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Robert Gillespie

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Robert James Gillespie (born 9 November 1933) is a British actor, director and writer. Notable acting credits include Keep It in the Family (1980), At the Earth's Core (1976) and Force 10 from Navarone (1978). Later, he appeared in Jimmy McGovern's Broken and Mike Leigh's film Peterloo about the Peterloo Massacre.[1] The first volume of his autobiography, Are You Going To Do That Little Jump?, was published in 2017.[2] A second volume, Are You Going To Do That Little Jump? The Adventure Continues followed in October 2021.[3] At the same time, Gillespie launched a new publicly-available and growing online archive of his extensive career, entitled Little Jump.[4]

Key Information

Early life

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Gillespie is the eldest child of Magdalena Katalin Singer, from Budapest, Hungary; and James William Gillespie, who was of Scottish descent, from Toronto, Canada. He was born in Lille, but the family left France in 1940 after Hitler's invasion of the country.

Education

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Gillespie was educated at Sale Grammar School, and trained as an actor at RADA between 1951 and 1953.[5]

Career

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Career overview

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Robert Gillespie entered the theatrical profession at a time when every playscript had to be approved by the Lord Chamberlain's Office, or risk prosecution. The only platform for plays addressing controversial subjects like homosexuality, or contentious political topics, existed at club theatres like the New Lindsey, in Notting Hill, with a private membership. Gillespie witnessed the day Brendan Behan used the F-word on BBC Television (1956) which rocked the corporation. [dubiousdiscuss] But times changed. 70 years later Gillespie relished playing a repellent, paedophile priest opposite Sean Bean in an episode of Broken by Jimmy McGovern – at which no-one turned a hair. Robert Gillespie is especially interested in this period of enormous transition and has written about it.

Contributions to British theatre

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From drama school, Gillespie joined the Old Vic Company in 1953 and found an unexpected mix of acting styles used on the stage in each production. Richard Burton and Claire Bloom headed the company, and Gillespie expected them firmly to deploy a modern style of acting. Strangely, Burton's sonorous baritone delivery echoed the last chimes of a declamatory style, while Bloom wavered between a naturalistic delivery (borrowed from her recent film with Charlie Chaplin) and a 'singing' tone. It was Michael Hordern (playing Polonius, Malvolio and Parolles) who chatted in a delightful, modern manner. Inevitably, during his two-year stay with the company (1953–55), the quality of production was uneven. The second year was headed by Paul Rogers, Ann Todd, Virginia McKenna and John Neville. Gillespie's most substantial part was Adam in As You Like It. The highlight of both years was Douglas Seale's production of Henry IV Parts 1 and 2.[6]

It is with gratitude that Gillespie views his hiring by George Devine at the very start of Devine's creation of The English Stage Company at the Royal Court Theatre (1956–58). It is George Devine, in Gillespie's view, who should be credited with launching modern theatre in the UK. Devine dared to present the transforming play Look Back in Anger by John Osborne and brought Berthold Brecht into mainstream drama.

In sharp contrast, Gillespie found Joan Littlewood's claim to ground-breaking innovation to be dubious and unfounded. He joined her Theatre Workshop company, based at the Theatre Royal, Stratford, for three productions in 1956 and left by mutual agreement while rehearsing a fourth. Littlewood's chief claim was that she could imbue the great classics with a fresh, accessible approach. The results were uniformly disappointing, a view supported by an almost uniformly bad press. (History suggests that her break-through to personal success rode on the new "kitchen-sink" style of play, viz. A Taste of Honey, and its musical equivalent.) Gillespie has written about his time at Theatre Workshop.[7]

In 1970, he appeared in Keep Out, Love in Progress by Walter Hall, at the Basement Theatre, Soho, taking the lead opposite Alex Marshall.[8] He performed in David Lan's Paradise at the Royal Court Theatre, John Arden's The Hero Rises Up at the Roundhouse, Peter Hall's Playhouse Theatre production of Tennessee Williams' The Rose Tattoo (starring Julie Walters).

A cherished stage engagement was his appearance as Charlie in Mincemeat, with Cardboard Citizens, a company based on homeless actors founded by Adrian Jackson MBE.[9] He also played Luka in The Lower Depths.

He recalls his two and a half years with the Royal Shakespeare Company as "actor paradise" (1994–6) writing of the huge advance in general standard of performance, quality of backstage support and generosity of respect and care shown to the individual artist – in notable contrast to the hierarchical regime in place at The Old Vic, forty years before, when deference to one's "superiors" was still firmly expected. At the RSC, Tony Britton was very fine as Sir Toby Belch in Ian Judge's production of Twelfth Night and Desmond Barrit an excellent Malvolio – showing great professional curiosity as to how Michael Hordern had addressed the part.

Television

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His first major television role was as the disciple Matthew in Jesus of Nazareth, directed by Joy Harington.[10]

Gillespie appeared in many British sitcoms, including Hugh and I Spy, The Good Life, Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads, Robin's Nest, George and Mildred (2 episodes, one as Detective Sergeant Burke and one as Mr Richardson (a vet)), Rising Damp, The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, Porridge, Dad's Army (in which he played Charles Boyer playing Napoleon Bonaparte), Butterflies, The Liver Birds, Beggar My Neighbour, Only When I Laugh (series one, “Let Them Eat Cake”), Agony, Terry and June and It Ain't Half Hot Mum. He often played deadpan police desk sergeants.[11]

Gillespie was the star of the Brian Cooke situation comedy Keep It in the Family, playing the harassed cartoonist Dudley Rush, a part that Cooke wrote especially for him. The show ran for five series transmitted between 1980 and 1983. It also starred Pauline Yates, Stacy Dorning, Jenny Quayle and Sabina Franklyn.[11]

Gillespie appeared in many British television series, mostly from the 1960s to 1980s. His credits include Maigret, The Saint, The Avengers, Doomwatch, The Sweeney, The New Avengers, Survivors, Warship, The Professionals, Mary's Wife, I Woke Up One Morning, Return of the Saint, Bonjour La Classe and Secret Army.[11] He has appeared in New Tricks, with James Bolam, as well as Jimmy McGovern's Broken, alongside Sean Bean.

TV Advertising

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Robert made at least one TV Advert for Birds Eye, produced by Collett Dickenson Pearce Advertising Agency, in the 1970s. This saw him in the role of a petrol pump attendant who had to serve a large number of motorcycle riders. All boisterous but at the end of the advert, over his dinner, he says, "But they were a nice bunch of lads".

Film

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Film appearances include the Pride segment of The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins (1971), The National Health (1973), Barry McKenzie Holds His Own (1974), Force Ten From Navarone (1978), The Thirty Nine Steps (1978), and the 1996 Royal Shakespeare Company production of A Midsummer Night's Dream.[11] He appeared in Woody Harrelson's ambitious live-action movie Lost in London, playing the part of the mystic cabbie([12]) and later took part in the Mike Leigh project Peterloo.

Writings

[edit]

Gillespie has published two linked books charting the enormous changes undergone within the performing arts over three-quarters of a century, written from the point of view of a practising tradesman - Are You Going to do That Little Jump[13] (pub. 2017) and Are You Going to do That Little Jump - The Adventure Continues (pub. 2021).[14] The title comes from a moment in Terence Rattigan's Harlequinade, describing the unforgivable misdemeanour of upstaging. The author suggests that theatre practice changed to such an extent over this period that young performers of today will hardly recognise the profession they enter now as the same as the one he entered in 1947. The two volumes, which provide a personal reminiscence of living theatre history, are supported by unique photographs, illustrations, and letters unavailable in other archives.

Gillespie wrote a celebrated sketch for Ned Sherrin's BBC TV show That Was the Week That Was in 1963. Commonly entitled "A Consumer's Guide to Religion", it was performed by David Frost and proved to be a satirical landmark. It provoked questions in the House of Commons and fulminations from pulpits.

Theatre directing and writing

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Gillespie has directed many plays for the stage, including seventeen productions at the King's Head Theatre in Islington between the 1970s and mid-1980s, starting with The Love Songs of Martha Canary which starred Heather Sears. Tom Conti, Jack Shepherd, John Hurt, Tony Doyle, Nichola McAuliffe and Steve Harley starred in Gillespie's shows there. Notable productions were Spokesong, Tennessee Williams' Period of Adjustment, which Williams attended personally, and Punch critic Jeremy Kingston's Oedipus at the Crossroads, which starred Nicky Henson, Raymond Westwell and John Bott.[6]

Jane Nightwork Productions

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Gillespie created his own production company, Jane Nightwork Productions, in 2000.[15] Productions have included David Mamet's Oleanna, Jeremy Kingston's Making Dickie Happy, Deborah Cook's Sex, Death and a Baked Swan and Eugene Scribe's Golden Opportunities, translated by former Times Arts Editor Anthony Curtis, which received its UK premiere at the Warehouse Theatre in Croydon in September 2006. In May 2008 he directed a reading of Chains by Eugene Scribe at the Trafalgar Studios.

Gillespie toured a two-handed drama (largely comic) in London and the Home Counties on the topic of death (My Heart, 2000). On 6 April 2010, Gillespie's production of his own play Love, Question Mark opened at the New Diorama Theatre for a 4-week run. The play addresses our curious fixation with monogamy. Love, Question Mark is the first part of a trilogy entitled, Power of Three: Love, War and Death. The play starred Clare Cameron and Stuart Sessions and was produced by Lucy Jackson.[16]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1963 Siege of the Saxons Soldier Uncredited
1968 Inspector Clouseau Senior Swiss Banker Uncredited
1969 Otley Policeman
1969 Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed Mortuary Attendant Uncredited
1971 A Severed Head Winking Patient
1971 To Catch a Spy Man in Elevator
1971 The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins A.A. Man Segment "Pride"
1972 Rentadick Arab Porter
1972 Up the Front French Officer
1973 The National Health Tyler
1974 Barry McKenzie Holds His Own Dorothy
1975 Rising Damp Gas Man Episode 'The Last Of The Big Spenders'
1976 At the Earth's Core Photographer
1978 Force Ten From Navarone Sergeant
1978 The Thirty Nine Steps Crombie
1979 The Prisoner of Zenda Andrews Uncredited
1994 Zorn Assistant
1996 A Midsummer Night's Dream Robin Starveling / Cobweb
2017 Lost in London Older Cabbie
2018 Peterloo Magistrate Warmley

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Robert James Gillespie (born 9 November 1933) is a British actor, theatre director, and writer of French birth.[1][2] Born in Lille to a Hungarian mother and Canadian father, Gillespie evacuated to England with his family in 1940 aboard the last boat departing France amid the advancing German forces, eventually settling in Manchester where he attended Sale County Grammar School for Boys.[2][3] After training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) and performing with the Old Vic Company, he pursued a multifaceted career spanning over seven decades, including repertory theatre, television sitcoms, and directing more than 100 plays.[2][4] Gillespie gained prominence for character roles in British television, notably as the hapless Dudley Rush in the ITV sitcom Keep It in the Family (1980–1983), alongside appearances in classics such as The Likely Lads, Rising Damp, and Butterflies.[2][5] His theatre contributions include directing 17 productions at the King's Head Theatre and founding the Jane Nightwork Company to promote new writing, while he also contributed scripts to the satirical programme That Was the Week That Was.[2] Later works encompass films like Peterloo (2018) and memoirs detailing his wartime childhood and professional journey.[2]

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Early Influences

Robert Gillespie was born on 9 November 1933 in Lille, Nord, France, to a Hungarian mother and Canadian father James William Gillespie.[1][2] In June 1940, at the age of six, his family escaped the advancing German army during the Fall of France, departing from Saint-Jean-de-Luz on one of the last boats to reach Britain, arriving in Plymouth; Gillespie arrived unable to speak English.[4][6] The family subsequently settled in Manchester, England, where Gillespie attended Sale County Grammar School for Boys.[2] A formative influence emerged at school when an English master cast him in three plays, igniting his passion for performance and steering him toward acting.[2] These early theatrical experiences, detailed in his memoir Are You Going to Do That Little Jump?, marked the onset of his lifelong engagement with the stage amid the disruptions of wartime displacement.[6][7]

Formal Education and Training

Gillespie attended Sale County Grammar School for Boys in Manchester, where a post-war English teacher cast him in three successive school plays, igniting his interest in performance.[2] He subsequently trained as an actor at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London during the early 1950s, supported by a grant from Cheshire County Council that enabled him to bypass university.[8] Under principal Sir Kenneth Barnes, Gillespie's RADA experience involved cramped conditions with 90 students competing for limited roles, conducted partly in a basement amid post-war reconstruction noise from pneumatic drills in a bombed theatre building.[8] His final student production at RADA was portraying Reedbeck in Christopher Fry's Venus Observed at age 19.[8] Following graduation, Gillespie undertook two seasons of professional repertory training at the Old Vic Theatre from 1953 to 1955, debuting onstage as Fleance in Macbeth.[8][2]

Acting Career

Stage Performances

Gillespie's early stage acting career began during his training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in the early 1950s, where he performed in student productions including a shared role as Imogen in Cymbeline, Reedbeck in Venus Observed, and Tony Lumpkin in an unspecified Sheridan play.[8] Following graduation, he joined the Old Vic company for two seasons from 1953 to 1955, appearing as Fleance in Macbeth and in supporting roles during productions of Henry IV, Parts I and II, working alongside actors such as Richard Burton, Claire Bloom, and Michael Hordern.[2] [8] In repertory theatre, Gillespie acted in various regional productions, including Murder in the Vicarage at the Ipswich Repertory Theatre, while also beginning to direct.[8] He later appeared in Peter Hall's West End production of Tennessee Williams's The Rose Tattoo.[2] His association with influential ensembles included performances with Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop and George Devine's English Stage Company at the Royal Court Theatre, though specific roles in these groups remain undocumented in available accounts.[2] Later in his career, Gillespie returned to prominent stage acting with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC), portraying Starveling in Adrian Noble's production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, which ran at Stratford-upon-Avon, the Barbican Theatre in London, and on Broadway in the mid-1990s.[9] He also performed in Treasure Island at the Mermaid Theatre and took on roles with the Cardboard Citizens company, including a character in Maxim Gorky's The Lower Depths in 1998 and a part in Mincemeat, a World War II-themed play.[9] These appearances highlight his versatility across classical, modern, and ensemble-driven works, though his stage acting diminished relative to directing after the 1970s.[2]

Television Appearances

Gillespie achieved prominence on British television through his lead role as the hapless cartoonist Dudley Rush in the sitcom Keep It in the Family, which aired on Thames Television from 1980 to 1983 across five series comprising 37 episodes.[10][11] In the series, created by Geoff Rowley and based on the Belgian original Het is weer familietijd, Gillespie portrayed a family man whose home-based work leads to comedic chaos with his wife Muriel (Pauline Yates) and daughters.[10] The show drew audiences of up to 15 million viewers at its peak and was praised for Gillespie's deadpan delivery and timing, reminiscent of classic British comedy styles.[12] Beyond this starring role, Gillespie made numerous guest appearances in landmark British sitcoms during the 1970s and 1980s, often leveraging his talent for physical comedy and precise character work. In Dad's Army (1972), he played Charles Boyer impersonating Napoleon in a historical reenactment episode.[11] He appeared in Rising Damp (1976) as a gas board official, delivering the line "I'm from the gas board" while navigating a doorframe for laughs.[11] Similar bit parts included a disgruntled office worker in The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin (1976), a recurring policeman in Robin's Nest (1977–1981), and roles in Butterflies (1978), George and Mildred (1979), Porridge (1977), The Good Life (1977), Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads? (1973), and The Liver Birds (1971–1979).[11][10] Gillespie also featured in action and drama series, such as The Professionals (1978), where he portrayed a small-time crook in the episode "Long Shot," and Hugh and I Spy (1968), as a desk sergeant adopting a French accent.[11] Later credits include the lead role of Zero in I Woke Up One Morning (1985–1986), a surreal comedy series; Gilbert Herring in the French sitcom Bonjour la Classe (1993); and various characters in Life Beyond the Box (2003).[10] More recent television work encompasses Father Matthew in the drama Broken (2017) and a magistrate in the historical film-with-TV-broadcast elements Peterloo (2018), though his primary television legacy remains in sitcom guest spots that highlighted his versatility in ensemble casts.[10]

Film Roles

Gillespie's film appearances began in the 1960s with supporting roles in British comedies and dramas, such as Otley (1969) alongside Tom Courtenay and Romy Schneider, and A Severed Head (1970) with Lee Remick and Richard Attenborough.[13] He also featured in Hammer Horror productions like Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed (1969) and adventure films including Inspector Clouseau (1967) and Catch Me a Spy (1971).[14] [15] In the 1970s, Gillespie took on character parts in genre pictures, notably as a supporting actor in the science fiction film At the Earth's Core (1976), directed by Kevin Connor, and the war epic Force 10 from Navarone (1978), a sequel to The Guns of Navarone featuring Robert Shaw and Harrison Ford.[14] His later film work shifted toward independent and historical dramas, including Lost in London (2017) as the second cabbie in Woody Harrelson's improvised feature, Broken (2017) as Father Matthew, and Peterloo (2018) as Magistrate Warmley in Mike Leigh's depiction of the 1819 Manchester massacre.[5] These roles highlight his versatility in ensemble casts, often portraying authoritative or eccentric figures.[1]
YearFilmRole
1967Inspector ClouseauSupporting role[14]
1969OtleySupporting role[13]
1969Frankenstein Must Be DestroyedSupporting role[14]
1970A Severed HeadSupporting role[13]
1971Catch Me a SpySupporting role[15]
1976At the Earth's CoreSupporting role[14]
1978Force 10 from NavaroneSupporting role[14]
2017Lost in LondonCabbie (2nd)[5]
2017BrokenFather Matthew[5]
2018PeterlooMagistrate Warmley[5]

Directing and Producing Career

Theatre Directing

Gillespie's directing career commenced in 1963 during his time in repertory theatres following training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and stints at the Old Vic.[4] He gradually increased his directing responsibilities, focusing on new writing and innovative productions, particularly at the King's Head Theatre in Islington, where he staged 17 works over several years, including the premiere of Mr Joyce is Leaving Paris.[2] Notable among these was a contentious effort to secure staging rights amid disputes with theatre owner Dan Crawford.[2] His work extended to Dublin Theatre Festival connections, enabling productions like A Streetcar Named Desire in Norwich.[9] From 1971 onward, Gillespie directed over 100 plays, many touring nationally, alongside venue-specific runs such as Fearless Frank at the King's Head in 1979, which transferred to New York in 1980, and J.B. Priestley's Dangerous Corner at London's Ambassador's Theatre in 1981.[4] [16] These efforts emphasized fringe and pub theatre environments, prioritizing overlooked or contemporary scripts over mainstream revivals.[2] In 2000, he established Jane Nightwork Productions as artistic director—a role he held until 2011—dedicating the company to new or neglected plays centered on interpersonal dynamics, especially between men and women.[17] [18] Later directorial credits include Making Dickie Happy and Shaw's Women, a 2013 double bill of George Bernard Shaw one-acts (Village Wooing and Overruled) at the Tristan Bates Theatre, highlighting his continued interest in concise, character-driven works.[9] [18]

Establishment of Jane Nightwork Productions

In 2000, Robert Gillespie established Jane Nightwork Productions as an independent theatre company to champion new writing and overlooked scripts that had been neglected by mainstream venues.[19] The initiative stemmed from his longstanding passion for innovative drama, particularly works exploring interpersonal dynamics, which he sought to revive or introduce through a flexible, rotating ensemble of actors dubbed The Jane Nightwork Company.[2] This structure allowed for agile production of experimental pieces without the constraints of fixed repertory commitments, enabling Gillespie to direct and produce plays that prioritized narrative depth over commercial viability.[20] The company's founding aligned with Gillespie's return to directing after decades focused on acting, aiming to address gaps in British theatre where lesser-known or controversial relational themes—especially between men and women—received insufficient attention.[18] Jane Nightwork Productions emphasized scripts that delved into psychological and social tensions in human relationships, drawing from both contemporary authors and historical texts rarely staged in modern contexts.[21] Early efforts under Gillespie's artistic directorship included mounting productions that blended revival and originality, fostering a niche reputation for thoughtful, uncompromised interpretations amid a theatre landscape dominated by safer, audience-tested fare.[22]

Key Productions and Innovations

Gillespie founded Jane Nightwork Productions in 2000 to focus on new writing and overlooked scripts, enabling the staging of works that might otherwise remain unproduced due to commercial constraints.[18][2] One early production was My Heart, a two-handed comic drama exploring themes of death, which toured London and the Home Counties in 2000, demonstrating Gillespie's emphasis on intimate, touring formats suitable for fringe venues.[23] The company produced David Mamet's Oleanna, a contentious two-character play examining power dynamics in academia, highlighting Gillespie's willingness to tackle provocative contemporary texts that challenge audiences.[24] Jeremy Bettis's Spear was another key offering, contributing to the company's reputation for supporting emerging playwrights with structurally innovative narratives.[24] In 2015, Jane Nightwork presented Shaw's Women, a double bill comprising George Bernard Shaw's Village Wooing and How He Lied to Her Husband at the Tristan Bates Theatre from January 6 to 31, reviving lesser-performed Shaw one-acts to interrogate early 20th-century gender and class dynamics through sharp, witty dialogue.[25][26][27] Gillespie's innovations through Jane Nightwork include prioritizing economical two-hander and small-cast formats for viability in pub and fringe theatres, allowing sustained touring of over 100 directed plays since 1971 while bypassing subsidized mainstream venues.[1] This approach fostered causal efficiency in production, emphasizing script-driven content over spectacle, and addressed underrepresented themes like mortality and institutional critique without reliance on large budgets or institutional approval.[2][28]

Writing Contributions

Scripts and Plays

Robert Gillespie authored a number of theatre plays, often exploring themes of human relationships, mortality, and unconventional life choices, typically in intimate two-hander formats suited to fringe venues.[2] His play Love, Question Mark, a comedy examining the nature of love and the challenges of monogamy, premiered on April 6, 2010, at the New Diorama Theatre in London under his direction through Jane Nightwork Productions.[29] The script follows Michael Smith, a retired widower whose routine life is disrupted by an infatuation sparked by glimpsing a pair of legs on a bus, prompting him to pursue companionship through bold and non-traditional means, culminating in an unanticipated visitor that tests notions of partnership in later life.[29] Themes include risk-taking in aging, the implausibility of lifelong monogamy, and the distortions of romantic pursuit, delivered with inky humor.[30] The production featured Stuart Sessions as Michael and Clare Cameron as Maria, and toured to additional London venues including the Old Sorting Office (October 20–23, 2010), Courtyard Theatre (October 18–22, 2011), and Tabard Theatre (November 8–23, 2011).[29] Reviews noted the script's provocative questions about relationships, though some critiqued the need for heightened stylistic acting to fully realize its intent.[31] Another work, My Heart, is a two-hander play centered on themes of death, which received a touring production in London.[2] Specific premiere details and plot elements remain less documented, aligning with Gillespie's focus on concise, introspective narratives for smaller stages. In addition to stage plays, Gillespie contributed scripts to early television satire, including the sketch "A Consumer Guide to Religions" for the BBC's That Was the Week That Was in the 1960s, which satirized institutional faith and reportedly stirred national debate.[2] These writings reflect his broader role in injecting sharp, observational commentary into performance media.[4]

Memoirs and Books

Robert Gillespie published his first memoir, Are You Going to Do That Little Jump?, in October 2017 through Jane Nightwork Productions, focusing on his early career in theatre from the 1950s onward.[7] The book details his training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) and initial professional engagements, including two seasons at the Old Vic Theatre, emphasizing the challenges and transitions in post-war British stage acting.[6] In 2021, Gillespie released the sequel, Are You Going to Do That Little Jump? The Adventure Continues, which extends the narrative to his work in television sitcoms, films, and continued theatre involvement spanning over seven decades.[32] This volume covers appearances in series such as Butterflies, Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?, Rising Damp, and The Liver Birds, alongside reflections on the evolution of the entertainment industry.[33] Both works are characterized by anecdotal insights into collaborations with prominent figures, avoiding sensationalism in favor of professional observations on craft and cultural shifts.[34] No additional books by Gillespie are documented beyond these autobiographical volumes, which collectively chart his progression from fringe and repertory theatre to mainstream broadcasting.[2] The memoirs highlight his self-publishing approach via Jane Nightwork Productions, established to support independent theatre and writing projects.[35]

Contributions to British Theatre

Role in Fringe and Pub Theatre

Gillespie directed seventeen productions at the King's Head Theatre in Islington during its formative years from the 1970s to the mid-1980s, contributing significantly to the venue's reputation as a pioneering pub theatre space for experimental and new writing.[2][19] These efforts helped establish the King's Head—founded in 1970 by Dan and Joan Crawford—as a hub for intimate, low-budget performances in a converted pub backroom, often under challenging conditions like earthen floors and limited facilities, attracting actors such as Tony Doyle and Jim Norton for dramatic roles.[36][37] Among the notable early successes he supported was Mr. Joyce is Leaving Paris, which became one of the theatre's biggest hits shortly after its inception.[2] In parallel, Gillespie advanced fringe theatre through his establishment of the Jane Nightwork Company (later Jane Nightwork Productions in 2000), a flexible ensemble dedicated to staging new or overlooked plays, particularly those exploring relationships and innovative narratives.[2][19] This initiative focused on fringe venues, emphasizing unproduced works by emerging or neglected writers, such as Jeremy Kingston's adaptations and original pieces. Examples include the 2014 double bill Oedipus Retold at the Tristan Bates Theatre, blending Sophocles with modern retellings, and the 2016 comedy Making Dickie Happy at the same venue, both directed by Gillespie to highlight lesser-known texts in compact, audience-proximate settings typical of fringe productions.[38][39] His approach privileged bold, under-the-radar scripting over commercial viability, fostering a tradition of risk-taking in non-subsidized, pub-adjacent spaces that echoed the raw energy of early King's Head work.[2]

Addressing Controversial Themes

Gillespie's contributions to satirical television content included co-authoring the sketch A Consumer's Guide to Religion for the BBC's That Was the Week That Was in 1963, a piece that lampooned major world religions and elicited widespread public backlash for its irreverence toward sacred institutions.[8][34] The sketch's bold critique of religious dogma aligned with the program's reputation for pushing boundaries against establishment norms, contributing to debates on free speech in broadcasting.[8] In theatre, Gillespie wrote and directed Love, Question Mark (premiered 2010 at New Diorama Theatre, revived 2011 at Courtyard and Tabard Theatres), a two-hander exploring a widower's pursuit of companionship and sexual fulfillment, which interrogated monogamy, infidelity, and post-loss vulnerability in ways deemed unorthodox and provocative by reviewers.[40][41][42] The play's direct confrontation of sexual morality and relational cynicism challenged audience expectations of domestic propriety, reflecting Gillespie's interest in human frailties often sidelined in mainstream narratives.[40] His acting role in a Finborough Theatre production of Rolf Hochhuth's The Representative (a post-war drama accusing Pope Pius XII of complicity in the Holocaust through inaction) further engaged with politically charged historical accountability, echoing the original 1963 premiere's global uproar over its indictment of Vatican neutrality during Nazi atrocities.[43] Through Jane Nightwork Productions, founded in 2000, Gillespie prioritized neglected or new scripts centered on relational dynamics, enabling fringe explorations of interpersonal taboos that evaded commercial theatre's conservatism.[18][2] These efforts underscored a commitment to unfiltered examinations of power, faith, and intimacy, leveraging smaller venues to circumvent residual cultural reticence post-1968 Theatres Act reforms.[2]

Later Career and Commentary

Recent Projects

In October 2021, Gillespie published his second memoir, Are You Going to Do That Little Jump? The Adventure Continues, which chronicles his career in television sitcoms, film, and theatre, including contributions to satirical programs like That Was the Week That Was and reflections on fringe theatre innovations.[34] The book features illustrations and a chronological "what I did, when" appendix detailing over seven decades in the industry.[44] Simultaneously, he established Little Jump, an expanding online archive hosted at littlejump.co.uk, providing public access to documents, photographs, and accounts from his directing, acting, and writing endeavors, such as Jane Nightwork Productions' revivals of Shaw and Sophocles adaptations.[45] This digital repository serves as a primary source for his career timeline, emphasizing early influences like Dublin Theatre Festival and King's Head Theatre stagings.[46] Gillespie has sustained creative output through "Tales from the Green Room," a series of original short stories on the Little Jump platform, drawing from backstage anecdotes and industry observations, though specific publication dates beyond the site's 2021 inception remain undated.[47] No new stage productions under his direction have been documented since Shaw's Women in 2015.[25]

Online and Public Commentary on the Industry

Gillespie has disseminated his observations on the theatre industry via memoirs, a personal website, and interviews, often drawing on firsthand experiences to challenge secondary narratives and highlight practical realities. In the memoir series Are You Going to Do That Little Jump? (Volume 1, 2017; Volume 2 subtitled The Adventure Continues, circa 2021), he chronicles seven decades in show business from the late 1940s, incorporating backstage anecdotes, evaluations of prominent figures, and candid assessments of professional dynamics, rendered with wit and realism rather than mere celebrity recounting.[48][49] These volumes extend to solo theatrical performances of the material, as in the 2021 show at the Pump House Theatre, where Gillespie delivered provocative insights into industry evolution, from post-war repertory to fringe innovations, emphasizing persistence amid adversity.[34] On his website Little Jump (launched post-2010s), Gillespie corrects prevailing histories of fringe venues, notably decrying "sanitized, sentimental versions" of the King's Head Theatre's origins by uninvolved commentators, while crediting the unheralded contributions of Joan Crawford—wife of founder Dan Crawford—in sustaining the pub theatre through its raw, audience-integrated 1970s phase, where he directed 17 productions from 1971 to 1986.[50] In site essays like "Actors are used to slumming," he portrays early pub theatre's earthen floors, absent backstages, and actors navigating pub crowds for necessities, yet affirms performers' adaptability—exemplified by stars like Tony Doyle and Jim Norton accepting such rigors between television work for substantive roles—underscoring fringe spaces' role in fostering depth over glamour.[36] Interviews reveal Gillespie's preference for theatre's collaborative immediacy over film's "boredom of waiting around," lauding the Royal Shakespeare Company (mid-1990s tenure) as "actor’s heaven" for its supportive ensemble, and advocating revival of neglected scripts via his company Jane Nightwork Productions, implicitly critiquing mainstream priorities.[9]

References

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