Melvyn Hayes
Melvyn Hayes is an English actor and voice-over performer with a career spanning more than seven and a half decades. Performing in films, television shows and on stage, Hayes frequently portrayed camp-styled characters.
Hayes' professional career began on stage before transitioning to film and television in the late 1950s. He was a recurring actor in films starring pop musician Cliff Richard such as The Young Ones, Summer Holiday and Wonderful Life. He had a recurring role in the film series The Magnificent Six and 1/2 in the late 60s and its subsequent series, the short lived sitcom Here Come the Double Deckers! in 1971.
Hayes' appeared as the camp character Gunner "Gloria" Beaumont in the television comedy It Ain't Half Hot Mum, from 1974 to 1981. After the show ended, he moved to voice acting, and had a role in the children's animated show SuperTed as the villain Skeleton from 1983 to 1986, and in its short reboot show, The Further Adventures of SuperTed in 1989.
Hayes has more recently appeared as himself in entertainment shows such as The Alan Titchmarsh Show and Would I Lie to You?, and has made occasional performances as a one-off character in shows Benidorm and Not Going Out.
He is the father to actress Charlie Hayes, who was born while Hayes was married to actress Wendy Padbury.
Early life and education
Born on 11 January 1935 in Wandsworth, South London as Melvyn Hyams, he was the third of four children to parents of Jewish ancestry. When he was four, the family evacuated to Dawlish, Devon during the Second World War. His father worked at a fairground before opening a suit shop in Wandsworth, which the family lived above. His mother was a housewife who sang in working men's clubs. They lived in Devon until 1944, when they moved to Clapham, where they remained until the war ended.His first experience with acting came in primary school when he played the Gingerbread Man in a school play. After passing his 11 plus exam, Hayes attended Sir Walter St John's Grammar School For Boys, in Battersea, where he was bullied because of his height and his Jewish background. While there, he was in the schools Chess and Boxing clubs.
His inspiration to work in show business came in 1946, when at age 11 he saw The Jolson Story. He sent a letter to Columbia Pictures asking for an autograph from Al Jolson, which he received after a few weeks; Hayes kept the autograph and regarded it as his "most prized possession".
He left Sir Walter St John's Grammar School in 1949 and was unsure on what to do with his life. Because of his short stature, some suggested he be a jockey. Hayes sent a letter to Princess Elizabeth asking if he could be an apprentice at the royal stables; Elizabeth was on holiday in Malta but wished him the best on his journey. Hayes got a job at a local stables, but quit the job after a fortnight because he did not like the experience. He got a job at News Chronicle in Fleet Street, carrying advertising print blocks between newspapers.
Career
1950s and 1960s
In 1950, Hayes saw an advertisement seeking an assistant for the conjurer The Great Massoni. He got the job and was soon "disappearing twice daily for £4 per week" performing the Indian rope trick in Maskelyne's Mysteries at The Comedy Theatre in London. He was also in a theatrical troupe called Terry's Juveniles and later appeared in repertory theatres in Surrey, Derbyshire and the Midlands. Hayes revealed many years later that on the day of his audition, when he met the troupe leader Theresa Freedman, aka Miss Terry, she said to him: "'Can you sing?' No. 'Can you dance?' No. 'Are you Jewish?' Yes. 'You got the part.' "He played Tommy at the Westminster Theatre between 15 May and 14 June 1952. He returned to the Comedy Theatre in October 1952, playing Tommie, opposite Florence Desmond, Anthony Ireland and Geoffrey Kerr, in The Apples of Eve. In 1955, he was in three theatre productions: The Desperate Hours, South, and Edward's Son, as Jimmy. His last stage role of the 1950s was in Telescope, performed at the Salisbury Playhouse, as Joe Palmer.
Hayes slowly began his move to film and television in the late 1950s. One of his earliest televised roles was in the BBC Billy Bunter of Greyfriars School. He played Edek in The Silver Sword in 1957, a children's television serial about Polish refugees trying to find their father after World War II. His early film roles include the young Victor Frankenstein in The Curse of Frankenstein, Willem in Operation Amsterdam, and Cecil Biggs in Bottoms Up.
Throughout a seven-year span Hayes reappeared four times on the police drama series Dixon of Dock Green portraying various minor characters: Larkin in series 4 episode 25 "Little Boy Blue" in 1958, Mick in series 5 episode 20 "Blue in the Night" in 1959, Dave "Cha-Cha" Charlton in series 7 episode 16 "The Burn-Up" in 1961, and finally as Atkins in series 11 episode 24 "The Inside Man" in 1965. However, none of these episodes remain the BBC archive, presumed to have been wiped.
In 1959, Hayes guest appeared on an episode of This is Your Life dedicated to Ted Willis. Hayes would appear on the show another fifteen times over the course of 43 years, in episodes for Richard O'Sullivan, Michael Bates, Windsor Davies, Richard Goolden, Michael Aspel, his own episode, Peter Adamson, Catherine Cookson, Jim Davidson, Paul Henry, Gretchen Franklin, David Croft, George Layton, Linda Lusardi, and Ian Lavender.
On 1 May 1960, he performed in the one-time stage show Change for the Angel at the Arts Theatre. In 1961 he was on stage in The Fantastiks and Why the Chicken, and on 10 November 1962 began portraying Wilfred Compton in Spring and Port Wine, which would run at the Mermaid and Apollo Theatre for the next years, performing its last show on 12 October 1968.
In the mid-1960s, Hayes had recurring roles in films starring pop musician Cliff Richard; these include as Jimmy in The Young Ones Cyril in Summer Holiday, and 'Brother' Willy in Crooks in Cloisters. Hayes has mentioned many times, including on an episode of Would I Lie to You?, that filming was terrifying as he and Richard were only taught how to drive a double-decker bus half an hour before filming: "Coming round bends on the cliffs of Greece, I remember driving this big bus round a bend, first day of shooting, and wondering what the insurance would cost, with Cliff, The Shadows and Una Stubbs in the seats behind me., I was heading for the cameras, as I knew we wouldn't go over the edge that way, they told me if they waved their right arms, I was too near the wall, and if they waved their left, I was too close to the edge".
Hayes appeared in an episode of the drama The Human Jungle starring Herbert Lom in 1963. A day after Hayes' last performance of Spring and Port Wine, he debuted in the show Staring at the Sun as Tom, on 13 October 1968 which lasted for another seventeen days. In December 1968, he was in Toad in Toad Hall at the Duke of York's Theatre.
1970s and 1980s
In 1971 he performed at the Thorndike Theatre as a part of the show Ballad of the Sad Cafe. In 1974, he toured South Africa in the stage show Habeus Corpus.Hayes' biggest role came in the sitcom It Ain't Half Hot Mum as Gunner "Gloria" Beaumont. He played the flamboyantly camp character Gloria Beuamont. For the first two series, the character held the rank of gunner, but after character Gunner Solomon left, he was promoted to bombardier. Hayes appeared in all 56 episodes of the comedy show, from 1974 to 1981. He has openly criticised the BBC on many occasions over the years for refusing to repeat episodes of the show due to some of its dated language, and because Caucasian actor Michael Bates applied brown tan and an Asian accent to play the Indian character Bearer Rangi Ram. Hayes said to The Telegraph in 2014: "It was one of the most popular shows on television and I don't understand the decision. Now, people can swear on television - which we never did - and you're seemingly allowed to tell any homophobic joke you want, et cetera. Yet because Windsor Davies's character called us a "bunch of poofs" and Michael Bates, who was born in India, dressed up as an Indian, the BBC won't repeat it."
During his time on the IAHHM, Hayes also appeared in Carry On England, Love Thy Neighbour and The Thin Blue Line. He was also on the show Potter's Picture Palace on two occasions. Between March and June 1979 he was in a production of Play It Again, Sam as Allan Felix at the The Playhouse, Weston-super-Mare.
In 1980, he and IAHHM co-star Windsor Davies starred in the production Sink of Slim, in which he played Albert, which ran at the Shanklin Theatre and Marlowe Theatre from April to November.
Hayes was the subject of a 1981 episode of This Is Your Life that aired on 28 January 1981. He was surprised by Eamonn Andrews during the curtain call of the pantomime show Dick Whittington at the London Palladium on 7 January. Richard O'Sullivan, Edward Woodward and Alfred Marks all guest appeared to pay tribute to Hayes.
After It Ain't Half Hot Mum was cancelled in 1981, Hayes appeared with most of the cast in a year long stage show of the serires from 1982 to 1983, hosted at the Bristol Hippodrome. In 1983/1984, he was in Run for Your Wife. Afterwards, he started appearing on many popular talk and game shows as himself.
Hayes found a new career path as a voice actor in the 1980s, and shifted his career toward that. He mainly voiced characters on children's cartoons, most notably in SuperTed as the "flamboyantly gay" villain Skeleton from 1983 to 1986 and its revived show The Further Adventures of SuperTed in 1989.
Hayes played the Mole in a production of The Wind in the Willows from November 1984 to February 1985. In 1988, he was a part of the shows In One Bed... Out the Other and Who Goes Bare? as Maurice and Eddie respectively.