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Cyril Shaps
Cyril Shaps
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Cyril Leonard Shaps (13 October 1923 – 1 January 2003) was an English actor of radio, television and film, with a career spanning over seven decades.[1]

Key Information

Early radio

[edit]

Shaps was born in the East End of London to Polish-Jewish parents; his father was a tailor.[1] Shaps was a child broadcaster at the London School of Broadcasting, providing voices for radio commercials from the age of 12. He was educated at Central Foundation Boys' School, then took an office job with the London Ambulance Service. Following service as a warrant officer in the Royal Army Educational Corps during World War II, he was trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) and then worked for two years as an announcer, producer and scriptwriter for Radio Netherlands.[1] His short stature and round face then led to a steady flow of character roles in film and television in a career spanning nearly 50 years.

Film

[edit]

Shaps's film appearances included bit parts in Lawrence of Arabia (1962), as the officer's club bartender, To Sir, with Love (1967), as Mr Pinkus, and the James Bond film The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), as Dr Bechmann. In The Madness of King George (1994), he portrayed Dr Pepys, a royal physician obsessed with the colour of the king's stool. In 2002, at the age of 78, Shaps performed his last film roles: as a pew opener in The Importance of Being Earnest, and as concentration camp victim Mr. Grun in The Pianist.[2]

Television

[edit]

In TV, his work ranged from science fiction (including appearances in the Doctor Who serials The Tomb of the Cybermen, The Ambassadors of Death, Planet of the Spiders and The Androids of Tara[3]), to classic literature (such as the BBC's 1990s serialisations of Charles Dickens's Martin Chuzzlewit and Our Mutual Friend) to detective series (with appearances in The Saint, Lovejoy, and Sherlock Holmes and the Leading Lady—as Emperor Franz Joseph—in 1991).[4] He appeared in the first episode of the sitcom The Young Ones, playing a neighbour.[5] He appeared in two Jim Henson Company television films: Gulliver's Travels (1996) as an elderly madman, and Jack and the Beanstalk: The Real Story (2001) as the "Bent Little Man". He supplied the voice of Professor Rudolf Popkiss in the second series of Supercar, broadcast in 1962.[6] He also voiced the characters of Mr. Gruber in The Adventures of Paddington Bear and Great Grandfather Frost in one episode of Animated Tales of the World.

Other notable work

[edit]

Other series featuring Shaps were Quatermass II, Danger Man, The Mask of Janus, The Spies, Dixon of Dock Green, Z-Cars, The Saint, Out of the Unknown, Alexander the Greatest, The Rat Catchers, Man in a Suitcase, Randall and Hopkirk, Department S, The Liver Birds, When the Boat Comes In, Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em, The Onedin Line, The Persuaders!, Porridge, The Sweeney, Jesus of Nazareth, Wilde Alliance, Holocaust (miniseries), Private Schulz, The Young Ones, Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense, The Bill, Dark Season, Midsomer Murders and Doctors.[7][2]

Shaps' radio work included a stint with the BBC Drama Repertory Company in the early 1950s.[6] Broadcast parts (his characters often being old men or priests) included Firs in The Cherry Orchard, Justice Shallow in Henry the Fourth, Friar Lawrence in Romeo and Juliet, Polonius in Hamlet and Canon Chasuble in The Importance of Being Earnest, and Sven Olaffson in ' A Life of Bliss'.

Personal life and death

[edit]

Shaps and his wife Anita were married from 1950 until her death in 2002;[8] they had two sons, Matthew and Simon, and a daughter, Sarah.

Shaps died in Harrow, London on New Year's Day 2003, aged 79, and was survived by his children.

Selected filmography

[edit]

Doctor Who

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Cyril Shaps (13 October 1923 – 1 January 2003) was a prolific British character actor renowned for his versatile portrayals across , , television, and radio, often embodying elderly Jewish figures, scholars, or eccentric personalities with a distinctive blend of warmth, humor, and nuance, including multiple appearances in the series . Born in London's East End to Polish immigrant parents—his father a —Shaps began his professional career as a child broadcaster at age 12 on Radio Lyons and , providing voices for commercials. After working as a clerk for the London Ambulance Service and serving in the Royal Army Education Corps during —where he taught drama and music—Shaps won a Leverhulme scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in 1947, earning the Shakespeare Prize. He married Anita Rosen in 1950, with whom he had two sons and a daughter; she predeceased him in 2002. Shaps's stage career included a standout role in the 1987 revival of Three Men on a Horse, for which the production received an Olivier Award for best comedy. In film, Shaps appeared in over 50 productions, highlighting his range from the doctor attending King George III in (1994) to the sympathetic music teacher in Roman Polanski's The Pianist (2002), one of his final roles. Earlier credits included Lawrence of Arabia (1962) as a newsman and the Jewish watchmaker in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977). On television, he gained prominence in the and 1970s with recurring roles such as Rabbi Levy in the sitcom Never Mind the Quality, Feel the Width (1967–1971) and the grandfather in the BAFTA-winning play Bar Mitzvah Boy (1976), alongside guest spots in series like The Saint, , and . Shaps also lent his voice to puppet characters like Professor Popkiss in Gerry Anderson's (1961–1962) and featured in radio dramas, maintaining a steady workload until health issues curtailed his activities shortly before his death at age 79 in Harrow, Middlesex.

Early life

Birth and upbringing

Cyril Leonard Shaps was born on 13 October 1923 in the , , to Polish immigrant parents—his father a Jewish . Shaps grew up in a working-class Jewish family in London's during the , a vibrant yet challenging immigrant community marked by economic hardship and cultural richness. He attended Cowper Street School, a local renowned for educating children from poor immigrant backgrounds who later succeeded in the arts, sciences, and business. After leaving school, Shaps worked as a for the London Ambulance Service for five years. From an early age, Shaps showed a keen interest in performance, starting as a child broadcaster at 12 years old by providing voices for radio commercials through the London School of Broadcasting. His first professional appearances came that same year on Radio Lyons and . During , Shaps served in the Royal Army Education Corps, teaching drama and music appreciation to troops.

Education

Following his military service in the Royal Army Education Corps during , Cyril Shaps entered the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in 1947 on a Leverhulme scholarship, graduating in 1949 with an emphasis on classical theatre techniques. At RADA, he received the Shakespeare Prize for his performance as in , honing skills that would define his versatile approach to character roles. The RADA training under its mentors shaped his distinctive style, favoring nuanced, neurotic characterizations that allowed for broad versatility in ensemble roles.

Career

Radio

Shaps began his professional radio career after training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA), where his vocal training prepared him for audio performances. Following service in the during , he returned to Britain and joined the Repertory Company in 1952, remaining for two years and contributing to numerous classic literary adaptations broadcast on the and Third Programme. During this period and throughout his career, Shaps specialized in character roles often portraying elderly or clerical figures, leveraging his distinctive voice for dramatic effect in audio-only formats. Notable among his radio performances were several Shakespearean adaptations. He played Justice Shallow in a BBC Third Programme production of , alongside as King Henry IV. In a 1967 BBC radio adaptation of , Shaps portrayed Friar Lawrence. For , he took on significant supporting roles in related broadcasts, including in a 1983 BBC radio version of Tom Stoppard's , which draws directly from Shakespeare's play. These performances highlighted his ability to convey nuanced authority and through voice alone. Shaps also excelled in non-Shakespearean works, demonstrating versatility in and . In a 1953 BBC Home Service adaptation of Oscar Wilde's , he played the Reverend Canon Chasuble, using subtle modulation to capture the character's absent-minded pomposity. Another key role was Firs, the aging servant in Anton Chekhov's , in a 1979 BBC Radio 3 production directed by , where his weary delivery underscored the play's themes of decline and nostalgia. Such roles exemplified his range in , from tragic depth to light-hearted . In addition to standalone broadcasts, Shaps' early stage work at the in from 1949 to 1958 occasionally intersected with radio, as some repertory productions were adapted or rehearsed for BBC audio transmission, allowing cross-medium exposure for classic plays. This period solidified his reputation in British audio theatre, where his economical yet evocative style made him a reliable ensemble player for decades of BBC productions.

Theatre

Shaps began his professional stage career in , performing diverse roles in plays that showcased his versatility as a . In 1989, he appeared as Jacob in Clifford Odets's Awake and Sing! at the Palace Theatre in , bringing depth to the ensemble of a struggling Jewish family in Depression-era New York. During the 1970s and 1980s, Shaps joined the Royal National Theatre, contributing to a range of classical and modern productions that highlighted his skill in both comedic and dramatic supporting roles. Notable appearances included Szycki in Jacobowsky and the Colonel (1986), where he supported the wartime comedy; the Regimental Clerk in Bertolt Brecht's (1995), in a revival emphasizing anti-war themes; Mr. Wormington in Arthur Wing Pinero's The Magistrate (1986), a in which he played a key ensemble member; and John Cecil Holm and George Abbott's Three Men on a Horse (1987), in which he portrayed Frankie, the hapless tipster; the production received the Olivier Award for Best New Comedy. In the early 1990s, Shaps took on a prominent supporting role as Sir Lucas Pepys, the eccentric royal physician fixated on the king's bodily functions, in Alan Bennett's The Madness of George III at the National Theatre's Lyttelton Theatre from 1991 to 1994. His performance added sharp satirical humor to the historical drama exploring King George III's mental decline. Later in the decade, Shaps appeared as Corbaccio in Ben Jonson's at the in 1989–1990, alongside as the titular schemer and as Mosca, in a production noted for its sharp Jacobean satire on greed and deception.

Film

Cyril Shaps began his film career in the mid-1950s with minor supporting roles in British productions, including the part of the Warden in the crime thriller (also known as , 1957). These early appearances established him as a reliable in low-budget features, often portraying authoritative or enigmatic figures in international settings. Shaps achieved a notable breakthrough in David Lean's epic Lawrence of Arabia (1962), where he played the bartender at the officers' club, a small but memorable role that highlighted his ability to add depth to ensemble casts. This led to further opportunities in prominent films, such as his portrayal of the neighbor Mr. Pinkus in James Clavell's To Sir, with Love (1967), contributing to the drama's depiction of cultural tensions in a London school. By the 1970s, he secured a highlight in the James Bond series with the role of the doomed scientist Dr. Bechmann in The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), a part that showcased his knack for eccentric, intellectually intense characters in high-stakes action sequences. In his later career, Shaps delivered acclaimed performances in more introspective dramas, including Dr. Pepys, the stool-obsessed royal physician in (1994)—a role he reprised from the original stage production of Alan Bennett's . His final screen appearance came as the concentration camp resident Mr. Grün in Roman Polanski's Holocaust survival story The Pianist (2002), earning praise for its quiet poignancy amid the film's harrowing narrative. Over his four-decade span in cinema from 1955 to 2002, Shaps contributed to more than 40 films, consistently embodying eccentric or authoritative supporting characters that enriched the worlds of both blockbusters and literary adaptations.

Television

Shaps began his television career in the 1950s with minor roles in science fiction serials. In Quatermass II (1955), he portrayed a Control Assistant in the episode "The Destroyers." He gained prominence in the 1960s and 1970s with recurring roles such as Rabbi Levy in the sitcom Never Mind the Quality, Feel the Width (1967–1973) and the grandfather in the BAFTA-winning play Bar Mitzvah Boy (1976), alongside guest spots in series like The Saint, Danger Man, and The Onedin Line. During the 1960s, he made guest appearances in popular adventure series, including The Saint, where he played the Jonkheer in the episode "The Angel's Eye" (1966). He also appeared in Department S (1969) as Esplin in the episode "A Fish Out of Water." In the 1970s, Shaps took on character roles in comedies, notably as the inmate Jackdaw in Porridge, specifically in the episode "The Harder They Fall" (1975). His television work continued into the 1980s with a supporting role as the Old Man Next Door in the first episode of The Young Ones, titled "Demolition" (1982). Later in his career, Shaps featured in fantasy miniseries and crime dramas. He played the Mad Old Man in Bedlam in the 1996 adaptation of Gulliver's Travels. In Midsomer Murders, he appeared as Sebastian Renwick in the episode "Strangler's Wood" (1999). One of his final roles was the Bent Little Man, a peddler with narrative elements, in the miniseries Jack and the Beanstalk: The Real Story (2001).

Voice acting and other work

Shaps began his professional voice work as a child, providing voices for radio commercials such as those for O.K. Sauce and Quaker Oats, which honed his versatile vocal range for later animated and narrated roles. His radio background further enhanced his technique, allowing him to excel in character voices that conveyed warmth, eccentricity, or authority. In puppet and animated television, Shaps contributed significantly to Gerry Anderson's early productions, voicing both Professor Popkiss, the inventive scientist, and the villainous Masterspy in the final 13 episodes of the 1961–1962 series Supercar. Decades later, he brought a gentle, avuncular quality to the role of Mr. Gruber, the antique shop owner and Paddington's confidant, in 39 episodes of the animated series The Adventures of Paddington Bear from 1997 to 2000. He also voiced Big Ears in the 1995 episode "Big Ears' Smokey Chimney" of The Adventures of Noddy, showcasing his ability to portray quirky, endearing supporting characters in children's animation. Additionally, Shaps lent his voice to Great Grandfather Frost in an episode of the 2000 anthology series Animated Tales of the World. Beyond animation, Shaps' distinctive, resonant voice—often suited to elderly or whimsical figures—found a prominent place in commercials, most notably as one of the narrators for Mr Kipling cake advertisements, delivering the iconic tagline "exceedingly good cakes" in campaigns that aired widely in the UK during the late 20th century. In documentaries, he provided narration and readings, such as voicing Lt. Commander Atherstone's diary entries in the 1967 episode "His Majesty's Airship R.101" of the series Death by Misadventure?. His film voice work included the uncredited role as Tauber's voice in the 1974 thriller The Odessa File. Over his career, Shaps amassed more than 20 voice credits, with a particular emphasis on puppetry and animation formats spanning from the 1960s to 2002, where his nuanced portrayals added depth to ensemble casts in family-oriented media.

Doctor Who

Second and Third Doctor stories

Cyril Shaps first appeared in Doctor Who during the Second Doctor era as John Viner in the 1967 serial The Tomb of the Cybermen. Viner served as the assistant to expedition leader Professor Edward Parry on a 25th-century archaeological dig on the planet Telos, where the team sought to uncover the dormant tombs of the extinct Cybermen. His character embodied the perils of scientific curiosity, initially expressing paranoia about the tomb's "living" structure after a colleague's death in a booby trap. As the plot unfolded, Viner attempted to deactivate the awakening Cybermen by returning them to their cryogenic sleep, only to be shot and killed by the fanatical Brotherhood of Logicians member Eric Klieg, highlighting the expedition's internal betrayals and the dangers of tampering with ancient alien technology. This black-and-white serial marked Shaps' debut in the series, filmed entirely on 16mm for location scenes to evoke a gritty, exploratory atmosphere amid the transition from earlier studio-bound productions. Shaps returned for the Third Doctor era in The Ambassadors of Death (1970), portraying Dr. Lennox, a disgraced scientist coerced into working for General George Carrington at a secret base. Lennox, who had falsified academic records due to financial grievances, contributed to the plot by conducting unethical experiments to extract lethal radiation isotopes from kidnapped alien ambassadors, ostensibly for national security but actually to fuel a rogue weapons program. His arc underscored themes of moral compromise under pressure, as he collaborated with criminal Reegan while showing flickers of remorse, ultimately dying from acute radiation poisoning after mishandling the isotopes during an escape attempt. This color serial represented a shift in production style, with extensive location filming in England to depict the ambassadors' recovery mission, contrasting the claustrophobic tomb exploration of Shaps' prior role. In his final Third Doctor appearance, Shaps played Professor Herbert Clegg in Planet of the Spiders (1974), a vaudeville-style clairvoyant enlisted by the Doctor to investigate psychic phenomena linked to a stolen Metebelis crystal. Clegg's mind-reading act at a seedy theater provided comic relief while advancing the narrative on extrasensory perception, as the Doctor used UNIT's Image Reproduction Integrating System to test Clegg's latent telepathic abilities in the lab. Curiosity again proved fatal for the character; while examining the crystal, Clegg suffered a fatal heart attack triggered by its psychic energy, inadvertently alerting the Doctor to the crystal's dangers and the encroaching Eight Legs threat from Metebelis III. Filmed in full color with a mix of studio and outdoor sequences in Wales, this serial bridged Shaps' earlier black-and-white work with more ambitious visual effects for the spider invasion. Across these roles, Shaps' characters consistently illustrated the double-edged nature of intellectual pursuit—driving discovery yet inviting catastrophe—amid 's evolving production from monochrome austerity to vibrant color experimentation during the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Fourth Doctor stories

Cyril Shaps continued his recurring involvement with during the 's era, appearing in one serial that exemplified the series' shift to vibrant, full-color adventure storytelling under producer and later Graham Williams. This role highlighted Shaps' skill in portraying authoritative yet vulnerable figures, often with a touch of eccentricity that complemented Tom Baker's bohemian interpretation of the Doctor. Shaps appeared in The Androids of Tara (1978), the fourth installment of the Key to Time arc, where he portrayed the , Tara's high religious official responsible for and sacred rites. In this swashbuckling tale inspired by , the Archimandrite officiates Prince Reynart's coronation—unwittingly involving an android duplicate—and later conducts a farcical ceremony between the Doctor and Romana amid political intrigue involving doubles and royal impostors. Notably, the character survives the serial's conflicts unscathed, marking a departure from Shaps' usual fate in and allowing for a more lighthearted depiction. The production's opulent color design, including exterior filming at to evoke Tara's medieval-like aristocracy, amplified the adventure's fairy-tale quality. Shaps' dignified yet comically oblivious performance shone in interactions with , particularly during the wedding sequence, where the Doctor's witty improvisations clashed entertainingly with the Archimandrite's ritualistic formality, underscoring their effective on-screen rapport. This appearance, though brief, has been fondly recalled by fans as a standout supporting turn that enriched the Fourth Doctor's era of colorful, character-driven escapades. Reviews often praise Shaps' reliable presence for adding depth to ensemble casts without overshadowing the leads, cementing his role as a memorable fixture in this high-production serial.

Personal life

Marriage and children

Shaps married Anita Rosen in 1950, and the couple enjoyed a stable marriage lasting 52 years until her death in 2002. The pair had three children: sons Matthew and Simon, and daughter Sarah. Shaps, raised in a Jewish family, and his wife Anita—who worked for the Jewish charity Jewish Care—raised their children in London. Despite his frequent portrayals of neurotic characters on screen, Shaps maintained a low-profile personal life centered on his family, with no reported public controversies.

Death

Cyril Shaps died on 1 January 2003 in Harrow, London, at the age of 79, following a short illness related to old age. He had appeared in the film The Pianist (2002) shortly before his death. Shaps was predeceased by his wife, Anita, who died in March 2002, and was survived by their three children: two sons and a daughter. Following his death, obituaries in major British publications highlighted his versatility as a across seven decades in radio, , film, and television, with tributes from peers and critics emphasizing his distinctive voice and memorable supporting roles. These posthumous recognitions underscored his enduring impact, particularly as the voice behind advertisements and in series like . No public details emerged regarding his arrangements.

Selected filmography

Films

  • Interpol (1957) as Warden
  • Lawrence of Arabia (1962) as Bartender in Officer's Club
  • To Sir, with Love (1967) as Mr. Pinkus
  • The Spy Who Loved Me (1977) as Dr. Bechmann
  • The Lost Son (1999) as Mr. Spitz
  • (1999) as Chaim
  • The Madness of King George (1994) as Pepys
  • The Pianist (2002) as Mr. Grün

Television

Shaps began his television career in the with minor roles in science fiction serials. In Quatermass II (1955), he portrayed a Control Assistant in the episode "The Destroyers." During the 1960s, he made guest appearances in popular adventure series, including The Saint, where he played the Jonkheer in the episode "The Angel's Eye" (1966). He also appeared in Department S (1969) as Esplin in the episode "A Fish Out of Water." In the 1970s, Shaps took on character roles in comedies, notably as the inmate Jackdaw in Porridge, specifically in the episode "The Harder They Fall" (1975). His television work continued into the 1980s with a supporting role as the Old Man Next Door in the first episode of The Young Ones, titled "Demolition" (1982). Later in his career, Shaps featured in fantasy miniseries and crime dramas. He played the Mad Old Man in Bedlam in the 1996 adaptation of Gulliver's Travels. In Midsomer Murders, he appeared as Sebastian Renwick in the episode "Strangler's Wood" (1999). One of his final roles was the Bent Little Man, a peddler with narrative elements, in the miniseries Jack and the Beanstalk: The Real Story (2001).

References

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