British Comedy Guide
Richard Wilson
Richard Wilson

Richard Wilson (I)

  • 88 years old
  • Scottish
  • Actor

Press clippings Page 5

Richard Wilson talks about being gay

One Foot In A Grave actor Richard Wilson has said in an interview: "I don't mind people saying I'm gay - because I am. But I don't live in a gay relationship."

Mark Jefferies, The Mirror, 2nd March 2013

I never feel comfortable when fact is mixed with fiction. I spend the whole time trying to figure out what's real and what's made up and usually end up vaguely irritated if it's not clear which is which. And then, I usually say to myself, the truth is usually more interesting anyway, so why bother?

I had high hopes that Believe It!, the purported autobiography of the actor Richard Wilson, written by Jon Canter, might up-end my preconceptions. The programme felt a bit like an episode of The Unbelievable Truth, picking out factual nuggets from the welter of fiction: was he mates with George Best? Was his first acting role in Oh! What a Lovely War!, during the shooting of which he drove an apparently legless Lord Olivier back home to Brighton? And what about Mad Great-Uncle Hamish?

There were some good lines (I liked Hamish's advice - "never trust a man who doesn't drink, for he's walking around with truths inside him that he never lets oot"), and I laughed more than is usual with Radio 4 comedy. But I was troubled: the bit about him studying electrical engineering, for example, sounded true, though it seems his pre-thespian career was spent as a lab technician. But unless there's a killer joke in there somewhere, which there wasn't, why make it up?

As for Hamish (wonderfully played in the dramatised bits by John Sessions), I'm guessing he's not real, but I found myself wishing he'd existed. As he told the young Richard (played by David Tennant): "Do you want to have an exciting life and forget most of it or a blameless life and remember every second?"

Chris Maume, The Independent, 13th May 2012

Fact meets fiction as Richard Wilson narrates this personal "radiography", taking listeners on a semi-fictional odyssey through milestone moments in his life. Featuring childhood secrets, a decades-long quest for a lone glove and a cameo from an acting legend of yesteryear, it's whimsical and gently charming.

The wry script is more likely to inspire smirks than all-out laughter, but in Wilson it has a bona fide trump card. Delivered matter-of-factly in his lugubrious drawl, even the most outrageous flights of fancy can seem plausible. He might struggle to convince the listener that he truly coached George Best to football triumph, but for a moment we do wonder - and therein lies the true joy of this play. Like all the best tall tales, it's difficult to tell where the truth really ends.

Stuart Manning, Radio Times, 9th May 2012

Excess was the hallmark of Jon Canter's BelieveIt!, a 'radiography' of Richard Wilson who starred in a parody of his own life. In one scene, he directed George Best in the final days of his footballing career through an earpiece. That this didn't seem so very odd tells us all we need to know about celebrity biographies.

Moira Petty, The Stage, 9th May 2012

Richard Wilson: my life story - but don't believe it!

The One Foot in the Grave actor Richard Wilson tells Roya Nikkhah why he's narrating a "tongue in cheek" story of his life for a new BBC Radio Four programme, Believe It!

Roya Nikkhah, The Telegraph, 8th May 2012

Richard Wilson, actor, director and possibly the nation's favourite fictional grouse, got so fed up with being greeted with his One Foot in the Grave TV catchline "I don't believe it!" that he's now been persuaded to launch his "radiography". It's a heady mix of the actual with the fictional, written by Jon Canter, starring Wilson and a starry roster of support which includes John Sessions, David Tennant and Arabella Weir. Unpick the facts (Wilson is unmarried, private, passionate about theatre, politics and Manchester United) from the mischievous fantasies.

Gillian Reynolds, The Telegraph, 8th May 2012

Richard Wilson investigates trains for C4's Dispatches

TV grumpy man Richard Wilson could not believe it when he was charged £280 for forgetting his railcard on a £15.85 train trip.

Nicola Methven, The Mirror, 21st March 2011

Richard Wilson investigates Britain's train networks

Actor Richard Wilson turns reporter to investigate train journeys from hell for a TV documentary - and finds himself forced to sit on the loo on one packed train.

Nicola Methven, The Mirror, 4th March 2011

Season's greetings from Auntie's Reckless Nostalgia department, where Ronnie Corbett is sitting in a corner, tweaking his glasses as he panic-knits gags for this 80th birthday bun-fight. Intended as a celebration of the minute octogenarian's career, it's a peculiar affair, with famous guests (Richard Wilson, Rob Brydon, Catherine Tate) scattered like novelty pencil toppers among wilting sketches about dongles and trapped wind. Still, there's an air of genuine affection to proceedings, and Corbett's way with a one-liner remains one of light entertainment's most enduring marvels. "I have my own treadmill at home. I'm only doing widths at the moment . . .")

Sarah Dempster, The Guardian, 24th December 2010

With king of grouches Victor Meldrew still indelibly etched on British psyches, it's nigh on impossible to imagine Richard Wilson playing anything other than a discontented grump. Here he stars as Frank Ross, an ex-Latin teacher turned frustrated cabbie. In addition to his career nose-dive, Frank is forced to spend more time than he'd like with his cab controller ex-wife Barbara (Julia Deakin) along with the man she left him for- the owner of the cab firm that employs them both. On top of this, he also has his hopeless son Sean (Ralf Little) to contend with. Will Frank ever escape the gloom of his cab and return to the classics? A Russian oligarch, a box of human remains and a broken coffee machine all provide plenty of laughs - Wilson fans won't be disappointed.

Caroline Martin, Radio Times, 11th December 2010

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