionally ventured out of the sitcom territory with which
he is usually associated. Notable examples of experiments in other
fields of comedy have included guest appearances in such acclaimed
shows as Fawlty Towers and Blackadder Goes Forth,
in which he played Field Marshall Haig.
-David
Pickering
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