Howard Lew Lewis

Howard Lew Lewis (21 August 1941 – 20 January 2018)[1] was an English comedian and actor, best known for his roles in comedy series including Maid Marian and Her Merry Men and Brush Strokes.

Howard Lew Lewis
Born(1941-08-21)21 August 1941
Died20 January 2018(2018-01-20) (aged 76)
Occupationcomedian
actor
Spouse(s)Anna Goodall
Children1

Biography

Lewis was born in London, England. His parents were both born in southern Wales (Tenby and Bridgend). As a young man, Lewis flat-shared with Ken Morley (Reg Holdsworth of Coronation Street) and Andy Carr, actor and screenwriter. His first job was with the Royal Air Force, where he was a computer operator. He worked for several years in computing and telecommunications, but when promoted to manager-level he decided instead to pursue acting as a career after being asked to fire a colleague whom he believed to be a good worker.[2] He was married twice. His first marriage lasted just over a year. His second marriage was to Anna Goodall. They married in 1990 with Ken Morley as best man.

Howard loved reading and had over 35,000 books in his collection, many were first editions. His other hobby was trains and trainsets and tea was often passed on the back of a train that circumnavigated his living room. His favourite magazine was Private Eye and the Beano and Dandy comics which he collected for many decades.

Television

As an actor, Lewis was probably most associated in the British public consciousness with his role as Rabies, one of the Merry Men in the award-winning 1989 BBC children's television comedy series Maid Marian and Her Merry Men.

Lewis featured as one of Robin Hood's followers in the 1991 film Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, playing a character named Hal.[3]

He appeared in two other prominent historical comedy series - as Blag in the Channel 4 sitcom Chelmsford 123 (1988) set during the Roman occupation of Britain in AD 123, and as assorted medieval peasants, (including Piers and Mr Applebottom) in The Black Adder (1983), set in 1485. His longest recurring role was as dim barman Elmo Putney in the comedy series Brush Strokes (1991), and he had minor parts in two Ronnie Barker sitcoms - The Magnificent Evans (1984) and Open All Hours (1985) - and the ITV comedy-drama Minder (1984).

He had a succession of minor roles in such notable series as:

Films

Lewis appeared in several films, again mostly in minor roles. Notable film appearances included Terry Gilliam's 1985 film Brazil, where he played one of the Black Maria guards, and playing Hal in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves.

He also appeared in the 1992 Oscar-nominated semi-biographical film Chaplin, and was the English language voice of Obelix in the 1994 film of Asterix in America to Craig Charles' Asterix. In 2005, he played the part of Lillas Pastia, the innkeeper, in Bizet's Carmen at the Royal Albert Hall, London, and in 2007, played alongside Warwick Davis in the film Small Town Folk.

Year Title Role Notes
1980The Mouse and the WomanDoctor
1983Fords on WaterMan in Toilets
1985BrazilSecond Black Maria Guard
1991Robin Hood: Prince of ThievesHal
1992ChaplinWorkhouse Official #1
1993ShadowlandsTea Room Waiter
1994Asterix in AmericaObelixEnglish version, Voice
1998The Tichborne ClaimantThe Hotel Manager
2000QuillsFirst Vendor
2001Girl from RioTaxi Driver 2
2003Chaos and CadaversCabbie
2004The Baby Juice ExpressKent
2007Small Town FolkKnackerman #1

Death

In an interview with the Scottish Mail on Sunday in late 2017, Lewis confirmed he had been diagnosed with dementia.[4] His fellow actor and friend Tony Robinson announced on Twitter on 22 January 2018 that Lewis had died on 20 January 2018.[1]

On 28 January 2018, it was reported that police in Edinburgh were investigating the circumstances surrounding the actor's death after his daughter Debora Milazzo claimed he had been placed on a regime of high-dose sedatives and maximum-strength opiate painkillers, and had been needlessly placed on the kind of treatment plan that would be prescribed for the terminal phase of a malignant disease, explaining that her father had not received a terminal diagnosis. Police Scotland confirmed it was investigating the complaint.[5]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.