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Celebrities / Actors / Arthur Lowe / Biography
Arthur Lowe

Arthur Lowe

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Biography

This page uses content from the Arthur Lowe biography page on the English version of Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. This list of authors can be seen in the page history. Rotten Tomatoes disclaims any and all warranties as to the accuracy or reliability of the content.


For the early Twentieth century tennis player see Arthur Lowe (tennis).


Arthur Lowe (Hayfield, September 22, 1915 — Birmingham, April 15, 1982) was an English actor. He was best known for playing Captain George Mainwaring in the popular British sitcom Dad's Army; he also played the Captain's drunken brother Barry Mainwaring in one episode.

Arthur Lowe was born in Hayfield, Derbyshire, the only child of Arthur and Mary Annie (Nan) Lowe. Lowe’s original intention was to join the Merchant Navy but this idea was thwarted due to his poor eyesight. Working at an aircraft factory he joined the army on the eve of World War II, but not before experiencing his first brush with the acting world by working as a stagehand at the Manchester Palace of Varieties.

While serving in the Middle East, he began to take part in shows put on for the troops, which appears to have sparked his desire to act. Lowe became known for his character roles, making his debut at Manchester rep in 1946. He appeared on stage in many roles including parts in Call Me Madam, Pal Joey and The Pajama Game and eventually featured in no fewer than fifty films.

By the 1960s Lowe had successfully made the transition to television and landed a regular role as draper/lay preacher Leonard Swindley in the Northern drama series Coronation Street. So popular was his role with viewers that he was eventually given his own spin off series Pardon the Expression. However, Leonard Swindley was not a role Arthur relished and he longed to move on to other parts, so it's no surprise that the months he was not playing Swindley he was busy on stage or making guest roles in other TV series including Z Cars and The Avengers. He also had a prominent part in the Lindsay Anderson film This Sporting Life in 1963.

In 1968, Lowe landed perhaps his most famous role, Captain George Mainwaring. It has often been remarked by his former colleague Bill Pertwee that this was the role Lowe played which most resembled himself: pompous and bumbling. His comic timing in the role could never be faulted and he went on to take the character into a radio series, stage play and feature length film.

When not filming Dad's Army Lowe would frequently be making films such as No Sex Please, We're British and O Lucky Man!. He was in great demand for guest appearances on other TV shows such as The Morecambe and Wise Show. He was never afraid to play oddities or surreal characters. In the film version of The Bed-Sitting Room, a surreal post-apocalyptic black comedy featuring a cross-section of British comic talent, he played a man on the verge of mutating into a parrot, while still maintaining the mannerisms of a lower middle-class British professional keen on marrying his daughter to an upper-class drone. His comic tics, squawking and scratching under his ear at just the right moment, almost stole the film. Unfortunately the script called for a real parrot to take over in the latter half, so he was unable to carry the role as far as he might have.

Between 1971 and 1973 Lowe joined Dad's Army castmate Ian Lavender on the BBC radio comedy Parsley Sidings. He employed a multitude of voices on the 1975 BBC animated television series Mr. Men, where he voiced all the characters as well as narrated.

When Dad's Army ended in 1977, Lowe was still very much in demand with starring roles in TV programmes such as Bless Me Father and Potter. He also carried on working on the stage and films. An unusual role he had was in a silent film, 1979's 'The Plank', alongside Eric Sykes. Arthur Lowe reprised his role as George Mainwaring for the pilot episode of It Sticks Out Half a Mile, a radio sequel to Dad's Army.

While touring at coastal theatres, accompanied by his wife Joan, he used his distinctive 1885 former steam yacht Amazon as a floating base. He bought "Amazon" as a houseboat in 1968, but realised its potential and took her back to sea; this unique vessel is still operating in the Mediterranean today.

Lowe died of a stroke in his dressing room before a performance of Home at Seven on April 15 1982 aged 66, having given a live interview on the BBC 1 afternoon show Pebble Mill at One only several hours earlier. His last sitcom, A J Wentworth, BA was shown posthumously from July to August 1982.

Two biographies on Arthur Lowe are available, Arthur Lowe - Dad's Memory by his son Stephen which was released in 1997 and more recently Arthur Lowe by Graham Lord.

External links

  • Arthur Lowe at the Internet Movie Database

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify the biographical information on this page under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.



 
 
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