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Howell Evans
Howell Evans
from Wikipedia

Howell Albert John Evans (3 March 1928 – 9 September 2014) was a Welsh actor, comedian, and singer who worked extensively in television and theatre roles in a career spanning over 60 years. He was best known for having played "Daddy" in the Sky1 TV comedy drama series Stella.[1]

Key Information

Biography

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He was born in Maesteg, and first performed as an impressionist during the Second World War. After the war, he joined the Carroll Levis Discovery Show, and formed a comedy double act with his wife, Patricia Kane, working together for many years in music hall, variety shows and pantomime. He later appeared in many television shows including Coronation Street, Casualty, Open All Hours, and The Story of Tracy Beaker.[2]

Personal life and death

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Evans married actress Patricia Kane in 1950, with the marriage producing one child, a son, in 1953.

Evans died on 9 September 2014, aged 86.[2]

Filmography

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Year Title Character Production Notes
2012–15 Stella Daddy Sky 1 Series 1, 2, 3 And 4
2012 Sadie J Mr. Snodgrass CBBC
2006 Young Dracula Atilla CBBC Series 1, Episode 8
2003–2004 The Story of Tracy Beaker Grandpa Jack CBBC Series 3 And 4
2000 Coronation Street Tegwin Thomas ITV
1995 The Englishman who Went up a Hill but Came down a Mountain Thomas the Trains Miramax Films and Parallax Pictures
1989–1991 We Are Seven William Price ITV
1967–69 Softly, Softly DC Morgan/PC Thomas BBC1
1964 Crossroads Dudley Scrivens ITV

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Howell Evans was a Welsh actor, comedian, singer, and impressionist best known for his portrayal of the character Daddy in the Sky1 comedy-drama series Stella, opposite Ruth Jones. Born in Maesteg, south Wales, in 1928, he began performing at the age of 16 as an impressionist entertaining troops in war zones during World War II, before serving three years in the Royal Air Force. After demobilisation in 1949, he joined the Carroll Lewis Discovery Show and formed a long-running comic double act with his wife, Pat Kane, whom he met while entertaining troops; together they performed extensively in music hall, variety, revue, and pantomime for many years. Evans enjoyed a career spanning nearly 70 years across theatre, television, and film, with notable television appearances including Coronation Street, Casualty, Open All Hours, How Green Was My Valley, Satellite City, Holby City, and Grandpa Jack in The Story of Tracy Beaker, as well as film roles in The Ipcress File and An Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain. He continued to engage in charity work and music hall revivals later in life, earning praise for his warmth, professionalism, and talent from colleagues and representatives. Evans died on 9 September 2014 at the age of 86, surrounded by his family, including his wife Pat Kane and actor son Warwick Evans.

Early life

Birth and childhood

Howell Evans was born on 3 March 1928 in Maesteg, Glamorgan, Wales. Maesteg, a town in south Wales now part of Bridgend County Borough, was his birthplace and where he spent his early years. Of Welsh heritage, he grew up in the region's working-class industrial communities typical of the South Wales Valleys during the interwar period. Evans showed an early interest in performance, beginning his impressions at the age of 16 just as World War II intensified. This marked the start of his involvement in wartime entertainment before further developments in his career.

Military service and entry into entertainment

Evans began his entertainment career during World War II, touring war zones as an impressionist to entertain the troops from the age of 16. During these wartime tours, he met his future wife Pat Kane, a member of a dance group performing for the troops. He served three years in the Royal Air Force before emerging in 1949, when he joined the Carroll Lewis Discovery Show and was introduced as "the star from the services". His wife Pat joined him in the show, and they formed a comedy double act.

Personal life

Marriage and partnership with Pat Kane

Howell Evans married Pat Kane, and their marriage endured until his death in 2014. Evans first met Kane during World War II while on tour entertaining troops as an impressionist, with Kane performing as part of a dance group for the forces. After his discharge from the RAF in 1949, the couple formed a long-running comic double act, beginning with appearances in the Carroll Lewis Discovery Show. They went on to work together for many years in music hall, variety, revue, and pantomime. Later in life, Evans continued performing music hall revivals alongside his wife.

Family

Howell Evans had a son, Warwick Evans. When Warwick was born, he was taken on tour with his parents until he went to school. He later followed his parents into the acting profession. No other children or extended family members are documented in available sources.

Career

Variety theatre, revue, and early stage work

Following his service in the Royal Air Force, Howell Evans returned to civilian entertainment in 1949, joining the Carroll Lewis Discovery Show where he was introduced as "the star from the services." During his touring work, he met dancer Pat Kane, who had performed in a group entertaining troops, and she soon joined him professionally. The couple developed a comedy double act and worked together for many years in music hall, variety theatre, revue, and pantomime. Their partnership, which took shape in the early 1950s, featured regular appearances in traditional British live formats, including summer seasons, revues, and pantomime productions across various UK venues. Evans made his pantomime debut in 1951 and solidified the double act by 1952, after which they supported prominent performers and took on complementary roles in seasonal shows. In later years, Evans and Kane continued music hall revivals and contributed extensively to charity performances, sustaining their live work well into the 1990s and marking significant personal milestones through these engagements. This enduring collaboration in variety, revue, and related stage traditions formed the foundation of Evans's career before his transition to television and film.

Television roles

Howell Evans built a prolific television career that spanned more than five decades, with his numerous appearances in British series and mini-series comprising the majority of his 76 acting credits. His television work often featured supporting and guest roles in both long-running dramas and comedies, frequently drawing on his Welsh background and comedic timing developed in earlier stage work. Evans began appearing on television in the 1960s, with a role in the anthology series Festival (1964). He followed this with a recurring part as Capt. Taffy Lewis in Shine a Light (1970), appearing in four episodes. During the 1970s and 1980s, he took on guest roles in several notable police and sitcom series, including Softly Softly, Z Cars, Coronation Street, and Open All Hours. In the 1990s, Evans featured in the BBC mini-series The Old Devils (1992) as Garth Pumphrey across three episodes. He also appeared in adaptations such as How Green Was My Valley and the Welsh comedy Satellite City. From the 2000s onward, Evans continued with recurring and guest spots, including six episodes as Grandpa Jack in The Story of Tracy Beaker (2004–2005) and his best-known role as Daddy in the Sky1 comedy-drama series Stella (from 2012). His guest appearances during this period encompassed Little Britain (2004), Casualty (2005), Young Dracula (2006), Doctors (2007), and Benidorm (2009). Later roles included five episodes as Mr. Bolder in The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (2012) and a guest spot in Holby City (2013).

Film appearances

Howell Evans's feature film appearances were relatively few compared to his extensive work in television and theatre, reflecting a career more focused on the small screen and stage. He made occasional contributions to cinema, with roles spread across several decades, often in supporting or small parts. One of his more prominent film roles came as Thomas the Trains in the 1995 comedy-drama The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain, directed by Christopher Monger. In 2010, he appeared as George the Scout in the biographical crime drama Mr. Nice, which chronicled the life of drug smuggler Howard Marks. Earlier in his career, Evans had a small role in the 1965 spy thriller The Ipcress File. He also took part in several short films during the 2000s and 2010s, including as The Grandfather in Bubbles (2010) and as Scobie in The Shop (2011). These film credits, while limited, overlapped with his active television period in the 1990s and 2010s.

Later career

Recurring and guest roles in the 2000s and 2010s

In the 2000s and 2010s, Howell Evans made numerous guest appearances across British television, often in single episodes of popular series while also taking on limited recurring parts in children's programming and a mini-series. He frequently appeared in family-oriented shows alongside mainstream comedies and medical dramas, reflecting his versatility in later career guest work. In 2004, Evans guest-starred as Mr. Jenkins in an episode of the comedy sketch series Little Britain. From 2004 to 2005, he played Grandpa Jack in six episodes of the children's series The Story of Tracy Beaker. He followed this with a 2005 guest role as Jeff in Casualty, a 2006 appearance as Atilla in Young Dracula, and a 2007 part as Ernie Spencer in Doctors. In 2009, he portrayed Skipper in an episode of the comedy Benidorm. In 2012, Evans appeared in the five-episode television mini-series The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby as Mr. Bolder. He later made a guest appearance as Marc Greene in Holby City in 2013. These roles represented his continued activity in episodic and limited-run television work before his more prominent involvement in Stella.

Role in Stella

Howell Evans gained widespread recognition in his later years for his role as Daddy in the Sky One comedy-drama series Stella, created by and starring Ruth Jones. He played the mumbling, nonsensical-speaking father of Jones's title character, an undertaker whose eccentricities and warmth became a beloved part of the show set in the Welsh Valleys. His portrayal charmed audiences across the UK, particularly in Wales, where the series celebrated local life and humour, and Sky described his performance as one that "charmed us all." Evans appeared as Daddy from the series' debut in 2012 through to 2015, featuring in 29 episodes across multiple seasons. The role stood as his most prominent modern television part, opposite Ruth Jones, and contributed significantly to his late-career resurgence in British comedy-drama. His final appearances were broadcast posthumously, following his death in September 2014, with the show continuing to air episodes featuring him into 2015. The character's enduring appeal reflected Evans's skill in bringing subtle, wordless humour to the screen, earning tributes that highlighted his talent for conveying emotion without needing coherent dialogue.

Death

Passing and tributes

Howell Evans died on 9 September 2014 at the age of 86 in Crowthorne, Berkshire, England, surrounded by his family. No cause of death was disclosed. His Cardiff-based agents at Emptage Hallett paid tribute to the actor, praising his warmth, humour, and professionalism. They stated that his "warmth, positivity and sense of humour made him a joy" to work with.
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