Felicity Kendal
Felicity Ann Kendal is an English actress, working principally in television and theatre. She has appeared in numerous stage and screen roles over a more than 70-year career, including as Barbara Good in the television series The Good Life from 1975 to 1977. Kendal was born in England, but moved to India with her family from the age of seven. Her father was an English actor-manager who led his own repertory company on tours of India, and Kendal appeared in roles for the company both before and after leaving England. She appeared in the film Shakespeare Wallah which was inspired by her family.
Kendal made several television appearances, starting with Love Story in 1966, and made her London stage debut in Minor Murder at the Savoy Theatre. She was approached to appear in The Good Life while appearing in The Norman Conquests, and appeared in all four series. She later went on to star in the sitcoms Solo and The Mistress which were scripted by Carla Lane. Later television work included The Camomile Lawn, which, as of 2022, remained the most-watched drama ever on Channel 4. However, the poor reception to the 1994 sitcom Honey for Tea led Kendal to focus on stage rather than television work for some years. She co-starred with Pam Ferris on television in Rosemary & Thyme as one of a pair of gardeners and detectives.
Kendal's stage career blossomed during the 1980s and 1990s when she formed a close professional association with Tom Stoppard, starring in the first productions of many of his plays, including On the Razzle, The Real Thing, Hapgood, and Arcadia. She also appeared in ten plays directed by Peter Hall, from portraying Constanze Mozart in Amadeus to Esme in Amy's View. She took her first role in a musical as Evangeline Harcourt in the 2021 London revival of Anything Goes at the Barbican Theatre. In 2023, she starred as Dotty Otley in Noises Off at the Phoenix Theatre and the Theatre Royal Haymarket. Many of her stage performances have been critically acclaimed. Kendal was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1995 New Year Honours for services to drama.
Early life
Felicity Ann Kendal was born in 1946 in Olton in Solihull, England. She is the younger daughter of Laura Liddell and actor and manager Geoffrey Kendal. Her older sister, Jennifer Kendal, was also an actress.After early years in Birmingham, Kendal lived in India with her family from the age of seven: her father was an English actor-manager who led his own repertory company on tours of India. The ensemble would perform plays from a repertoire including Shakespeare, George Bernard Shaw, and Richard Brinsley Sheridan to audiences that included schoolchildren, nuns, British expatriates, and royalty. As the family travelled, Kendal attended six different Loreto College convent schools in India, until the age of 13. She contracted typhoid fever in Calcutta at the age of 17.
Kendal made her stage debut for her family's company aged nine months, when she was carried on stage as the changeling boy in A Midsummer Night's Dream. Five years later she was the Changeling in the same play, and aged nine she was Macduff's son in a production of Macbeth. Her first speaking role was as Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream when she was 12.
Kendal's family and their touring theatre company were the inspiration for the Merchant Ivory Productions film Shakespeare Wallah, which follows the story of nomadic British actors as they perform Shakespeare plays in towns in post-colonial India. She played Lizzie Buckingham, the daughter of the company's actor-managers, who falls in love with the son of film star Manjula, portrayed by Madhur Jaffrey. Lizzie's parents face a dilemma between their deep-seated theatrical ambitions and their fears for the welfare of their daughter. The Observer film critic Kenneth Tynan wrote a positive review of the film, and considered that the role of the daughter was "fetchingly played by the dumpling-faced Felicity Kendal". Patrick Gibbs of The Daily Telegraph named Kendal as his actress of the year, and said that, based on her portrayal of Ophelia in an extract from Hamlet within the film, her performance of that role would "rank with any that seen".
Speaking to The Daily Telegraph journalist Jasper Rees in 2006, Kendal said that her time in India was "sometimes very hard, sometimes very poor, sometimes ghastly, ghastly, ghastly in all sorts of ways", she did not regret it, and that it was an "amazing way of living". She also felt that it prepared her for a career in theatre as she did not have any established expectations about how things should be. Aged 17, she moved to England, initially living with her aunt.
Early television work
Kendal appeared in two episodes of Love Story in 1966, and as a teenage hippie in "The May Fly and the Frog", an episode of The Wednesday Play which starred John Gielgud, the same year. Her other early TV roles included parts in Man in a Suitcase, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, The Woodlanders and Jason King.In 1975, she appeared as Princess Vicky in Edward the Seventh. In his article about Kendal for the Museum of Broadcast Communications Encyclopedia of Television, David Pickering wrote that in the early years of Kendal's television career, "Producers liked her girlish good looks and bubbly confidence and audiences also quickly warmed to her."
''The Good Life''
Kendal had her big break on television with the BBC sitcom The Good Life which started in 1975. She and Richard Briers starred as Barbara and Tom Good, a middle-class suburban couple who decide to quit the rat race and become self-sufficient, much to the consternation of their snooty but well-meaning neighbour Margo and her down-to-earth husband Jerry Leadbetter. Kendal appeared in all 30 episodes, which extended over four series and two specials, until 1977. BBC Head of Comedy Jimmy Gilbert, who had commissioned The Good Life as a showcase for Briers, saw Kendal and Keith perform in the play The Norman Conquests and felt they would suit the roles of Barbara and Margo. Briers approached Kendal in her dressing room and suggested that she read for the part. Kendal later recounted that she was keen to get the part, both because she needed work and because she felt a rapport with Briers, who was already established, having appeared regularly in television shows since 1962. The show's producer John Howard Davies also went to see the play, and Kendal and Keith were both given parts. Eddington also had stage acting experience, and the show's co-writer Bob Larbey felt that having a cast of actors, rather than a comedian as a central figure, made writing episodes easier. In her 1988 book White Cargo, Kendal reflected that the lead actors' stage experience and their attitude "to be actors first and stars second" was an important factor in the show's success. She commented that from the beginning, "we slotted into a way of working together that was fun, fast and furious... all extremely professional, ambitious and hard-working, and our dedication to the show was total." She also felt that Larbey and his co-writer John Esmonde tailored the scripts so that they were for the "actors and characters combined".Although Barbara has her doubts about Tom's plans for self-sufficiency at first, she supports him emotionally and practically. The cultural historian Mark Lewisohn commented that it was obvious that Barbara and Tom "enjoy a great marriage, being fully attuned to one another's needs and desires". The British Film Institute's page about Kendal, written by Tise Vahimagi, argues that the four lead characters were relatable, "with Kendal standing out as the epitome of friendly suburban sexiness in her tight blue jeans". On the Institute's page about The Good Life, Mark Duguid wrote that "Felicity Kendal's lively, sexy Barbara won her the adoration of millions of British men" in a very popular show that was a "gentle social satire of the suburban middle-class". For Pickering, Kendal's "whimsical, puckish charm and endearingly good-humoured outlook made her ideal for the role".
After a low-key start, the programme quickly became popular, attracting audiences of about 14 million for new episodes. By the last episode, Esmonde and Larbey felt that the main storylines had come to a natural end, and decided not to write further episodes. The last regular episode aired in May 1977 and was followed by a 1977 Christmas special. The cast reunited for a 1978 Royal Command Performance. It has often received repeated showings on the BBC, typically at prime viewing times, and the repeats typically attracted high audiences.
The film and television studies scholars Frances Bonner and Jason Jacobs contended that although The Good Life was consistently a reference point across the coverage later careers of each of the lead actors, this was most pronounced in the case of Kendal. Kendal has maintained that the character of Barbara Good is very dissimilar to her as a person. In a 2010 interview, she said of her close association with the character that " is always on some channel or another. I think it's rather nice. It's following me like a good fairy." She added that while the other lead characters were like people that the viewers might know personally, Barbara "had all the ingredients – feisty, strong but adoring, up for anything, very funny – that people find attractive".
Later television work
Davies was so impressed by the performances from Kendal, Keith and Eddington that when he was Head of Comedy for the BBC, he gave them all starring roles in new series: Yes Minister for Eddington, To The Manor Born for Keith, and Solo for Kendal.Carla Lane wrote Solo, in which Kendal played the lead role of Gemma Palmer, who decides to split from her boyfriend and live independently. Lane also wrote The Mistress in which Kendal portrayed a florist having an affair with a married man, played by Jack Galloway in 1985 and with a different character played by Peter McEnery in the 1987 version. Both Solo and The Mistress were positively received, although some viewers were disappointed by the lack of innocence displayed by Kendal's character in The Mistress compared to that of the Barbara Good character. Bonner and Jacobs commented that "As Barbara, her sexiness was contained in the loving relationship with her husband, but her subsequent casting in the TV sitcoms Solo and The Mistress reveals even in their titles a making of her imaginatively available for the lustful viewer." The media scholar Mary Irwin considers that Kendal has avoided being typecast in roles of "acquiescent girlfriend or supportive wife", and that in Solo and The Mistress she "cut through commonplace binaries situating sitcom women as either bimbos or battleaxes".
The Camomile Lawn starred Kendal as Helena Cuthbertson, whose property encompassed a mansion and the lawn in the title. Eddington played her husband Richard. Attracting over seven million viewers, as of 2022 it remained the most-watched drama ever on Channel 4. However the 1994 sitcom Honey for Tea starring Kendal was later described by Maureen Paton of the Daily Telegraph as "an unmitigated flop". Her American accent in the show was mocked by TV critic and humourist Victor Lewis-Smith: "In a single phrase, she veered uncontrollably from the Bronx to South Africa via Surrey, like some linguistic Spruce Goose, awkwardly taking off only to crash-land again within moments."
Having focused on her theatre rather than her television career for some years following the poor reception to Honey for Tea, in 2003 Kendal co-starred with Pam Ferris in Rosemary & Thyme as a pair of gardeners and detectives. Kendal's character Rosemary Boxer is a University of Malmesbury lecturer in applied horticulture. The show was negatively reviewed, but still popular with viewers, becoming the most viewed new drama series on ITV1 in 2006. Vahimagi wrote that despite "pleasantly skittish performances" from the leads, the show was a "peculiarly dispiriting addition to the list of British detective drama".