Colin McCormack
John Colin McCormack (2 December 1941 – 19 June 2004) was a Welsh actor who enjoyed success in classical stage performances and television shows including BBC TV's Dixon of Dock Green, a show he returned to twenty years later when he played a police constable. McCormack also appeared in several feature films during his career.
Colin McCormack | |
---|---|
Born | John Colin McCormack 2 December 1941 |
Died | 19 June 2004 62) | (aged
Other names | Colin MacCormack |
Years active | 1955–2004 |
Spouse(s) | Wendy Allnutt, 1967–2004 (his death) |
McCormack was probably best known for his recurring role as Alan in the 1984 science fiction series Chocky and for playing Kevin Masters in EastEnders.
McCormack's electric presence and square jaw coupled with his imposing athletic build usually saw him typecast as a soldier or policeman. He nonetheless appeared in a wide range of roles including Man About the House, The Good Life and Yes, Minister. He also tutored and coached at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama where his students included Ewan McGregor, Daniel Craig and Damian Lewis.[1]
McCormack died of cancer aged 62 after a short illness, following a tour of Romeo and Juliet in Hong Kong with the Royal Shakespeare Company.
History
Early life and career
McCormack was born in Penarth near Cardiff in Glamorgan, Wales on 2 December 1941, during the Second World War, the eldest son of a railway worker.[2] Educated at Kings College, a private junior school in Cardiff and Penarth Grammar School he appeared in several school plays and also joined the local Victoria Youth Drama Group, appearing in several amateur productions and drama competitions. While still in school, at the age of fourteen in 1955, he was chosen after an audition to play a young crime victim on an early episode of BBC TV's Dixon of Dock Green.
McCormack was a keen, accomplished rugby player. In later years he became a squash player.
On leaving grammar school McCormack initially chose to attend an arts course at Cardiff Art College. Despite these early studies, acting remained his first love and he eventually secured a place at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London as a further step towards a professional acting career.
His first professional stage performance came in 1964 as a member of the Bristol Old Vic repertory company when he appeared in the play Bartholomew Fair followed by dozens of ensemble productions over the next few years.
Royal Shakespeare Company
His work at the Old Vic came to the attention of the Royal Shakespeare Company. In 1967 he was invited to join them at their Stratford upon Avon headquarters and he remained associated with them until his death. His first appearance with the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford was as a citizen in Coriolanus and during his first full season with the company he went on to play a courtier in Trevor Nunn's production of The Revenger's Tragedy, the First Suitor in All's Well That Ends Well, Donalbain in Peter Hall's production of Macbeth, and Third Musician in Romeo and Juliet.
In the 1970s he played Angus in Macbeth at the Aldwych Theatre, London, Udy in Howard Barker's The Hang of the Gaol, Florence in The Adventures of Awful Knawful at the Warehouse Theatre during 1978 and Chachava in The Caucasian Chalk Circle. The decade ended with McCormack playing Borachio in Much Ado About Nothing in a Royal Shakespeare Company UK tour that started in the Autumn of 1979 and continued over into the spring of 1980.
The 1980 season continued with McCormack taking four different roles in Barker's The Loud Boy's Life when he played Costall, Dampsing, Streatham, and Imber. He starred as Macduff in the Barbican Theatre's 1988 showing of Adrian Noble's Macbeth and again in 1989. Also that year he played Mr. Hardacre in Edward Bond's play Restoration, Sebastian in The Tempest at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre, and Kent in the Almeida Theatre's King Lear directed by Cicely Berry.
The 1990s started with McCormack taking a starring role as gang member Dolin in the stage production of A Clockwork Orange at the Barbican Theatre. He returned to the Royal Shakespeare Company for the 1998 and 1999 seasons when the company alternated performances of three plays where he played Mike in Richard Nelson's Goodnight Children Everywhere, the Duke of Milan in The Two Gentlemen of Verona, and Baptista in the bawdy Elizabethan comedy The Taming of the Shrew. He reprised the last role for a small-scale Royal Shakespeare Company tour of the UK during the summer of 2000.
During the last few years of his life McCormack played the Earl of Salisbury in King John several times over the 2001 and 2002 seasons, Casca in Julius Caesar at both the Royal Shakespeare Theatre and the Barbican, and filled three separate roles in Gregory Doran's "Season of Rarities" during the winter of 2002/2003: He was Lord Audley in Edward III, Bramble in Eastward Ho! and Pietro in The Malcontent.
Royal Court Theatre company
McCormack's occasional association with Royal Court Theatre company started in 1982 when he appeared in G.F. Newman's play Operation Bad Apple. He returned to the Royal Court in 1986 to star in the original stage production of Jim Cartwright's seminal play Road. Also that year he appeared at the Theatre Upstairs in the Royal Court's production of Andrea Dunbar's Shirley. In 1991 he took a leading role in Griselda Gambaro's Putting Two and Two Together again at the Theatre Upstairs and starred in the 1992 production of Timberlake Wertenbaker's unusual play Three Birds Alighting in a Field.
Other theatre companies
McCormack's other stage appearances include playing Islayev during the Cambridge Theatre Company's (CTC) 1987 tour of A Month in the Country and Pinchwife in The Country Wife in 1991 also with the Cambridge Theatre Company. He took on the dual roles of Chandebise and Poche in Feydeau's A Flea in Her Ear by the Welsh company "Theatr Clwyd" in 1993 and in a number of non-company appearances played Wangel in Ibsen's The Lady from the Sea at the Blackfriars Theatre in 1996, Lord Kent in the Haymarket Theatre's 1997 showing of King Lear, Estragon in Waiting for Godot in 2000 at the Mercury Theatre, Colchester.
McCormack's last UK stage appearance was as Nicholas in Harold Pinter's One for the Road at the Battersea Arts Centre during 2003. Pinter himself was particularly taken with McCormack's impressive interpretation and personally wrote to him afterwards, saying:
- "I thought your Nicholas was absolutely terrific. What power and awesome lucidity." [3]
Television roles
Year | TV Show | Role (If Known) | Other notes |
---|---|---|---|
1955 | Dixon of Dock Green | Young boy victim | First TV appearance following a BBC audition |
1966 | Z-Cars | Running youth | 1 Episode - Series 5 |
1970 | Please Sir! | Skinhead 'yobbo' | 1 Episode in Series 1 |
1971 | Trial | Petrol pump attendant | 1 Episode "Debris" |
1972 | Van der Valk | Sailor | 1 Episode "One herring's not enough" |
1972 | Public Eye | Book Shop Manager | 1 Episode "Girl in Blue" |
1973 | Thriller | Peter | 1 Episode "The Eyes have it" |
1973 | Warship | Petty Officer James | 1 Episode "Sub smash" |
1973 | New Scotland Yard | Detective Sergeant Edge | 1 Episode "Edge" |
1973 | Softly, Softly | Tommy Jarvis | 1 Episode "Night Watch" |
1973 | Spy Trap | Detective Inspector Tarr | 1 Episode "A dirty sort of War" |
1974 | Dixon of Dock Green | Police Constable Wakeman | 1 Episode "Sounds" - McCormack's second appearance on the show after a nineteen-year gap |
1973–1974 | Man About the House | Bernard | 3 Episodes "It's only money", "While the cat's away" and "Somebody out there likes me" |
1975 | Centre Play | Telephone caller | 1 Episode "Post Mortem" |
1975 | Quiller | Press reporter | 1 Episode "Objective Caribbean" |
1977 | The Good Life | Mr Batty | 1 Episode "Our speaker today" |
1977 | Doctor Who | The Commander | 2 Episodes "The Sun Makers - Part 3" and "The Sun Makers - Part 4" |
1978 | Armchair Thriller | Detective Sergeant Bowen | 1 Episode "The girl who walked too quickly" |
1978 | Out | Keith | Unknown episodes |
1978 | The Sweeney | David Wade | 1 Episode "The bigger they are" |
1980 | The Gentle Touch | Jack Ledley | 1 Episode "Break in" |
1981 | When the Boat Comes In | Starkey | 1 Episode "Back to dear old Blighty" |
1981 | Yes, Minister | Bodyguard | 1 Episode "The death list" |
1982 | Kelly Monteith | (unknown) | 1 Episode (Series 4 Episode 2) |
1978 & 1983 | The Professionals | PC Edwards & Inspector | 2 Episodes "In the public interest" (1978) and "The Ojuka Situation" (1983) |
1979–1983 | Terry and June | Jack | 3 Episodes "Flying Carpets" (1979), "Uncle Terry, Auntie June" (1980) and "Tea and no sympathy" (1983) |
1983 | Storyboard | George Taylor | 1 Episode "Woodentop" |
1984 | Chocky | Alan | Featured in the entire series |
1984 | The Lenny Henry Show | As himself in several sketches | 1 Episode |
1987 | Casualty | Dr Gregory Newman | Several episodes |
1990 | The Chief | Assistant Chief Constable Peter Leech | Appeared in the entire second series |
1991 | Forever Green | Brian Allerton | 1 Episode (Series 2 Episode 3) |
1991 | EastEnders | Kevin Masters | Multiple episodes |
1992 | Ruth Rendell Mysteries | Ken Harrison | 1 Episode "Kissing the gunner's daughter" |
1992 | A Touch of Frost | Caretaker | 1 Episode "Conclusions" |
1993 | Spender | Bob Bamford | 1 Episode "Kid" |
1994 | Martin Chuzzlewit | Bullamy | Appeared in the entire series |
1994 | Open Fire | Detective Chief Superintendent Haylor | TV Play |
1996 | Kavanagh QC | Sam Lomax | 1 Episode "A stranger in the family" |
1996 | Pie in the Sky | David Arthur Melchett | 1 Episode "Coddled Eggs" |
1997 | Supply and Demand | Superintendent Harper | Appeared in entire series |
1994–1997 | The Knock | Detective Superintendent Ray Parker | 3 Episodes in Series one and three |
1997 | Inspector Morse | Sergeant Hargreaves | 1 Episode "Death is now my neighbour" |
2000 | Longitude | Inn keeper | TV play - McCormack's last recorded TV appearance |
Filmography
Year | Film Title | Role (If Known) | Other notes |
---|---|---|---|
1971 | Death Line | Policeman 1 | a.k.a. "Raw Meat" in the US. Was killed with a spade by a tube train cannibal |
1981 | The Winter's Tale | Dion | AKA for US video release " The Complete Dramatic Works of William Shakespeare: The Winter's Tale" |
1991 | Let Him Have It | Army Recruitment Doctor | AKA for French cinema release "Âge de vivre" |
1995 | First Knight | Sir Mador | |
2004 | Raw Meat | Cameraman | Filmed during 2003, the year before McCormack's death |
Personal life
McCormack met the actress and movement specialist Wendy Allnutt while they were studying together at the Central School of Speech and Drama in 1963, and they married in 1968 after they had both graduated. They remained married until his death in 2004 and had two children, Katherine and Andrew.
Throughout his stage and television career McCormack still found time to cultivate a lifelong interest, expertise and extensive knowledge in historic churches and medieval architecture.
Death
In late 2003 McCormack was playing Lord Capulet in a tour of Hong Kong with the Royal Shakespeare Company's Romeo and Juliet when he first started to feel unwell. On his return to England he consulted doctors and learned that he had cancer. He died in hospital in June 2004.
References
- Rea, Kenneth (9 July 2004). "Colin McCormack". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
- Obituary Archived 12 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine
- Pinter letter Para 7 Archived 12 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine