John Thaw
John Edward Thaw was an English actor. He became best known for his television roles starring as Detective Inspector Jack Regan in The Sweeney and as Detective Chief Inspector Morse in Inspector Morse. He also worked on stage and in films.
For four consecutive years, Thaw was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor for playing Morse, winning in 1990 and 1993. In 1988, he was nominated for the BAFTA [Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role] for the film Cry Freedom. In 2001, he was awarded the BAFTA Fellowship.
Early life
Born in Gorton, Manchester, to John Edward Thaw, a tool-setter at the Fairey Aviation Company aircraft factory, later a long-distance lorry driver, and Dorothy. Dorothy left when he was seven years old. He and his younger brother, Raymond Stuart, had a difficult childhood due to their father's long absences. Thaw grew up in Gorton and Burnage, attending the Ducie Technical High School for Boys, gaining just one O Level. He entered the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art at the age of 16, and won the Academy's Vanburgh Award. Ray emigrated to Australia in the mid-1960s.Career
In 1960, Thaw made his stage début in A Shred of Evidence at the Liverpool Playhouse and was awarded a contract with the theatre. His first film role was a bit part in The [Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (film)|The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner] starring Tom Courtenay and he also acted on stage opposite Laurence Olivier in Semi-Detached. In 1963/64, he appeared in several episodes of the BBC series Z-Cars as a detective constable. Between 1964 and 1966, he starred in two series of the ABC Weekend Television/ITV production Redcap, playing the hard-nosed military policeman Sergeant John Mann. He was also a guest star in an early episode of The Avengers. In 1967 he appeared in Bat Out of Hell and in the Granada TV/ITV series Inheritance, alongside James Bolam and Michael Goodliffe; TV plays including The Talking Head, and episodes of series such as Budgie, where he played against type as an effeminate failed playwright with a full beard and a Welsh accent.Thaw was cast in the police drama series The Sweeney alongside Dennis Waterman and Garfield Morgan, playing the hard-bitten, tough-talking Flying Squad detective Jack Regan. It established him as a major star in the United Kingdom. He followed this with four series of the sitcom Home to Roost, which co-starred Reece Dinsdale, about a divorced father whose teenage son moves back in with him after choosing as a child to live with his mother. He had previously co-starred in another ITV sitcom, Thick as Thieves, with Bob Hoskins.
Thaw's role as Endeavour Morse">Endeavour (TV series)">Endeavour Morse in Inspector Morse, cemented his fame. Alongside his put-upon Detective Sergeant Robert "Robbie" Lewis, Morse became a high-profile character—"a cognitive curmudgeon with his love of classical music, his drinking, his classic Jaguar and spates of melancholy". According to The Guardian, "Thaw was the definitive Morse, grumpy, crossword-fixated, drunk, slightly anti-feminist, and pedantic about grammar." Inspector Morse became one of the UK's most popular TV series; at its peak in the mid-'90s, it was viewed by 18 million people, about one third of the British population. He won "Most Popular Actor" at the 1999 National Television Awards and won two BAFTA awards for his role as Morse. Thaw is mainly known in the United States for Inspector Morse, as well as for the BBC series A Year in Provence with Lindsay Duncan.
Thaw subsequently played liberal working-class Lancastrian barrister James Kavanagh in Kavanagh QC.
Thaw appeared in a number of films for director Richard Attenborough, including Cry Freedom, in which he portrayed the conservative South African justice minister Jimmy Kruger, and Chaplin, playing the English music hall impresario Fred Karno alongside Robert Downey Jr..
Thaw also appeared in the TV adaptation of the Michelle Magorian book Goodnight Mister Tom. It won "Most Popular Drama" at the National Television Awards, 1999.
During the 1970s and 1980s, Thaw appeared in productions with the Royal Shakespeare Company and the National Theatre.
Thaw was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1981 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews in the foyer of the National Theatre in London.
Personal life
In 1964, Thaw married Sally Alexander, a feminist activist and stage manager, later professor of history at Goldsmiths, University of London. They divorced four years later. He met actress Sheila Hancock in 1969 on the set of So What About Love? She was married to fellow actor Alexander "Alec" Ross. They became friends, but she refused to have an affair as she did not want to disrupt her daughter's life. Following the death of her husband in 1971, Thaw and Hancock married on 24 December 1973 in Cirencester. They remained together until his death in 2002.Thaw had three daughters : Abigail from his first marriage to Sally Alexander, Joanna from his second marriage to Sheila Hancock, and he also adopted Sheila Hancock's daughter Melanie Jane, from Hancock's first marriage to Alec Ross. His granddaughter Molly Whitmey made a cameo in the Endeavour episode "Oracle" as the younger version of her grandmother Sally Alexander.
Thaw was a committed socialist and a lifelong supporter of the Labour Party. He was appointed a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, the insignia for which he received in March 1993 from Queen Elizabeth II.
Illness and death
A heavy drinker until going teetotal in 1995, and a heavy smoker from the age of 12, Thaw was diagnosed with cancer of the oesophagus in June 2001. He underwent chemotherapy in hope of overcoming the illness, and at first had appeared to respond well to the treatment, but just before Christmas 2001 he was informed that the cancer had spread and the prognosis was terminal.Thaw died on 21 February 2002, seven weeks after his 60th birthday, the day after he signed a new contract with ITV, and the day before his wife's birthday. At the time of his death he was living at his country home, near the villages of Luckington and Sherston in Wiltshire, and was cremated in Westerleigh, near Yate in South Gloucestershire, in a private service. A memorial service was held on 4 September 2002 at St Martin-in-the-Fields church in Trafalgar Square, attended by 800 people including Charles, Prince of Wales, Richard Attenborough, Tom Courtenay and Cherie Blair.
A memorial bench is dedicated to Thaw within the grounds of St Paul's, Covent Garden.