David Nobbs


David Gordon Nobbs was an English comedy writer, best known for writing the 1970s television series The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, adapted from his own novels.

Life and career

Nobbs was born in Orpington, Kent. Following an education at Marlborough College and St John's College, Cambridge, he worked as a reporter for the Sheffield Star, before starting his career in comedy as a writer for That Was The Week That Was in the early 1960s. He wrote for many of Britain's comedy performers over the years, including Kenneth Williams, Frankie Howerd, Les Dawson and The Two Ronnies.
Nobbs was the creator of the sitcom The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, adapted from his own Reginald Perrin novels, which "told the story of a man living an escapist fantasy in response to the mundanity of his daily commute". The TV series starred Leonard Rossiter as Perrin.
Nobbs also wrote the comedy/drama series A Bit of a Do and the Henry Pratt series of novels, the fourth of which, Pratt à Manger, was published in 2006. His novel It Had to be You was published in 2011.

Humanism

A passionate humanist and a believer in the ideals of secularism, Nobbs was a longstanding Patron of the British Humanist Association. Although he was devoutly religious into his teens, at 18 Nobbs realised he was an atheist. From then on and throughout his career, he used his writing to explore humanist ideas about the nature of people and relationships. In particular, he cited his novels Obstacles to Young Love and It Had to Be You as two books strongly influenced by humanism, saying "I would describe them as being humanist books as well as humorous ones":
After becoming a Patron of the BHA, Nobbs supported the charity across both its campaigning work and its support for non-religious people through services. In September 2010 Nobbs, along with 54 other public figures, signed a BHA open letter published in The Guardian, stating his opposition to Pope Benedict XVI's state visit to the UK. In 2014 he was one of a number of high-profile signatories of an open letter that challenged David Cameron on his assertions that Britain was a "Christian country". That same year, he wrote the foreword to a new edition of Jane Wynne Wilson's book about humanist funerals, Funerals Without God, writing that "One cannot think of the significance of a humanist death without thinking about the significance of a humanist life, and I gradually found, beneath the facts and practical suggestions, a pretty good account of what it is to be a humanist, and how much more there is to it than just not believing in God."

Novels

The Itinerant Lodger Ostrich Country A Piece of the Sky is Missing The Death of Reginald Perrin The Return of Reginald Perrin The Better World of Reginald Perrin Second From Last in the Sack Race A Bit of a Do Pratt of the Argus Fair Do's The Cucumber Man The Legacy of Reginald Perrin Going Gently Sex and Other Changes Pratt à Manger Cupid's Dart Obstacles to Young Love It Had to be You The Fall and Rise of Gordon Coppinger
  • ''The Second Life of Sally Mottram''

Television works

The Two Ronnies Shine a LightThe Fall and Rise of Reginald PerrinThe Sun TrapThe Hello Goodbye ManA Bit of a DoFairly Secret ArmyDogfood Dan and the Carmarthen CowboyThe Life and Times of Henry PrattRich Tea and SympathyThe Legacy of Reginald PerrinLove on a Branch LineStalag Luft

Radio works

Nobbs wrote a number of works for radio, all of which were broadcast on BBC Radio 4:

Non-fiction

  • ''I Didn't Get Where I Am Today''

Personal life and death

Nobbs was married twice, firstly to Mary Blatchford in 1968, from whom he was divorced sometime after the success of Reginald Perrin, and secondly to Susan Sutcliffe in 1998.
Nobbs died on 8 August 2015 aged 80. He was survived by his second wife and four step-children.