RADIO INTERVIEWS, NARRATIONS and SPECIALS

1954 Variety Playhouse

Peter and Zena Marshall perform an excerpt from ‘The Rose Without a Thorn’ by Clifford Bax

Broadcast: 25th December, 1954 at 13.10

1958 Toast Of The Town

Toastmaster, Eamonn Andrews, spotlights ‘Duel of Angels’, and features the performance of a scene from the Jean Giraudoux play. Peter played Count Marcellus.

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 7th June, 1958 at 20.15

1960 Movie-Go-Round

Soundtrack from: The Siege of Sidney Street

Broadcast: 6th November, 1960 at 14.45

1960 Guest Spot

Interview with Peter by Anne Holden

Peter talked about his role as Count Marcellus in ‘Duel of Angels’

Broadcast: Saturday, 13th August, 1960 on Radio KFAX (New York)

1960 Guest Spot

Interview with Peter by Al Covaia

Peter talked about his role as Count Marcellus in ‘Duel of Angels’

Broadcast: Wednesday, 10th August, 1960 on Radio K00 (New York)

1960 Movie-Go-Round

Peter recalls his favourite movie themes

Broadcast: BBC Radio – 6th November, 1960 14.45

Repeated on BBC Radio 2 – 23rd February, 1974 as Star Sound and on BBC Radio 2 – 7th January, 1975 at 20.02 

1970 Department S Special

Interview with Peter

Broadcast: Radio Luxembourg – January 14th, 1970

1971 BBC Radio Manchester

Interview

6th November, 1971

1973 Women’s Hour

Interview

Broadcast: BBC Radio 2 – January 26th, 1973

1973 Weekend Women’s Hour

Interview

Broadcast: BBC Radio 4 – March 31st, 1973 at 15.00

1974 Star Sound

Peter recalls his favourite movie themes

Broadcast: BBC Radio 2 – 23 February, 1974 at 18.03

1974 John Dunn’s Late Night Special

Interview

Broadcast: BBC Radio 2 – 19th November, 1974 at 22.02

1974 The Rias Parade

Variety Show

Broadcast: (West) Germany – 29th November, 1974

1983 The Showman

Peter is interviewed by Harry Martin

Broadcast: Australia 1983

1993 A Game Of Two Halves

Peter discusses his favourite year

Broadcast: BBC Radio 5 – 29th March, 1993 at 14.30

1996 The Afternoon Shift

Interview

Broadcast: BBC Radio 2 – June 4th, 1996

1994 The Judy Spier’s Show

Interview

Broadcast: BBC Radio 4 – August 1994

2017 Nightwaves: The Innocents Special

Peter and other guests talk about the classic film, ‘The Innocents’. Broadcast live from The British Film Institute (BFI).

Broadcast: BBC Radio 4 – 2nd December, 2013

Peter (far left) at the BFI live broadcast

2018 The Arts Show

Broadcast: BBC Radio Ulster – 18th January, 2018

Marie-Louise looks back on the life of Peter Wyngarde

Click below for…

RADIO PLAYS, READINGS & INTERVIEWS

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1951 The Wonderful Year: 1851

Broadcast: Sunday, 4th February, 1951 and Friday, 2nd November, 1951

1953 The Nobel Spaniard

Character: The Duke of Hermances (a Spaniard)

The play takes place in the dining room of the Proudfoot family’s villa in Boulogne in 1950

Broadcast: 4th August, 1953

1954 Artists In Crime

Character: Nigel Bathgate

A serial in five episodes, dramatised by Giles Cooper from the novel by Ngaio Marsh

The action of the play takes place during the late 1920s.

Part 1: Broadcast: 11th August, 1953 at 20.30

Part 2: Broadcast: 18th August, 1953 at 20.30

Part 3: ‘Question and Answer’ – Broadcast: 24th August, 1953 at 20.30

Part 4: ‘The Man at the Table’ – Broadcast: 31st August, 1953 at 20.30

Part 5: ‘The Final Touches’ – Broadcast: 7th September, 1953 at 20.30

1954 Léocadia

Character: Prince Albert Troubiscoi

A comedy by Jean Anouilh Translated by Patricia Moyes Radio production by Raymond Raikes

Broadcast by the BBC Home Service – 1st August, 1954 at 16.30

1954 Rosalynde

Character: Rosander

Broadcast by the BBC Home Service – 8th August, 1954

1954 Variety Playhouse: A Rose Without A Thorn

Broadcast: BBC Radio – 27th December, 1954 at 20.40

Character: Francis Dernham

N.B.: A second performance of the play was broadcast on 31st December, 1954 at 19.30 

Story Synopsis: In what was billed as “One of the finest historical plays written in modern times”, Clifford Bax conducted a sympathetic and unerring dramatic enquiry into the love of King Henry VIII for Katherine Howard.

The King’s fourth marriage – to the pathetic and bewildered Anne of Cleves – has come to grief as the play opens, and Henry’s questing eye has already been taken by another lady of the Court when he asks the young Courtier, Thomas Culpeper: “Is her reputation as fair as her face?”

The unhappy Tom, who is himself enamoured by Katherine, acknowledges that is; and it is at that moment, perhaps, that the King is falsely persuaded that he’s found ‘the rose without a thorn’.

The play is thereafter concerned with a royal passion, foolishly idealised, and doomed to tragedy because it knows no compromise with jealousy.

Bax treats Katherine’s dilemma, of past feeling and present indiscretions, with a delicate understanding. He also allows the King as much dignity, sensitivity and charm as can be allowed to a man who avenged to wounds to his pride as a husband – as he rebuffed the challenges to his authority as a king – by a lavish recourse to the executioners block.

1955 The Ermine

Character: Frantz

A play in three acts by Jean Anouilh

Translated by Miriam John Radio adaptation and production by Raymond Raikes Broadcast: BBC Radio – 2nd April, 1955 at 18.35

ERMINE

1956 The Golden Bowl

Character: The Prince

Part 1: ‘The Prince’

Part 2: ‘ The Princess’

The novel by Henry James dramatised by Mary Hope Allen The principal scenes take place in London and at Fawns House at the beginning of the century. 

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 10th January, 1956 at 19.30

RADIO

Above: Peter as the Prince and Irene Worth as Charlotte Stant reading ‘The Golden Bowl’ – adapted from Henry James’ novel, and recorded for transmission in the BBC’s Third Programme on October 2nd, 1955.

1956 Also Amongst the Prophets

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 5th February, 1956 at 15.00

Character: David

Story Synopsis: The Old Testament story of Saul, the first king of Israel, is shot through with tragic irony. The corruption of power was thrust upon this innocent young man by a prophet who himself was bitterly opposed to kingship. ‘And the Spirit of the Lord will come upon thee,’ said Samuel, and thou… shalt be turned into another man.’ But Saul, after his early successes, was turned into another man in a tragic sense; ‘ for thou hast rejected the word of the Lord, and the Lord hath rejected thee from being king over Israel.’ Abandoned by Samuel, Saul becomes gradually madder and unhappier, and his one consolation is in David – until jealousy makes him David’s enemy. He swings to and fro between love and hate, between sanity and madness, and, as he swings, is propelled towards disaster by his own actions and by circumstance.

1956 Honesty Is The Best Policy

Character: Marchese Fabio Colli

A tragi-comedy by Luigi Pirandello translated by Frederick May Adapted by Helena Wood Produced by Mary Hope Allen

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 25th March, 1956 at 21.25

Repeated on 31st March, 1956

1956 The Wood Demon

Introductions to the four acts spoken by Peter

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 4th November, 1956 at 15.00

1956 The Oresteia

Character: Orestes – son of Agamemnon

Part 1: ‘Agamemnon’ – Broadcast: 23rd November, 1956 at 21.45

Part 2: ‘The Choephori’ – Broadcast: 24th November, 1956 at 21.45

Part 3: ‘The Libation Bearers’ – Broadcast: 25th November, 1956 at 21.45

Part 4: ‘The Eumenides’ – Broadcast: 26th November, 1956 at 21.45

A new translation by Philip Vellacott with music by Antony Hopkins. Arranged for broadcasting and produced by Raymond Raikes

Broadcast by the BBC Home Service

1957 Uncle Vanya

Scenes from country life in four acts by Anton Chekhov Translated from the Russian by David Tutaev Radio adaptation and production by Raymond Raikes Other parts played by members of the BBC Drama Repertory Company Introductions to the four acts spoken by Peter.

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 1st February, 1957 at 20.50

Repeated: October 1972

1957 The Egotist

Character: Sir Willoughby Patterne

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 30th August, 1957 at 21.15pm

1957 Captain Of The Dragoons

Character: Captain Charles Carey

Part 1. Swords and Pistols For Two

Part 2. Secret Service

Part 3. A Pinch of Snuff

Part 4. The Traitor

DRAGOONS

Written by John Keir Cross from the novel by Ronald Welch 

Part 1: ‘Swords and Pistols For Two’ Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 2nd October, 1957

Story Synopsis: Captain of Dragoons is a stirring tale of adventure and intrigue set in the time of John Churchill , first Duke of Marlborough. The young Captain Charles Carey is called upon, against his will, to serve his country as a secret agent in French territory. He is entrusted with a perilous mission, calling for all his skill as a swordsman and his full reserves of courage and resource. “Perhaps my hand trembles a little from my wound in the duel. The pistol swings round towards me; and, suddenly, as I touch it …”

Part 2: ‘Secret Service’ Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 9th October, 1957 at 17.00

Part 3: ‘A Pinch of Snuff’ Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 16th October, 1957 at 17.00

Part 4: ‘The Traitor’ Broadcast: 23rd October, 1957 at 17.00 

1957 The Alabama

Character: Captain Raphael Semmes

The story of an ocean raider Written and produced by Kenneth Poolman

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 20th November, 1957 at 20.00

1959 A Woman Killed With Kindness

Character: Master Wendoll

Broadcast: British Home Service – 25th February, 1959 at 20.00

Repeated: Under the title ‘National Theatre of the Air’ by the BBC Home Service on 20th August, 1961 at 20.30, and as ‘The Sunday Play’ by The BBC Home Service on 3rd April, 1966 at 14.30

1964 The Balcony

Character: The Chief of Police

Written by Jean Genet translated by Bernard Frechtman ‘We’ve reached the point at which we can no longer be actuated by human feelings. Our function will be to support, establish, and justify metaphors.’ Produced and adapted for radio by John Tydeman

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 6th December, 1964 at 20.55

1965 Time Remembered

Character: Prince Albert Troubiscoi

Produced by Charles Lefeaux The action takes place in the house and grounds of the Duchess of Pont-au-Bronc’s country estate in Brittany

Broadcast: BBC Home Service – 25th January, 1965  20.30

1970 The Sleeping Prince

Character: The Regent

Written by Terence Rattigan adapted for radio by Gerry Jones

The fairy story of a Gaiety Girl invited to supper by the Regent of Carpathia, in London for the Coronation of King George V. A casual encounter involves her not only in romance, but in the turmoil of Europe just before the First World War.

Broadcast: BBC Home Service 7th January, 1967.

Repeated: 27th September, 1970

1991 Mort

Broadcast: BBC Radio 4 – 28th August, 1991

2007 The Pickerskill Detentions

Character: Mr Mike Poulson-Jabby

By Andrew McGibbon.

Story Synopsis: Dr Henry Pickerskill, retired English Master of Haunchurst college for boys, looks back on his most memorable detentions.

Pickerskill’s doctoring of a hated school textbook amuses him greatly, and goes unnoticed until an unfortunate detention in the late fifties where the subversive book is mistakenly used by another teacher.

Broadcast: BBC Radio 4 – 28th February 2007 at 23.15

Listen to the play HERE

Click below for…

 

THEATRE PLAYS

1946 Quality Street

Buxton Playhouse Theatre – 1946

Character: Ensign Blades

1946 When We Were Married

Character: Gerald Forbes

The Embassy Theatre, London. July 1946

1946 Pick-Up Girl

Character: Door Attendant/Policeman Owens/A Young Man.

British National Tour – Autumn/Winter 1946.

N.B. In earlier performances of ‘The Pick-Up Girl’, Peter was billed in the role of “The Door Attendant”, but was later credited in the part of both ‘Policeman Owens’ and ‘A Young Man’.

1947 Present Laughter

Character: Morris Dixon

British Tour – Autumn 1947

1948 Macbeth

Character: A Messenger/A Murderer

Colchester Repertory Theatre. February 1948

1948 Deep Are The Roots

Character: Chuck Warren

Colchester Repertory Theatre. March 1948

1948 The Winslow Boy

Character: Dickie Winslow

Colchester Repertory Theatre: 1st – 6th March 1948

1948 The Government Inspector

Character: Osip

Royal Court Theatre, York. May 24th, 1948

1948 Julius Caesar

Character: Julius Caesar

Royal Court Theatre, York. May, 1948

1948 Residents Only

Character: Mr. Maydigger

Royal Court Theatre, York. June 1948

1948 The Devil’s Disciple

Character: Chaplain Brundenell

Royal Court Theatre, York. June 1948

1949 Fly Away Peter

Character: Pan

Colchester Reparatory Theatre: January 1949

1949 The Importance Of Being Ernest

1949 Rope

1949 Othello

Character: Sylvius

The Embassy Theatre. June 1949

N.B. Part of the Repertory Theatre Festival, held at the Embassy Theatre, Swiss Cottage, London between 31st May and 24th June, 1949. Companies from Bristol, Glasgow, Manchester and Nottingham took part. At the time, Peter was with the Nottingham Theatre Trust, based at the Nottingham Playhouse.

1949 The Paragon

Character: The Unknown Man

Colchester Reparatory Theatre. January/February, 1949

1949 As You Like It

Character: Oliver

Theatre Royal, Windsor. March, 1949

1949 Tobias and the Angel

Character: Raguel

The Playhouse, Nottingham. April, 1949

1949 By Candle Light

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Above: Peter with Jenny Harvey in ‘By Candle Light’  

1949 The Apple Cart

Character: Nicobar, The Foreign Secretary

The Playhouse, Nottingham. July 1949

1949 The Winslow Boy

Character: Sir Robert Morton

The Playhouse, Nottingham. July 1949

1949 Fresh Fields

Character: The Chinese Servant

The Playhouse, Nottingham

1949 The Merchant of Venice

Character: The Duke of Venice

The Playhouse, Nottingham

1949 Shadow and Substance

Character: A Young Clergyman

The Playhouse, Nottingham

1949 Othello

Character: Cassio

The Embassy Theatre, London. May-July 1949 

1950 The Happiest Days of Your Life

Character: Dick Tassell

The Richmond Theatre. January, 1950

1950 The Long Shadow

Character: Geoffrey Delamere

The Richmond Theatre: January, 1950

1950 Lovely To Look At

Character: Edward Winthrop

Richmond Theatre: February 1950

1950 Edward, My Son

Character: Sergeant Kenyon

Richmond Theatre. February 1950

1950 Mountain Air

Character: George Beesdale

Richmond Theatre. March 1950

1950 French Without Tears

1950 P.C. 49 – The Case of the Shocking Shadow

Character: Andre Cheval

The Richmond Theatre. May 1950

1950 The Magistrate

Character: Captain Horace Gale and Mr. Wormington

Richmond Theatre. May 1950

1950 Claudia

Character: Jerry Seymour

The Richmond Theatre. June 1950

1950 Goodbye Mr Chips

Character: Mr Chipping

The Richmond Theatre. July 1950

1950 And The Whistle Blew

1950 The Patsy

1950 The Man From Toronto

Character: Robert Gilmour

Richmond Theatre, October, 1950

1950 Someone At The Door

Character: Bill Reid

Richmond Theatre. October 1950

1950 She Stoops To Conquer

1950 Bonaventure

Character: Willy Pentridge

Richmond Theatre, October, 1950

Above: Peter as Willy Pentridge, with cast in Bonaventure

1950 Mr Gillie

Richmond Theatre, November, 1950

Character: Tom Donnelly

1951 September Tide

Richmond Theatre: February 1951

1951 Loaves and Fishes

Character: Bertram Railing

The New Boltons Theatre Club, London. March 1951

1951 Hamlet

Character: Voltimand/Third Player (who acts the part of the murderer, Lucianus)

The New Theatre, Bromley. May 1951

N.B. This production of ‘Hamlet’ at the New Theatre, Bromley, was produced as part of the Festival Of Britain celebrations.

1951 The Taming Of The Shrew

Character: Tranio

The Marlow Theatre. May 1951

1951 Ten Little Niggers

Character: Phillip Lombard

The Grand Theatre, Southampton, August 1951

1951 French Without Tears

Character: Hon. Alan Howard

The Grand Theatre, Southampton, August 1951

1951 The Happy Family

Character: Herbert Filch

The Grand Theatre, Southampton, September 1951

1951 Love From a Stranger

Character: Nigel Lawrence

The Grand Theatre, Southampton, September 1951

1951 Murder Without Crime

Character: Matthew

The Grand Theatre, Southampton, October 1951

1951 Murder Without Crime

Character: Inspector Japp and Sir Claude Amory

Grand Theatre, Southampton, November 1951

1951 Young Wives Tale

Character: Victor Manifold

The Grand Theatre, Southampton, November 1951

1951 Murder On The Nile

1952 They’ll Arrive Tomorrow

Character: Jonah

The Irving Theatre, London. June 1952

Above: Peter as Jonah

1953 The Loyal Traitors

Character: The Communist

The Arts Theatre, London. January, 1953

1953 September Tide

Character: Evan Davies

Marlow Theatre, Canterbury 

1953 The Nobel Spaniard

1954 No Laughing Matter (A.K.A. ‘Histoire de Rire’)

Character: Gérard Barbier

The Arts Theatre, London. July, 1954.

Laughting4

Above: Peter (Centre) in ‘No Laughing Matter’

1954 The Enchanted (A.K.A. ‘Intermezzo’)

Character: The Ghost/A Young Man.

The Arts Theatre, London. March 1954

Above: Peter (centre, on steps) as the Ghost of a Young Man in ‘The Enchanted’

1954 Saint Joan

Character: Dunois

The Arts Theatre, London. September 1954

Above: Peter (right – in full armour) as Dunois

1954 Journeys End

Character: Stanhope

The Irvine Theatre. July 1954

1956 The Good Woman of Setzuan

Character: Yang-Sun

The Royal Court Theatre, London. October 1956

Above: Peter (lying) as Yang-Sun

1958/59 Duel of Angels

Character: Count Marcellus

British Tour. April 1958/59

Above: Peter as Count Marcellus with Vivien Leigh

1959 The Taming Of The Shrew

Character: Petruchio

The Old Vic, Bristol – February 24th – March 10th, 195.

N.B. Recorded and shown by ITV (T.W.W.) in an edited 60-minute version on March 26th, 1959.

PETRUCHIO

Above: As Petruchio in ‘The Taming of the Shrew’

1959 Cyrano De Bergerac

Character: Cyrano

The Old Vic, Bristol – May 1959

CYRANO

Above: As Cyrano in ‘Cyrano De Bergerac’

1960 Duel of Angels

Character: Count Marcellus

American Tour. 1960

ANGELS

Above: Peter with Mary Ure in ‘Duel of Angels’

1962 King John

Character: King John

The Mother House, London

1962 The Merchant of Venice

Character: Shylock

The Mother House, London

1962 Macbeth

Character: Macbeth

The Mother House, London 1962

1964 Night Conspirators

Character: Werner Loder

Regional Tour, 1964

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Above: Peter as Werner Loder, with Sally Home

1964 Time Remembered (A.K.A. Léocadia)

Character: Prince Albert Troubiscoi

New Theatre, Bromley. September 1964

1965 The Philanderer

Character: Leonard Charteris

The New Theatre, Bromley. June 1965

1966 The Spies (A.K.A. The Game As Played)

Character: Chrystal

Richmond Theatre, May 1966

1966 The Servant

Character: Barrett.

The Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guilford. September/October 1966

The Duke of York’s Theatre, London

1967 The Two Character Play

Character: Felice

The Hampstead Theatre Club. December 1967

N.B. The world premiere of the play was on December 11th, 1967.

Above: As Felice in ‘The Two Character Play’, with Mary Ure

1968 The Duel

Character: Nickolay von Koren

The Duke of York’s Theatre, London. April 1968

Above: Peter as Nickolay von Koren

1972 Butley

Character: Ben Butley

The Metro Theatre, Melbourne, Australia. May 1972.

N.B. The production of ‘Butley’ at the Metro Theatre, Melbourne, was the World Premier of Charles Dyer’s play.

Above: Peter as Ben Butley

1972 Mother Adam

Character: Adam

Regional Tour. August-November, 1972

1973 The King and I

Character: The King

The Adelphi Theatre, London.

British National Tour: October – December, 1973

Above: Peter as the King of Siam

1974 Present Laughter

Character: Garry Essendine

British National Tour. Autumn 1974

N.B. Peter also directed this play.

1975 Dracula

Character: Vivorde Szekels/Count Dracula

British National Tour. Spring 1975

1975 Present Laughter

Character: Garry Essendine

The Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford

28th October to 15th November, 1975

N.B. Peter also directed this play.

1976 The Merchant of Venice

Character: Shylock

British National Tour. March-April, 1976

1976 Dear Liar

Character: George Bernard Shaw

The English Theatre, Vienna. July, 1976

N.B. Play had to reopen in September to accommodate both the public and subscribers of the English Theatre who missed it earlier in the year.

Above: As George Bernard Shaw in ‘Dear Liar’

1976 Anastasia

Character: Prince Bounine

The Cambridge Theatre, London. September 1976

Above: Peter as Prince Bounine

1977 Big Toys

Character: Richie Bosenquet

The English Theatre, Vienna. July, 1977

N.B. European premier. Directing, casting and male costume designs by Peter.

1977 The Merchant of Venice

Character: Shylock

The English Theatre, Vienna. August, 1977

N.B. Directed by Peter and recorded at the English Theatre, Vienna, by Austrian Educational Television

1978 Deathtrap

Character: Sidney Bruhl

Tour of Southern Africa 1978

1983 Underground

Character: Alexander Howard.

The Royal Alexandra Theatre, Toronto, Canada. March-May 1983

British Tour

Above: (From left to right): Alfred Marks, Peter, Elspeth March, Eric Carte and Raymond Burr.

1985 Light Up The Sky

Character: Carlton Fitzgerald

The Old Vic, London. September 1985

1984/85 Aladdin

Character: Abanazar

His Majesties Theatre, Aberdeen. December 1984/January 1985.

1985/86 Babes In The Wood

Character: Sheriff of Nottingham.

Richmond Theatre. December 1985/January 1986.

1986 Guilty Conscience

Character: The Prosecutor

The Theatre Royal, Windsor. June/July 1986.

1989 Wait Until Dark

Character: Harry Roat.

The Mill Dinner Theatre, Sonning, UK. July 22 – August 22, 1989

National Tour, South Africa. 1989

The Hilton International Hotel, Singapore: August 26th-September 2nd.

The Regent Hotel, Kuala Lumpar: September 4th-27th.

The Travel Lodge Hotel, Papua New Guinea: September 22nd-October 7th.

The Siam InterContinental, Bangkok: October 9th-13th.

The Nile Hilton, Cairo: October 18th-23rd.

The Jordan InterContinental Hotel: October 25th-28th.

The Athens Hilton, Athens: October 30th-November 3rd.

The InterContinental Hotel, Dubai: November 6th- November 13th.

The Hilton International Hotel, Manaman: November 15th-20th.

The Hilton International Hotel, Manaman: November 15th-20th.

The InterContinental Hotel, Muttrah: November 22nd-27th.

The InterContinental Hotel, Abu Dhabi: November 30th-December 4th.

The InterContinental Hotel, Al Ain: December 6th.

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Above: As Harry Roat with Helen Gill in ‘Wait Until Dark’

1988 As You Like It

Character: Duke Frederick

March/April 1988

UK National Tour

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1990 The Country Wife

Character: Jack Pinchwife

The Mermaid Theatre, London – December 1990

1995 The Cabinet Of Doctor Caligari

Character: Doctor Caligari

The Playhouse Theatre, Liverpool – September 1995

N.B. Peter appeared in just one half of the opening night performance of ‘The Cabinet Of Doctor Caligari’ at the Playhouse Theatre in Liverpool on Tuesday, September 19th, 1995, before withdrawing from the show with a serious throat infection.


1959 Long Day’s Journey Into Night

Produced and Directed by Peter Wyngarde.

The Bristol Old Vic. March 17th – April 7th, 1959


DIRECTED BY PETER WYNGARDE

1975 Time And The Conway’s

The Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford. December 1975


READINGS

1970 A Celebration of Tudor Verse

1974 Water, Water Everywhere

Click below for…

TRANSCRIPT: The Judy Spiers Show

Please note that some of the additional information provided here by the journalist named below may not be accurate, so it should be treated with caution.


Broadcast: BBC Radio 4 – August 1994

The programme opens with a sound bite from the Jason King episode, ‘A Red, Red Rose Forever’,

Voice of Fan 1: “I just remembered him as a quintessential English gentleman; a sort of James Bond character but as it was on TV, it was so slightly cheaper value. I also remember him wearing all the fab gear”.

Voice of Fan 2: “Jason King would usually pull up in a flared car of some sort – the tyres would be flared, and he’d sort of waft out, keeping his hand on his head to keep his wig in place; his moustache would be vibrating succulently. He’d have a bird on his arm and be smoking a corduroy cigarette. He’d usually be wearing some sort of double-breasted affair and fantastic shoes, no doubt”.

Voice of Fan 3: “He got the clothes. He got the girls. He was the man!”

Voice of Host: “Even though they were knee-high to a grasshopper when Jason King graced our screens, these guys do remember him. Fab! Jason also had a way with words”.

Voice of Fan 2: “I recall he had a thing of ending every sentence with, ‘Do-dee dee-dee’“ [1]

Voice of Host: “As well as being Prince of mix and match. No wonder as the release date of Jason King on video nears, that so many people remember the flamboyant adventurer and notorious lover of women who could solve crimes even Interpol battled with”.

Voice of Fan 2: “I remember he was in this love-scene with a famous actress at the time, and I remember him saying to her, “You really turn me on,” and her replying, “You’re really fab!”

Voice of Host: “Everyone at the time looked like him; you could hardly walk down the street without tripping over a droopy moustache. Peter Wyngarde is the actor who played this Sultan of style”.

Peter: “I thought the funniest thing of all was the fan mail you got from girlfriends and wives, saying things like: ‘My husband looks exactly like you,’ and you’d get this photograph of him and he’d look like Godzilla. It was absolutely unbelievable!

“There was this man with more hair on his head than anybody has ever had in their lives on top of their head, and a moustache that went down to their knees. It was unbelievable. They also had these great grinning teeth. And they’d say, ‘Could you sign his photograph – not my photograph – his photograph. People exaggerate what they think they see”.

Voice of Host: “And what about the clothes?”

Peter: “The idea was to give me more height, so I double the height of the collar and I made it much higher, that’s all it was. And instead of a tie which I believe displays a person’s personality; if you look at the people that have little tiny knots you know what else they have which is tiny! You know there’s no freedom and that they are so introverted they almost disappear into themselves,

Voice of Host: “He would often draw designs for his suits on brown paper which were sent to his own tailor. the pink high-neck shirt with gigantic matching tie bursting out from the jacket of the caramel suit; the high waisted trousers and the snooker players waistcoats. He was busy on set as there were at least eight changes of clothes per episode from Tweedy suit to sheepskin jacket to tight jumper; powder blue suit in the morning, red kaftan at night. Ohhh, the flick of his jacket as he strolled across the parquet floor to tick off a villain. The way the trouser leg hung just so”.

Peter: “I think you’ve got to dress to make yourself look better, if possible – to make the body look better. The fact that I used a riding jacket of the 18th Century gave it a kind of elegance in a very masculine way, which I was also after, you know, so that the jacket became longer, the trousers became narrow, and I wore riding boots, so you had this wonderful line. It was an elegant line; it had something, and I was doing alright in my private life with this, so why not use it in my public life. It was a very classic line”.

Voice of Host: “So what happened to the suits? Apparently, some were just given, so always look out when trawling the charity shops, you may get lucky and find a genuine Wyngarde suit that he’d once given to Oxfam. There’s even a rumour that an original pair of Jason King trousers are doing the rounds at various raves”.

Peter: “I can’t find any now as they’ve all disappeared with different people. Sometimes I’d say, ’Where’s that lovely steely grey one? I haven’t seen that for ages”.

Voice of Host: “Would you recognise without any shadow of doubt one of your suits?”

Peter: “Immediately! That’s why I knew when I went to Germany, France, Sweden and I’d see ‘Jason King Suits’ in shop windows, I said: ‘That’s not my suit!’  But everyone says it is. ‘No. It’s terrible. This is wrong, this is wrong this is…’ I could tell right away. They didn’t know the cut. The secret was the cut. I know that secret to this day so if I’m kidnapped, you know what happened.”

Voice of Host: “With Jason, the dandy writer of crime fiction who had better brains than all of MI5 put together, surely, he should have moved from crime into a fashion slot or joined the style police and kept the colour wheel firmly on beige”.

The world of cheese certainly won’t let him be forgotten.

Voice of Retro Clothes Shop Owner: “We have a screen that shows a photo’ of Peter Wyngarde around every 5 seconds to subliminally entice people into our 1st floor shop”.

INTERVIEW: Bravo

Please note that some of the additional information provided here by the journalist named below may not be accurate, so it should be treated with caution.


December 1974

The Bravo Truth Game

Peter Wyngarde makes a surprise confession: “I’m waiting for my third great love!”

Why does he sometimes dream at night of a James Bond character who looks just like Jason king? Why can’t he stand women who don’t have a sense of humour? And why does he consider it important that a man is able to fib convincingly?

Question: what is your greatest ambition?

Peter: To be a better actor and a better person.

Question: Which personality of our time do you most admire?

Peter: The Italian film director, Luchino Visconti. His film, Death In Venice, is a feast to the eyes.

Question: What does appetent happiness mean to you?

Peter: To lie on a beach in the sunshine, being lazy, not to wear anything about walls or crimes, and to wait for a lovely evening.

Question: What makes you unhappy?

Peter: Physical and mental pain, humiliation, human misery.

Question: Are there any experiences in your life that you’d rather have missed?

Peter: None at all. Every experience, even a bad one, has its advantages.

Question: What is your greatest talent?

Peter: Energy and concentration.

Question: What about faults?

Peter: I’m too impatient an easily hurt.

Question: What do you think about marriage?

Peter: I was very young when I married and it went wrong. I think that everyone should be in love at least three times. Unfortunately, this wouldn’t be possible if you were wearing a wedding ring.

Question: Have you already at these three loves?

Peter: I’m still waiting for the third!

Question: What is your favourite food?

Peter: Fresh fish and lots of salads.

Question: Favourite drink?

Peter: French country wine.

Question: What quality do you appreciate most in a woman?

Peter: Humour. If a woman can’t laugh, she’d get on my nerves!

Question: What quality do you consider most important in a man?

Peter: To charmingly unconvincingly tell fibs!

Question: What is your favourite book?

Peter: The one I’m reading at the time.

Question: Who are your favourite favourite composers?

Peter: Beethoven, Mozart and Schubert.

Question: Favourite actors?

Peter: Laurence Olivier, Marlon Brando I’m Vivien Leigh, who died much too young.

Question: Do you have a dream part?

Peter: I dream of a part much along the lines of James Bond but not so terribly serious, more playful Jason King.

Question: Imagine you were living on a desert island for a year and you were only allowed to take three things with you. What would they be?

Peter: Three women a cool blonde, a fiery black haired one, and a gentle brunette.

Question: Have you been telling the truth in this Questionnaire?

Peter: If I said yes, you think I was lying. Therefore, I shall say no!

TRANSCRIPT: Freddie Francis – The Innocents

Seeing things in black and white

On Sunday 6th April 1980, at the Gate 2 Cinema in Notting Hill, London, The Guild of British Camera Technicians arranged a showing of The Innocents, the black and white, Cinemascope production, directed by Jack Clayton. Its distinguished cinematographer, Freddie Francis who had, at the time, recently completed shooting another black and white production, The Elephant Man, kindly made himself available for a question-and-answer session after the showing. The following is a transcript of that session in relation to The Innocents:

F.F.: What a terrible dupe that print turned out to be. I’m glad my operator Ronnie Taylor was not here to see what they did to his work. I myself am a very non-technical person – I love taking photographs but I don’t know what goes on when they prepare a film for television. What I cannot understand, because I am a very simple soul, is why they didn’t come to someone like Jack Clayton, or even Ronnie for advice when converting from film to television. Then we wouldn’t be subjected to watching such atrocities as we just have done. However, bearing in mind that was not a representative copy of the film, if anyone has any questions at all please go ahead.

Q.: Was it all shot on PLUS X?

F.F.: Yes, I can’t remember using any faster film.

Q.: What about the interiors – were they shot in an actual house?

F.F.: No, they were all shot at Shepperton. The interesting thing was it was the early days of Cinemascope, when there was all sorts of rules and regulations set out. Some of you may remember the days when you couldn’t get closer than 10 feet. Of course we did, by shooting some of the interiors at 16 and 22. As you can imagine, it got a bit warm at Shepperton.

Q.: You were working for depth a lot weren’t you? Even though I hear you couldn’t always see the person on the other side of the screen?

F.F.: Yes, this was a trouble. One of the great things that we achieved for the first time with great depth of field and these panning and scanning people in their wisdom shows you one person at a time.

Q.: Who were the two focus pullers, do you remember?

F.F : Yes, I do. Ronnie Maasz and Bernie Ford.

Q.: Can you explain to people who don’t understand about the setup, just how the two focus pullers work?

In those days you had a combination lenses such as with Panavision etc,; then you had an anamorphic, which was a separate entity, mounted on the front of the camera, in this case an BNC Mitchell. You want to pull focus on the anamorphic lens as well as on the standard lens; therefore you needed two focus pullers. I don’t know how that sound used to cope, with all the dialogue going on between the two focus pullers! However, it seemed to work.

Q.: Did you use a filter at all?

F.F.: Well, this is a terrible thing, something about the picture projection that makes me angry. We had to make the film in black and white which was fair enough. Then, because the film was financed by 20th century, we ought to make it in Cinemascope. Both Jack Clayton and myself felt the Cinemascope was a terrible format for this picture. You are now going to be saying, why am I beefing about it being shown in 1.85? Well, as we had to make it Cinemascope, we had to do something to make it interesting. So I devised a special front, in addition to the anamorphic and standard lens. It involved the use of graduated filters – two filters being slid in from either side. This enabled us to filter, or graduate off, the sides of the picture. Although this sounds quite normal now, it had a wonderful effect with this film, because you were never quite sure what you could see at the sides due to the gradual diffusion at the edge. This greatly enhanced the claustrophobic feeling of the picture. Unfortunately, here today you didn’t get that effect except on the odd occasion. One terrible example is where we have a wonderful two-shot in centre frame (with the edges going off) and they have decided to frame up one person – on the wrong side of the screen. Nevertheless, we had these filters made up, with the special front, and this enabled us to change them during the actual shot, bringing them in and out. I don’t know which of the two focus pullers was responsible for that. On the side of the screen which you missed today you would have seen all of this – I would like you to see it properly someday.

So, in answer to your question, yes we were using filters throughout. Sometimes even painting filters as we went along, to give special strange effects.

Q.: The effect with the candle – was that one of your made-up filters?

F.F.: We just had nets on – we didn’t know about such things as ‘star filters’ in those days. In fact, another problem we had to face was the fact we were shooting interiors at 16 and 22, so the candles presented a bit of a problem. We were shooting single wick, and double with candles. In fact at times we even went up to five wicks, which meant that the candles were more powerful than the lights at times!

(VOICE OFF, A NOTE OF PATHOS: Can we go back to shoot interiors at between 16 and 22?)

As a matter of fact, Tim, (who is working with me on my next film) and I were discussing the film with the director. It is to be in two parts – with long flashback sequences; we have a modern part and a period part. I’ve just agreed with the director that we are going to shoot the period part (which is 75% of the film) at as wide an aperture as we can get. (Groans).

Q.: Why have you decided to do that?

F.F.: I can’t tell you too much at the moment because you are not supposed to know about it! Let’s say that it is a film within a film, and a period section has to be very romantic, whilst the present day is harsh. The type of stylised romantic lighting I have chosen for the 100 years ago part, requires a wide-open aperture. Also, I feel that in the good/bad old days of film, shooting wide open gave a romantic aura to a film.

I remind him of all this when he is grumbling about his lot – imagine trying to work with two focus pullers!

When I started there were all sorts of strange lenses i.e., Astro lenses, which were F2 this was great because everything seemed slightly soft, so therefore, everything looked equally sharp. I personally think that since then lenses have been getting awful, because they are getting too sharp, but that is just my point of view!

Q.: In the shot by the lake, in the rain, with Miss Jessel out in the reeds – when the Governess asks, “Where’s Flora? – did you use a filter on that; the background looks more contrasty.

F.F.: I am going back 20 years, but I am pretty sure that we didn’t shoot that it was a made up shot in the foreground. People were put in afterwards. The lake stuff was shot without filters to the best of my recollection.

Q.: The background looks like it has been taken with a longer lens than the foreground. The closer figures looked normal.

F.F.: I am sure that this was a made-up matte. In other words, we shot the background as normal and then the matte was made as late as the editing stage. In fact I don’t even know where that happened.

I do know the lake stuff was shot without filters because it was mostly bad-weather stuff anyway – and that is the stuff you can’t filter. There comes a time in B/W as you know, where you are wasting your time because there is nothing to filter.

Q.: Looking at The Innocents I think that it would have lost something if made in colour. It cries out for B/W.

F.F.: I can’t agree with this. We’ve just made a film The Elephant Man in black and white, and because it was turn of the century everyone thinks B/W is its medium. However in retrospect one wonders what could have been done in colourful stop I only said this because on the film I’m just about to do (in colour) people keep asking me “do you think we ought to do it in B/W?”. People seem to have a preconceived idea that the films made around the 1800s should always be made in B/W. I like them in black and white, but I think a good job can also be made of them in colour.

Q.: Why was this one made in B/W, was it a studio decision?

F.F.: I’m almost certain, it was the studios decision. But remember that in those days the decision was usually whether it could be made… in colour. B/W at that time was more or less the norm. The big castle came with Cinemascope. It was a very intimate story with a small cast of players, and everything everyone thought it was wrong to do it in Cinemascope. Recourse if you took 20th Century’s money, you took those Cinemascope anamorphic lenses as well. You had no way out. Which is why we designed our system of lenses.

Q.: Paradoxically now it is almost more expensive to make things in B/W is it not? Unless you print on colour start. In fact I believe Kodak or stopping the run of B/W.

F.F.: Tim and I have had so many problems on this film with B/W you would think it was something new. I sometimes get the impression and maybe I should have my solicitor that could call out ‘we don’t want films in B/W.’ We had complete and utter non-co-operation. We got to the stage where there was not a single usable 1000 feet roll of B/W in the world. So Kodak said, could we carry on with 400 feet rolls – which we did. However, eventually the wasn’t even 400 feet B/W PLUS X left – or any PLUS X left at all. Then someone there had the effrontery to turn around to say to me – “Why can’t you use Double X?” To which I replied, we can’t use Double X because I don’t want to use it AND we just happened to be in the middle of sixteen sequences which we have already shot in PLUS X. So they had to go back to recoat some. And the stock they’re coated was at least twice as fast as a stock we had been shooting on – so a great time was had by all!

Q.: I got that feature 35mm B/W is nothing to Rochester – very small part of the total output. The Motion Picture represents such a small percentage of the world demand for 35mm B/W you think the massive use in the amateur/stills field would guarantee that there should be a huge amount of PLUS X available all the time, on tap, ready to use.

F.F.: I think that all I was quoted at Rochester, they don’t coat it over here at all so I understand. So, it’s quite a drama now to shoot on B/W.

Q.: But they do talk about printing on colour stock.

F.F.: Of course. Our release printing is going to be done on Gaevert. I do feel that Brian is right – certain films do call for B/W, and I think you should be able to choose. The guy who is responsible for setting up The Elephant Man – Mel Brooks, is a great one for B/W.

Q.: How does working with B/W on The Elephant Man compare with working back then on The Innocents with B/W? Were there any essential differences?

F.F.: Well all our recent stuff went to Denham labs (about whom I can’t speak highly enough) and they had trouble on The Elephant Man because all the B/W equipment was out of date. however, Denham did a wonderful job with the processing, but I was surprised at the lack of grain on the PLUS X now, not that I thought it was ever excessive. The quality that Denham got out of PLUS X was amazing.

Q.: I suppose that the main differences now are in the lenses, there being so much faster. I can’t remember many then that were as fast as current Panavision lenses.

F.F.: Oh no, no.

Q.: And obviously light souses have changed, too, haven’t they?

F.F.: Yes, of course. I haven’t photographed a film since Night Must Fall and they have changed tremendously. One of the things I did notice coming back to photographing films after such a long lay-off is the sparks[1]. situation. At the time we shot The Innocents everyone had sparks from the studios, but now it’s all freelance and everyone is on their toes. I found the sparks were absolutely fantastic compared to what they used to be. This was very heartening, and certainly made life easier for me. Now you have a light for everything you may need – it’s horses for courses, you can pick and choose lights for any situation. However, in those days you had just the ordinary studio light; 2K’s and 5K’s and brutes, and that was it.

Q.: The shot of Deborah Kerr going up the stairs with the candles, when she is on the first part of her search, she goes through about five or six keys; was that just from one or two sources flagged off, or was each section keyed separately?

F.F.: It is hard to remember what I do recall is that I had a wonderful gaffer/sparks called Maurice Gillet, who I am sure you all know is tremendous. I know there were men on dimmers all over the place – we’ve got a man on a dimmer hidden in a grandfather clock. The answer is to be that there was lots and lots of tiny sources for that shot.

Q.: How long was the shooting schedule?

F.F.: About 10 weeks, which indoors days was a fairly long schedule.

Q.: was it shot in 1960?

F.F.: Yes.

Q.: Do you think the studio exteriors were more successful in B/W than they might have been in colour?

F.F.: I think that there is no difference (in quality) with interiors exteriors. B/W or colour. But if it’s a case of matching, if you have to match locations in the studio, I think you stand a better chance with B/W. Did I made that terribly complicated? We had a few exteriors which was shot at a place called Brighton Park[2] which we then had to match on the silent stage at Shepperton and I think that it was easier in B/W than it would have been in colourful. A strange answer to your question. It’s not whether it is easier. In B/W or colour to match exteriors in a studio the great problem relates to whether you have space or not.

Notes:

[1]. A lighting technician on a film set.

[2]. The outside location shots on The Innocents were actually filmed at Sheffield Park.

INTERVIEW: The Sunday People

Please note that some of the additional information provided here by the journalist named below may not be accurate, so it should be treated with caution.


Sunday, 28th November, 1971

He’s not just a pretty face – he’s great over a hot stove too!

Sexy he certainly is. With hardly a day passing without him receiving at least a few dozen proposals of marriage, a large smattering of decidedly improper offers and great sacksfuls of letters telling him he’s gorgeous. He has even outstripped Paul Newman in poster popularity as a world heart throb.

But when I called on Peter Wyngarde it wasn’t to make a grab for his trousers and, honestly, that’s what happens to him all the time, and I didn’t ask him to autograph the top of my tights and that, too, is a common request.

Instead, we chatted at his London bachelor flat to discuss his prowess as a cook.

As television’s hairy hero Jason King, now promoted from a bit part in Department S to solo starring in a series all of his own, Peter’s private life interest in food is pretty serious. But as he said, sprawled like a broody marjah on a much-cushioned settee, “Truth is people only seem interested in my sex life. Women just want to take me to bed. And men want to know where I get my suits cut.

“I suppose the fact that I’m quite a good cook doesn’t fit in with the sex image. Well, I mean, what woman would dream of being carried off into the night by a fella who’s been up to his elbows in flour!

“Mind you, I don’t want it to get around that I’m giving up sex for food. Believe me, I need sex. But then, one can always get plenty of that, thank goodness.

“No, the only thing is that I get a bit frazzled by the way women go after me. I truly don’t understand why – especially when you consider that it is all ages of women, starting at 4 and going up for 98”.

Manfully, though, he has learned to live with himself as a sex symbol.

Despite his following of armchair mistresses, inside the suave, sophisticated television Jason King there beats the heart of a real-life Peter Wyngarde, who actually enjoys a spot of slaving over a hot stove.

“It is a great relaxation for me,” he said, only just managing to find enough give in his skin-tight trousers to enable him to cross his legs.

“The thing is I’m a split personality over food. On one hand I’m hooked on the health food bit you know, nuts and whole wheat and all that. At least once a day I tried to eat a purely healthy, vegetarian meal. But then for my other meal I adore exotic food.

“I also love cooking for my friends, giving lavish dinners which might take hours and hours to prepare”.

As might be expected, Peter is a very unconventional cook. Like many things he does he creates on a whim and swears that he has never referred to a cookery book in his life.

“I do tend to add ingredients just as I fancy,” he said, “I don’t like rigid planning.”

He likens cookery to the way he chose his dog. “One day I woke up and decided to have a dog and I wanted to name him Yousef,” he explained.

“Incredibly that day I heard of a superb litter of champion Afghan Hounds. So I went along to have a look and there were these twelve puppies in the one litter. I stood there facing all 12 of them and yelled ‘Yousef’ and, you know, one toddled over to me. That was the one I went home with. Of course, I admit I was lucky with Yousef. But mostly my cooking works out on that principle, too.

“But, seriously, I think the secret of success with everything, cookery or what have you, is to be adventurous; a bit of a gambler. In that respect Jason King influences me tremendously. Though he’s only a fantasy character he has a lot to offer in real life”.

For a start he’s not hung up on the age bogey. “Now, I have noticed that young people never think about age. It’s only the old ones that mention it. They’re the ones that count birthdays and wonder constantly if someone is 30, 50 or 106.

“It’s the old ones that make the rules about what is the right behaviours for certain ages. In fact, age is all in the mind”.

As it happens, Peter wouldn’t pinpoint his own age accurately. He explained that his mother had confused his passport with his brother’s and he wasn’t sure whether he was four years younger or older than his brother.

He would not, however, say what he was four years younger or older than. “I really have forgotten all about it,” he said.

In some branches of his private life, though, Peter is not so forgetful or casual. He has organised himself very well with two cars, a Bentley and a Bristol, a London flat, a home in Spain, and odd bits of property all over the place.

“I am,” he said, “a pretty self-sufficient person. I’m quite happy to go for days even weeks without seeing a soul. I’m looking for an isolated cottage right now so I can do just that.

“You see, I don’t consider getting married. I was once and it was disastrous. Matter of fact, I learned to cook when my wife left me. But I must admit that it was only when I became Jason King that I learned to cook well.”

Interview by Patricia Boxhall.

INTERVIEW: The Leicester Chronicle

Please note that some of the additional information provided here by the journalist named below may not be accurate, so it should be treated with caution.


Friday, 29th November, 1974

Jason: The Man Who Will Go One Step Further Than Anyone Else

Peter Wyngarde had a twinkle in his eye and a cold in his nose. He picked the cold up in Bury St Edmunds and was very sorry about that, because he is very fond of Suffolk and was afraid the cold would put him off that particular part of the country in future.

To counteract the infection he was drinking a raw egg mixed with honey and, like the good son he assured me he was, he downed his medicine without a murmur. Though he did follow up the egg and honey within an equally therapeutic glass of whiskey.

Peter and I were talking in his dressing room at the Theatre Royal, Nottingham, where he has recently been appearing in Noël Coward’s Present Laughter, a play in which he was both directing and taking the lead part.

He isn’t easy to interview – first because he is so devastatingly attractive, and knows it in the nicest possible way – and secondly, because you’re never quite sure if he is laughing at you or not. Come to think of it, the was a third distraction. He wore a loose purple bathrobe and even the hairs on his chest crinkled with insatiable good humour.

It wasn’t difficult to see why a group of Australian girls had appointed him “The man they’d most like to lose their virginity to.”

Peter knows his attractions, play on them quite shamelessly, has a great fund for enjoying life to the utmost, and when he gets into trouble is inclined to run home to mum in Scotland and say, “You know all men are little boys at heart, don’t you?”

When I suggested that women fawned on him too much, he said quickly, “Actually, it gets a lot more physical than mere fawning. On tour I was sleeping peacefully in my hotel bed and two maiden ladies

rushed into my room and flung themselves on me. At 9:30 AM in the morning. What did I do? I defended myself, of course…”

But if you ask Peter Wyngarde who is the great love of his life the answer is immediate. Yousef. That’s the Afghan Hound who accompanies him on most of his travels and is the only creature permitted to permanently share his bed.

“I’m not saying that he’s less trouble than a woman, or even less temperamental. But he is an easier companion!”

Yousef is at present in Scotland being “doctored” by Peter’s mother. “The poor animal got some infection that meant he kept “going”. Whether he was sitting on my settee or someone’s lap, he just made puddles. It was awfully difficult for him and some of my friends began to object. The vet said Yousef wouldn’t recover.”

Peter was alarmed and telephoned his mother in great distress. “She knows I’m never depressed about myself, so when my sad little voice drifted over the phone she said, “it must be that dog that’s upsetting you.’ When I told her my tale of woe she told me to send Youssef to her immediately, and never mind what the experts said. After a few weeks of her treatment (she feeds him bran) he’s now so lively and bouncy that I’m going to have to put him on a slimming course.”

Yousef, says Peter, is good for him. “We talk all the time. I flatter him outrageously – you have to flatter Afghans – and he retorts by admonishing me. He has a peculiar way of growling, ‘Arrrr’, that reduces me to submission.”

Peter thrives on work, adores working under pressure, and is stimulated by women, the theatre, animals – almost anything that sets his imagination working.

As far as women are concerned his reaction is typical. “The physical thing is great, but you still got to find something exciting to talk about over the breakfast marmalade.”

He hates drab people. “There’s too much greyness in the world. That’s why I love playing in Present Laughter – it’s gay, and the characters refused to be daunted by circumstances. They plays life for laughs.”

He disagrees vociferously when I suggested that too much imagination might lead to neurotic behaviour. “Nonsense,” he said breezily. “Imagination is the greatest gift of the gods. You can’t have too much.”

That’s why he feels that Jason King, the character he played on television with such visual and sensual impact, hasn’t even begun to realise his potential.

“I like Jason’s flamboyancy – the fact that he will go one step further, both emotionally and physically than anyone else.”

So the Peter Wyngarde imagination is being concentrated on Jason King’s future. “I think it would be rather lovely to have a Puma as my assistant in the show. I’ve always fancied owning a real wild animal and Pumas don’t eat people until they’re at least three years old. And then I’d train him only to eat directors!”

Peter isn’t quite as tall as you’d imagine, but he automatically becomes the centre of attraction. “Only when Yousef isn’t around,” he declaims modestly. “I often have to say to him during photographic sessions, ‘Down boy.’ There’s only one star in this family!”

Interview by Valeen Marriot.

INTERVIEW: Record Collector

Please note that some of the additional information provided here by the journalist named below may not be accurate, so it should be treated with caution.


October 1996

Back in 1970, Peter Wyngarde was a household name as TV sleuth Jason King. Today is an idol of musical exotica thanks to a remarkable solo album.

He’s acted alongside Vivien Leigh, and was once tipped as a second Olivier, during a remarkably successful stage and screen career throughout the 50s and 60s. Then, in 1968, Peter Wyngarde was invited to play the part of crime fiction writer Jason King for a new television series called Department S. Two series later, King had his own show: the plots became more outrageous, as did Jason King’s wardrobe and haughty manner.

Back then, he topped ‘Sexiest Man’ polls, and was mobbed by thousands of fans as he touched down in Australia. Today, Wyngarde’s Jason King is equally irresistible as the most perfect embodiment of the reborn Easy aesthetic. Which is why EMI’s Sound Gallery schemer, Tris Penna, invited the man who was once King to write something for the sleeve of the second volume of the Sound Gallery; a tribute to legendary TV theme orchestrator, Laurie Johnson, penned in a manner that suggests the intervening 25 years had done little to cramp Wyngarde unique lyrics style: “Even them that are totally improbable/he manages is to invest with Emmy possibilities/And entirely personal, that’s quite indominable/Jason, Kingable.”

“I thought it was rather good,” says Wyngarde, munching on a King Prawn Thermidor in at distinguished eaterie in a nice part of town. He’s still recognisably King-like, the Mexican bandit moustache is still there, although that once luxurious bouffant is slowly losing the follicular challenge. Self-ridicule has tended to soften those rugged features, and today, Wyngarde could be mistaken for Peter O’Toole’s more handsome younger brother. But he isn’t: in fact, everything about him suggests that there’s a good deal of Jason King still lurking about.

“Oh, it was easy to get back into character

again,” he smiles. “Jason King was very much a romantic extension, a magnification of me anyway. I rewrote the scripts and developed the character to suit, and lived it 12 hours a day for four years.”

I don’t have a modern-day equivalent of Felicity Kendal or Diana Rigg to offer as sacrificial fodder for the patter of Jason King’s unflappable seduction techniques, but I do have in my bag one highly cherished copy of Peter Wyngarde’s album recorded for RCA in 1970. When I first purchased the record, it was worthless. Advertising in this magazine for one in better condition in 1986, I happily forked out £15. Now, no dealer would stick a copy out for less than £200. Why? It’s a masterpiece of fine, pseudo psychedelic orchestrations and impeccable bad taste; of the double-entandre, where symbolic fantasy collides with real-world impropriety; and of a lifestyle so preposterous that it’s barely recognisable.

Cherished by the Exotic and Easy crowd, the Peter Wyngarde LP has also found favour in other circles, according to the man who could charm the pants off a nun. “I heard it enjoyed a huge cult following amongst modern-day hippies who got stoned to it in Amsterdam,” he says. The record has even inspired several tributes, most notably Breadwinner’s ‘Give Us A Light, You Bastard’ private album, taped in 1990, which boasted three songs – ‘If Wyngarde Was A Woman’, ‘Hey There, Petter (sic) Wyngarde’ and ‘Jason Kinky Winky’, all performed in the manner of the great man’s own LP.

So out on a limb that it could easily have been recorded by a Martian, the Wyngarde album actually shares something in common with one or two cherish rock records. ‘God Save The Queen’, ‘Give Ireland Back To The Irish’, ‘Relax’ and ‘Hi, Hi, Hi’ all met a frosty reception when it came to getting radio play. But it’s with a wry smile that Wyngarde recalls that his entire album was banned from public dissemination.

“Sold out in three or four days, but RCA didn’t repress it. I got in a rage about that because I had signed a contract for three LPs, one a year. They told me that the main factory has just being closed and that they were opening a new one in Hollywood. That’s Hollywood in Gloucestershire. Perfectly truthful. It wasn’t going to open for another six months.

“They had this LP that had struck lucky. None of their other LPs had done that since Elvis; he was all they had. They said it would have to wait six months, by which time the momentum was lost.”

That episode, which has more than a whiff of conspiracy about it, helps explain the incredible scarcity of the album today. And a listen to the opening, highly theatrical sequence, comprising ‘Come In’, ‘You Wonder These Things Begin’ and

the infamous ‘Rape’, suggests that RCA got more than they bargained for after giving Wyngarde carte blanche for the record. It’s no more than they deserved, insist Wyngarde, who later discovered that the record was intended as a tax loss. “When they discovered that it wasn’t a tax loss but a tax gain, it floored them!”

Wondering what the legion of admirers, many of whom showered Wyngarde with suggestive letters, would have made of it only enounces the listening experience. The record opens with the sound of inane laughter, which gives way to a savage funky drummer rhythm, topped with a tumultuous horn arrangement. The mood distinctly changes as Wyngarde prepares to welcome his unsuspecting visitor –  a candle is lit, some champagne is opened and he lights the first cigarette of the evening, while humming in French to himself.

If this don’t sound like your average celebrity record, then what follows over the next seven or eight minutes is palatable only in its sheer perversity. One is reminded of Dali’s reaction to the murder of his friend, Lorca, during the Spanish Civil War: “Olé!” Could hardly be deemed etiquette.

Neither was the notion that Jason King (Wyngarde makes that it’s King during the piece) might indeed be a potential rapist. But that’s exactly what unfolds, as an idealistic dream-seduction sequence is brutally shattered by the return of those menacing horns. Enter a transformed Jason King, growling “rape” like a rabid, salivating werewolf intent on devouring the microphone, a scream and a Gregorian chant pile on further layers of unlikeliness. ‘King’, ever the international playboy, then offers a bizarre gazetteer of rape around the world, before a conciliatory “which makes the whole thing rather nasty, tasteless and rather hasty, but as Jason King would say, it depends so much on what you… fancy.”

It’s just possible that what starts out as ”a pleasant evening… and a few surprises” is in fact a savage satire on smooth man. However, Wyngarde feels no compunction to defend the song. “Is it politically incorrect?” he enquires. “Why is it politically incorrect? I’m sure rape is not frivolous, but it’s not intended to be physical rape. It’s about all different kinds of rape within marriage, rape of different countries, even.

“We’re now talking everything so literally, lacking the humour which is so vitally important. The reason why George Bernard Shaw worked as a socialist is simply because he made it funny. Even when things are horrible, you cannot talk about them. That’s what the Victorians did.

“All the problems of the world are because people don’t laugh. That’s much more dangerous. My album to be heard all over the place. Is totally fun.”

No question about the total fun of ‘Hippie And The Skinhead’. Inspired by a letter to The Sunday Times, in praise of Skinhead culture over “dirty” hippies. Wyngarde came up with an extraordinarily delivered tale of an encounter between gay long-hair Billy and a queer-bashing skinhead named Kenny, outside a public lavatory in Piccadilly.

Well the song ends up with the discovery that Billy is in fact an ample-chested woman in drag, Wyngarde insists that if he wrote the song today, he would have had them “going off into the sunset together,” adding that attitudes have “all changed now”.

Though the album’s appeal is largely down to the meeting of Wyngarde’s fertile imagination and its relationship with the Jason King persona. Peter is generous in his praise for his collaborators, Vic Smith and the Valverde brothers, who co-produced the record and co-wrote the music.

The Valverdes were Maltese brothers who went out as a guitar-playing due. “They first raised the idea of making a record.” Wyngarde recalls. “I wrote lyrics for some songs of theirs, which they then toured with. But I didn’t take them very seriously until this offer came up. And I was literally sitting on the loo listening to some of the tapes they’d sent me, when I started to write material for the record. It’s the best place for concentrate.”

The finishing touches were all put in place by Vic Smith, which also brought his ‘Neville Thumbcatch” song (previously covered by The Attack) with him for Wyngarde to cover. “He put the record together brilliantly,” says Peter, adding that the LP took about a week to complete at London’s prestigious Olympic Studios.

Wyngarde’s place in popular culture’s cult corner is assured by his crazy record and the creation of the Jason King character, now enjoying a new lease of life on Bravo, which is currently re-running episodes of Department S and Jason King.

We all know that Jason King remains an exceptional symbol of Easy elegance. But back in the days of extended sidies and slim-fit blazers, did Wyngarde’s bachelor pad really swing to the sounds of Roy Budd, Burt Bacharach and those other lords of leisure sound? “Of course it did,” he says, “Raindrops Keep Falling On My Head” was a great favourite of mine”.

Work hasn’t been so easy to find post Jason King, but Wyngarde still retains an exceptional fondness for the crime-writing sleuth he created: “Millstone’s the wrong word. You create something and it’s like a child in millstone. He’s a lovely character.” Of course he’s maverick, sense of humour an’ all.

Interview by Mark Paytress.