Hubbry Logo
search
logo

Harry Locke

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Harry Locke (10 December 1913 – 7 September 1987) was an English character actor.[1]

Key Information

He was born and died in London. He married Joan Cowderoy in 1943 and Cordelia Sewell in 1952. He was a good friend of the poet Dylan Thomas. Their friendship in London and South Leigh, Oxfordshire, has been described by Locke in a 1970s interview with the radio journalist Colin Edwards.[2]

Locke was a familiar face in three decades of British cinema, playing small parts such as assorted cockneys, working men, clerks, porters and cab drivers, with appearances including Passport to Pimlico (1949), Reach for the Sky (1956), Carry On Nurse (1959), The Devil-Ship Pirates (1964), Alfie (1966) and The Family Way (1966).[3]

His numerous roles on TV included Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) as a night porter in 1969. In 1972 he played Platon Karataev in the BBC production of War and Peace, with his final role, playing a gardener, in an episode of Just William, in 1977.

Selected filmography

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Harry Locke (10 December 1913 – 7 September 1987) was a British character actor renowned for his prolific work in film and television, often portraying supporting roles such as policemen, soldiers, and comic figures in post-war British cinema and comedy series.[1] Born in London, he began his career in repertory theatre in the 1930s, with his early progress interrupted by service in the British Army's Intelligence Corps during the Second World War.[2] Locke made his screen debut in bit parts during the 1930s and gained prominence after 1945 with roles in notable British films, including the sergeant in Passport to Pimlico (1949) and Haggott in the Disney adaptation Treasure Island (1950).[1] His career spanned over three decades, featuring in popular franchises like the Doctor series (Doctor in the House, 1954, as Jessup) and the Carry On comedies, including Carry On Nurse (1959), Carry On Doctor (1967, as Sam), and Carry On Again Doctor (1969, as Porter). He also made numerous television appearances, including in The Goon Show and his final role as a gardener in Just William (1977).[1][3] Locke died in London. His versatile performances contributed to the golden age of British film comedy, making him a familiar face in over 120 productions.[1]

Early life

Birth and family background

Harry Locke was born on 10 December 1913 in London, England.[4] Information regarding his parents' occupations and any siblings remains limited in available records. Locke spent his childhood in the city amid the challenges of World War I, which ended when he was five years old, shaping the formative environment of his early years.

Education and early influences

Harry Locke grew up in London during the 1910s and 1920s, a period when the city's vibrant music halls and emerging amateur theatre scene offered cultural stimulation for young aspiring performers.[5] Locke joined The Questors Theatre in the mid-1930s as one of its early members, an influential amateur drama group established in Ealing in 1929 by Alfred Emmet and a small cohort of enthusiasts committed to experimental and high-quality productions.[5] This early involvement marked a pivotal influence, immersing him in collaborative theatre-making and fostering his passion for the stage amid the group's focus on staging "worthwhile" plays beyond mainstream commercial fare. Locke's pre-professional activities with The Questors included acting in key productions such as Macbeth in 1938 and The Man in Noah in 1939, as well as designing sets and writing one-act plays, which honed his versatile skills and dramatic sensibilities during the late 1920s and 1930s.[5] The group's community-oriented ethos and exposure to diverse roles in amateur dramatics provided a foundational spark for his lifelong career in performing arts, encouraging participation in school-like ensemble work without formal training.

Career

Stage and theatre work

Harry Locke's professional acting career began in the late 1920s when, at the age of 16, he joined a touring repertory theatre company, performing works by George Bernard Shaw across various regional venues in Britain.[6] This early phase involved mobile productions that brought classic British plays to provincial audiences, establishing his foundation in character acting through diverse supporting roles in Shaw's socially incisive dramas. By 1938, he had advanced to the Birmingham Repertory Company, where he took on more prominent character parts in a range of British theatrical works, honing his skills in ensemble repertory settings before the outbreak of World War II.[6][7] His burgeoning theatre career was significantly interrupted by the war, during which Locke served in the British Army's Intelligence Corps from 1940 to 1946, postponing his stage engagements for military duties. Following his military service, he resumed theatre work with the Birmingham Repertory Company in 1945 for productions such as Oliver Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer (April-May 1945), where he portrayed a comedic supporting character, and Anton Chekhov's The Seagull (May-June 1945), contributing to the company's post-war revival of classic repertoire.[7] These roles underscored his versatility in period pieces and dramatic ensembles during the immediate post-war recovery period. In the late 1940s and 1950s, Locke expanded his stage presence in London and provincial theatres, including a notable performance as Draja, a Yugoslav Chetnik, in Jean-Paul Sartre's Cockpit at the Playhouse Theatre (February-April 1948), which highlighted his ability to tackle international wartime themes in live productions.[7] His career peaked in the late 1950s with a lead role in the musical adaptation of Henry Fielding's Rape upon Rape, titled Lock Up Your Daughters!, composed by Lionel Bart with music by Laurie Johnson; Locke starred as Justice Squeezum at the Mermaid Theatre in London from 1959 to 1960, earning acclaim for his comedic timing in this bawdy Restoration-era satire that ran for over 600 performances.[8] He continued with regional engagements, such as in the comedy Lock, Stock and Barrel at the Theatre Royal, Newcastle upon Tyne (October-November 1960), maintaining his commitment to live theatre amid a shifting industry landscape through the 1960s.[7]

Film and television roles

Harry Locke made his film debut in the late 1940s, appearing in uncredited roles before gaining notice in Ealing Studios comedies.[1] His breakthrough came with the role of Sergeant in Passport to Pimlico (1949), a satirical post-war comedy directed by Henry Cornelius, where he contributed to the ensemble cast portraying quirky British citizens declaring independence.[9] This Ealing production highlighted his knack for comic timing in group dynamics.[1] Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Locke established himself as a prolific character actor in British cinema, often in supporting parts that added depth to narratives. In war films, he played a sergeant in The Red Beret (1953), a Technicolor production starring Alan Ladd as a paratrooper, emphasizing his ability to embody military authority figures. Mystery thrillers showcased his versatility, such as Leonard in The Teckman Mystery (1954), a whodunit with Margaret Leighton, and Police Sgt. Beale in Town on Trial (1957), directed by John Guillermin and featuring John Mills as a detective unraveling a murder in a suburban town.[10] He also appeared in popular comedies like Doctor in the House (1954) as Jessup and Carry On Nurse (1959) in a bit role, reinforcing his reputation for providing comic relief in ensemble casts. Locke's film work during this era totaled over 100 credits, typically in bit parts that supported leads without overshadowing them.[1] On television, Locke transitioned seamlessly from the 1950s onward, guest-starring in British anthology dramas and comedies that capitalized on his expressive face and authoritative presence. Notable appearances include the gardener in Just William (1977 series) and the AA Man in Comedy Playhouse (1963), an ITV sketch show that launched several sitcoms.[11][12] In the 1960s, he played a night porter in Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) (1969), adding humor to the supernatural detective series. Later roles encompassed Platon Karataev in the BBC's War and Peace (1972), a philosophical peasant in the epic adaptation, and Arthur Simpson in Crown Court (1972), a courtroom drama.[11] His TV contributions, spanning over 50 episodes across series like Tales from the Crypt (1972) as Harry the Cook, underscored his reliability as a character actor in both dramatic and light-hearted formats.[13] Overall, Locke's screen career thrived on his chameleon-like ability to play policemen, tradesmen, and eccentrics, drawing from foundational stage skills to adapt to visual media's demands.[1]

Personal life

Marriages and relationships

Locke married Joan Cowderoy in 1943, during the Second World War.[2] The union ended in divorce sometime after the war.[2] Following his divorce, Locke wed Cordelia Mary Vashti Saleeby in 1952.[2][1] Saleeby, born in 1908 as the daughter of physician Caleb Williams Saleeby and Monica Meynell, had previously been married to Frank Benton.[14] No children from either of Locke's marriages are documented in available records.[2][14]

Later years and residences

In his later years, Harry Locke continued to reside primarily in London, the city where he had lived throughout his adulthood and which served as the base for his professional endeavors in theatre and film.[1] Following a prolific career that included roles up to the mid-1970s, his final on-screen appearance was as a gardener in the 1977 episode "William and the Wonderful Present" of the BBC children's series Just William, after which he retired from acting.[15] Locke spent the subsequent decade in semi-retirement, maintaining a low profile in London while remaining married to his second wife, Cordelia Mary Vashti Saleeby.[1]

Death and legacy

Circumstances of death

Harry Locke died on 7 September 1987 in London, England, at the age of 73.[1][4] Specific details about family presence at the time of his passing are not publicly available. Funeral arrangements were handled privately, with his burial at North Sheen Cemetery in East Sheen, Greater London, in Section H, Grave 389.[4]

Posthumous recognition

Since his death in 1987, Harry Locke's roles in British cinema have been referenced in scholarly works on post-war film, particularly his contributions to Ealing Studios productions like Passport to Pimlico (1949), where he portrayed a sergeant amid the film's satirical take on national identity. Historians Anthony Aldgate and Jeffrey Richards, in their analysis of British cinema's social reflections, include Locke in discussions of ensemble casts that captured working-class archetypes in films such as I'm All Right Jack (1959), emphasizing his embodiment of trade union officials and everyday laborers.[16] The British Film Institute (BFI) has played a key role in preserving Locke's legacy through its archives, making his performances available via the BFI Player and recognizing him as a "famous character actor" in descriptions of films like the 1951 sponsored short A Home of Your Own, in which he led as a bricklayer discovering new town opportunities. This institutional effort has facilitated renewed interest in his work during Ealing comedy retrospectives and screenings from the 1990s onward, highlighting his contributions to the genre's depiction of British resilience and humor.[17] While Locke received no formal awards or nominations posthumously, fan and critical appreciation for his understated character acting persists in contexts celebrating mid-20th-century British film, with his appearances in classics like Reach for the Sky (1956) often cited as exemplars of reliable supporting performances that enhanced ensemble dynamics.
User Avatar
No comments yet.