Showing posts with label Tony Haygarth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tony Haygarth. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 March 2017

Theme Time: Elvis Costello - Scully

The death of Tony Haygarth reminded me to blog about Scully today.


King of the scallies, Franny Scully remains scouse playwright Alan Bleasdale's most enduring character. Initially created to entertain the kids he was teaching, Bleasdale realised he was on to something and began to write the character's (mis)adventures in series of short stories which he submitted to BBC Radio Merseyside. The station loved them, and Bleasdale was subsequently invited to read them on air. From there, a Scully story was read out on the BBC2 arts series 2nd House, before he became a stage play, the subject of two novels, a recurring character in the Saturday morning kids TV show and regional TISWAS replacement The Mersey Pirate, the subject of a BBC Play For Today (Scully's New Year) and finally, a full length Granada TV series for Channel 4 in 1984.


If you can get past the fact that by 1984, Andrew Schofield was a very obvious 26-year-old playing the eponymous 16-year-old schoolboy, and that all his schoolmates were of a similar vintage too, then there was much to enjoy in ScullyOn initial inspection, Scully seemed like a much needed bout of light relief for writer Alan Bleasdale following his searing masterpiece Boys From The Blackstuff just two years earlier. Light relief for many of the cast too, who returned for fresh roles here. But there's a dark undercurrent that runs through Scully beneath the humourous japes, the rites of passage tropes and the commentary on teenage life. The lack of opportunities awaiting the likes of Scully in the impoverished and neglected Liverpool of Thatcher's Britain are often alluded to and seemingly embodied by the Scully's recurring vision of his idol Kenny Dalglish during his everyday life - is this seemingly funny and surreal Billy Liar-esque device actually an example of serious psychosis borne from his relationship with his environment? As the series progressed things turned darker and more serious, leading to an extended finale that sees Scully's dreams of one day playing for Liverpool in tatters. It's a world away from some of the amusing slapstick elsewhere in the series and is deeply emotionally affecting. But that's not to say that the show wasn't very funny too, providing an authentic and endearing depiction of working class teenage life that is probably just as relevant today as it was back in 1984.


And the series boasted a great theme tune too - Turning the Town Red - from Elvis Costello, who also plays Scully's train obsessed simpleton brother, Henry (pictured above). It played over the opening credits which saw Scully training with Liverpool FC, before pulling on the Number 7 shirt and running onto the Anfield pitch to the cries of 'There's only one Francis Scully!' from the Kop faithful.

Tuesday, 14 March 2017

RIP Tony Haygarth

Following the sad news of the death of character actor John Forgeham, comes news of another loss to the character actor world with the death of the great Tony Haygarth at 72 from Alzheimer's and vascular dementia.


Born in Liverpool, Tony started out his career - in between 'proper' jobs as a life guard in Torquay and a psychiatric nurse at Sefton General - as a performance poet in the burgeoning tradition that was then developing on Merseyside. Bitten by the performance bug he headed to London with friend Geoffrey Hughes (Coronation Street, Keeping up Appearances and The Royle Family) to make his name.  It wasn't long before Haygarth had developed a very healthy career on the stage and the screen, both TV and film.

Film roles included Percy, Unman, Wittering and Zigo, 1979's Dracula, McVicar, Britannia Hospital, A Private Function, The Bride, Clockwise, The Dressmaker and Chicken Run, whilst on television his recurring and significant roles included performances in Scully (as 'Dracula', the caretaker nemesis to the teenage hero) Emmerdale, The Rotters Club, Our Friends in the North, Boys from the Blackstuff, Rosie, Making Out and The Borrowers, as well as the lead role in Nigel Kneale's 1981 sci fi sitcom Kinvig. Significant guest roles in TV shows such as Casualty, The Bill, The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, Last of the Summer Wine, Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads, Shoestring, Bergerac, Lovejoy, Between The Lines, Sharpe, Hornblower, Inspector Morse Preston Front and I, Claudius.

He was a key figure in Bill Bryden's hard drinking Cottesloe company at the National in the '80s, he won a prestigious Equity Clarence Derwent award for his performance in Sam Shepard's Simpatico in the 90s and appeared in revivals of Twelve Angry Men (by Harold Pinter), Pygmalion and The Rise and Fall of Little Voice in the 00s. 

RIP