David Swift (actor)
David Bernard Swift was an English actor known for his role as Henry Davenport in the topical comedy Drop the Dead Donkey.
Early life
Swift was born in Liverpool, the second of the four children of Abram Sampson Swift and Lily Rebecca, who owned a furniture shop in Bootle. His family was Jewish. He was educated at Clifton College and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he studied law. He then embarked on a career as a businessman with his father-in-law, J.P. Jacobs, whose company supplied all the elastic to Marks & Spencer.Career
Swift made his professional debut on stage after being appointed as an assistant stage manager at Dundee Repertory Theatre in 1963. He made his television debut in 1964 as Theo Clay in the soap opera Compact. He appeared in many small-screen roles in the 1970s and 1980s, whilst in the theatre he appeared in the Royal Shakespeare Company's 1978 production of Henry VI, Part 1 at the Aldwych Theatre, and won acclaim for his performance as Frank Doel in the Ambassadors Theatre's 1981-2 production of 84, Charing Cross Road. In addition he played Montclair in the film of The Day of the Jackal. Swift appeared as Dingley alongside Richard Beckinsale in the BBC situation comedy Bloomers and also appeared in several episodes of Going Straight, the sequel to Porridge. Prior to this he had made a guest appearance, again with Beckinsale, in the Yorkshire Television comedy Rising Damp in which he played a suicidal tenant in the episode "Good Samaritans". But it was the role of irascible newsreader Henry Davenport in the topical comedy Drop the Dead Donkey, written by Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin, for which Swift became best known. He also made occasional appearances as God in the Radio 4 comedy Old Harry's Game, also written by Hamilton.Alongside his acting career, Swift had an active interest in the behind-the-scenes aspects of media production, running the sound recording and post-production businesses Preview 1 and Preview 2 in the 1960s, before co-founding and managing Tempest Films in 1969, along with film-makers Charles Denton, Richard Marquand, Paul Watson and John Pilger. The company also produced documentaries by actor-director Kenneth Griffith.
Personal life and death
Swift was the elder brother of the actor Clive Swift, known for his role in Keeping Up Appearances, with whom he sometimes performed. He was the uncle of the academic Adam Swift and the television personality Joe Swift and their sister Rebecca. He was married to the actress Paula Jacobs, was the father of actress Julia Swift and father-in-law of actor David Bamber.Swift died from complications of Alzheimer's disease on 8 April 2016, at the age of 85.
Selected filmography
Film
Travels with My Aunt - DetectiveThe Day of the Jackal - MontclairNo Sex Please, We're British - Inspector Paul Who Killed Lamb? - Inspector HavelockThe Internecine Project - Chester DrakeThe Assignment - ZafortezaThe Black Panther - Detective Chief SuperintendentWe Think the World of You - BillJack & Sarah - MichaelTelevision
Hamlet at Elsinore - Player KingThe Avengers - Barber Budgie - Sergeant OxleyAnother Sunday and Sweet F.A. - Eric ArmitsteadWar and Peace - Napoleon BonaparteFall of Eagles - TrepovFather Brown - Stephen Aylmer The New Avengers - Turner Richard II - Duke of NorthumberlandLes Misérables - Troufiat Going Straight - Mr. McEwanBloomers - DingleyTurtle's Progress - Superintendent Rafferty The Bunker - Johann RattenhuberThe Day of the Triffids - BeadleyWinston Churchill: The Wilderness Years - Professor Lindemann Freud - Joseph Breuer Bergerac - Dr. BarnardThe Storyteller - KingVanity Fair - Mr. SedleyJack the Ripper - Lord SalisburyAgatha Christie's Poirot - Henry ReedburnCountdown to War - Édouard DaladierDrop the Dead Donkey - Henry Davenport Holby City - Bill Hoskins Born and Bred - EuphratesRadio
- ''Old Harry's Game''