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From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/tv_and_radio/1399178.stm

Thursday, 21 February, 2002, 21:28 GMT
Thaw's portrayal of the world-weary Inspector Morse, created by author Colin Dexter (right), won him three Bafta awards.

John Thaw: Forever Morse

Whether gunning for criminals in The Sweeney or patronising his loyal sergeant as the eponymous Morse, John Thaw was one of the most familiar and well-loved actors of the British small screen.

Thaw was certainly a beneficiary of the nation's long love affair with romanticised television policemen. But with his world-weary integrity and barely concealed sensitivity, he became a favourite with audiences, whatever role he took.

During the 13 years he played Inspector Morse, viewers warmed to the cognitive curmudgeon with his love of classical music, his vintage Jaguar and spates of melancholy.

Thaw always confessed to similarities between himself and his best-known character, although Morse benefited from a university education.

Thaw's Manchester upbringing was not so privileged. In what he always called "the awfulness", his mother left home when he was seven and his father, a long distance lorry driver, left young John and his brother to fend for themselves much of the time.

His uncle drove 16-year-old Thaw to his Rada audition in a van, where the young actor lied about his age to get in.

Once at Rada, Thaw excelled, making friends with other such budding thespians as Tom Courtenay and later graduating with honours.

But he consistently felt like a working-class outsider, with a self-confessed "inferiority complex" that no amount of success would ever completely dispel.

Thus classically trained, Thaw made many successful forays into theatre where he was heralded as a new talent and befriended by Laurence Olivier.

But the large fees and huge audiences of the small screen soon lured him.

After an initial role in Z Cars and Redcap, it was as The Sweeney's belligerent Detective Inspector, Jack Regan, that Thaw fully entered the public consciousness.

His leather jackets and screeching tyres would form a prototype for many a worldly TV detective.

But it was really Morse which sealed John Thaw's place in that part of the nation's heart reserved for television heroes.

In the 13 years of playing the irascible Inspector, Thaw displayed all the depths of empathy and troubled morality lurking behind Morse's tough exterior.

Security

With his minimalist technique, he was able to convey hidden depths to the character, and, in the process, became the thinking woman's television crumpet.

When Morse author Colin Dexter finally killed off his popular creation in November 2000, 13 million people watched his television demise.

In contrast to his deprived childhood, John Thaw found security, both emotional and financial, in adulthood.

He was married for the second time to actress Sheila Hancock in 1973, and their three daughters are all actresses.

The secret of his happy marriage, he said, was "being able to see the silly side when it was all in danger of getting a bit too serious".

The spoils of a lucrative contract to play Morse and other characters for Carlton TV subsidised Thaw's own passions for fine houses and wines.

The role of the Inspector also brought the actor two British Academy awards, as well as a Bafta Fellowship in May 2000.

His bankability withstood such hiccups as A Year in Provence, and the roles of Kavanagh QC and The Plastic Man further cemented his position as the leading player in British television drama.

Kavanagh QC brought Thaw back to the familiar territory of a law-upholding figure, this time reconciling working-class roots and a highly-paid profession.

Off screen, he remained, too, a committed socialist, but was unrepentant about his high earning, claiming "I only get the rate for the job, just like a chippie."

Thaw never forgot the poverty and isolation of his childhood, and this was perhaps the key to his success. He said that acting was just "a way of making money, the way others make it from football".

But behind this pragmatic exterior, John Thaw dared to show a vulnerability, fragility and sense of all that had gone before. He was a master of bruised optimism.

***

Inspector Morse Episodes (1987-2000):

  1. "The Dead Of Jericho" Episode: #1.1 - 6 January 1987
  2. "The Silent World Of Nicholas Quinn" Episode: #1.2 - 13 January 1987
  3. "Service Of All The Dead" Episode: #1.3 - 20 January 1987
  4. "The Wolvercote Tongue" Episode: #2.1 - 25 December 1987
  5. "Last Seen Wearing" Episode: #2.2 - 8 March 1988
  6. "The Settling Of The Sun" Episode: #2.3 - 15 March 1988
  7. "Last Bus To Woodstock" Episode: #2.4 - 22 March 1988
  8. "Ghost In The Machine" Episode: #3.1 - 4 January 1989
  9. "The Last Enemy" Episode: #3.2 - 11 January 1989
  10. "Deceived By Flight" Episode: #3.3 - 18 January 1989
  11. "The Secret Of Bay 5B" Episode: #3.4 - 25 January 1989
  12. "The Infernal Serpent" Episode: #4.1 - 3 January 1990
  13. "The Sins Of The Fathers" Episode: #4.2 - 10 January 1990
  14. "Driven To Distraction" Episode: #4.3 - 17 January 1990
  15. "Masonic Mysteries" Episode: #4.4 - 24 January 1990
  16. "Second Time Around" Episode: #5.1 - 20 February 1991
  17. "Fat Chance" Episode: #5.2 - 27 February 1991
  18. "Who Killed Harry Field?" Episode: #5.3 - 13 March 1991
  19. "Greeks Bearing Gifts" Episode: #5.4 - 20 March 1991
  20. "Promised Land" Episode: #5.5 - 27 March 1991
  21. "Dead On Time" Episode: #6.1 - 26 February 1992
  22. "Happy Families" Episode: #6.2 - 11 March 1992
  23. "The Death Of The Self" Episode: #6.3 - 25 March 1992
  24. "Absolute Conviction" Episode: #6.4 - 8 April 1992
  25. "Cherubim And Seraphim" Episode: #6.5 - 15 April 1992
  26. "Deadly Slumber" Episode: #7.1 - 6 January 1993
  27. "The Day Of The Devil" Episode: #7.2 - 13 January 1993
  28. "Twilight Of The Gods" Episode: #7.3 - 20 January 1993
  29. "The Way Through The Woods" Episode: #8.1 - 29 November 1995
  30. "The Daughters Of Cain" Episode: #9.1 - 27 November 1996
  31. "Death Is Now My Neighbour" Episode: #10.1 - 19 November 1997
  32. "The Wench Is Dead" Episode: #11.1 - 11 November 1998
  33. "The Remorseful Day" Episode: #12.1 - 15 November 2000

More Morse Coming Soon!

 

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