Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

George Layton

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
George Lowy

Role
  
Actor

Name
  
George Layton

Website
  
www.georgelayton.com

Years active
  
1964–present


George Layton garybasfordtripodcomgeorgelaytonJPG

Born
  
2 March 1943 (age 81) (
1943-03-02
)

Occupation
  
Actor, author, theatre director, screenwriter, performer, writer

Books
  
The Fib and Other Stories, The Swap

Movies
  
Stand Up, Virgin Soldiers, Einstein's Big Idea

TV shows
  
Similar People
  
Geoffrey Davies, Robin Nedwell, Barry Evans, Ernest Clark, Richard O'Sullivan

george layton loosewomen.MPG


George Layton (born George Lowy on 2 March 1943 in Bradford, West Riding of Yorkshire) is an English actor, director, screenwriter and author. He was born to a family of Czechoslovak and Jewish ancestry and educated at Belle Vue Boys' Grammar School in Bradford and studied acting at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art where he won the Emile Littler award. He went on to leading parts at Coventry and Nottingham and appeared on Broadway in Chips with Everything. He also appeared in an Australian production called Funny Peculiar.

Contents

He is best known for three television roles – junior doctor Paul Collier in the comedy series Doctor in the House and its first two and last sequels Doctor at Large, Doctor in Charge and Doctor at the Top, that of Bombardier 'Solly' Solomons in the first two series of It Ain't Half Hot Mum, and as Des the mechanic in early episodes of Minder.

Doctor at the Top (1991) Episode Five 3/3 with Geoffrey Davies, George Layton


Life and career

Layton was born in Bradford, West Riding of Yorkshire, England. His early television work includes Swizzlewick, Enter Solly Gold, United!, Thirty-Minute Theatre, Detective, What's in It For Me? and Lay Down Your Arms. He also made guest appearances in many classic British series, including The Likely Lads, Z-Cars, The Liver Birds, The Sweeney, Minder and played the lead in Len and the River Mob. In 1969 he played a small role in the Doctor Who story The Space Pirates.

Later that year he made his debut as boisterous medical student Paul Collier in Doctor in the House. As well as continuing to star in the series and its sequels, in 1971 he began to co-write episodes with former co-star Jonathan Lynn, the first under the pseudonym Oliver Fry to conceal the new writer's identity from his fellow cast members.

At the end of the Doctor in Charge series in 1973 he left the show (although he stayed on as a writer), and the following year he appeared in the first two series of It Ain't Half Hot Mum as Bombardier 'Solly' Solomons. He then joined forces with Jonathan Lynn once again to co-write and co-star in another sitcom My Brother's Keeper. He also appeared in Carry On Behind in 1975 playing a hospital doctor.

Layton was also one of the main presenters on the original series of That's Life!, hosted by Esther Rantzen.

His other television writing credits with Jonathan Lynn include episodes of On the Buses, Nearest and Dearest, Romany Jones and My Name Is Harry Worth.

In the mid-1970s he and Lynn began to write separately, and Layton became a regular writer of Robin's Nest, in which he also played a guest character. Following this, he created and wrote the sitcoms Don't Wait Up starring Nigel Havers and Tony Britton and Executive Stress with Geoffrey Palmer and Penelope Keith. In 1990, Don't Wait Up won the Television and Radio Industries Club's 'Best Comedy Series' award.

Throughout the 1980s, as well as playing a recurring character in the hit comedy-drama Minder, he provided voices for the children's cartoons Pigeon Street and Joshua Jones, and was the voice behind Sydney, a character in a tremendously popular and long-running advertising campaign for Tetley tea.

After a brief return to the role of Paul Collier in 1991's Doctor at the Top, he starred in the hit comedy-drama series Sunburn (1999–2000), playing Alan Brooks, area manager of Janus Holidays in Cyprus. His most recent acting appearances have been in Doctors, Holby City and Casualty. In 2006, he made five appearances in Dictionary Corner on the game show Countdown and made a guest appearance in an episode of Heartbeat.

On 18 January 1999 George Layton was the subject of This Is Your Life. He has also appeared on Lily Savage's Blankety Blank. George's less well-known voiceover work includes TV commercials for various financial products, and narration of promotional videos for property speculators Inside Track.

George is an avid Bradford City fan.

In August 2012 George competed in Celebrity Masterchef.

Filmography

  • Here We Go Round The Mulberry Bush (1967)
  • Mosquito Squadron (1969)
  • Carry On Behind (1975)
  • Confessions of a Driving Instructor (1976)
  • Stand Up, Virgin Soldiers (1977)
  • Don't Go Breaking My Heart (1999)
  • Selected theatre

    As actor:

  • Billy Liar as Geoffrey Fisher (King's Head, Islington)
  • The Caucasian Chalk Circle as Lavrenti (Belgrade Theatre, Coventry)
  • Chicago as Amos Hart (Adelphi Theatre, London)
  • Chips With Everything as First Corporal (Royal Court and Broadway)
  • How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying as Ponty (New Theatre, Bromley)
  • More Lies About Jerzy as Jerzy Kosinski (New End Theatre, Hampstead)
  • The Odd Couple as Felix (Theatre Royal, Windsor)
  • Oliver! as Fagin (London Palladium)
  • Twelfth Night as Feste (Belgrade Theatre, Coventry)
  • As director:

  • Barefoot in the Park (Cambridge Theatre Company)
  • Dangerous Corner (Cambridge Theatre Company)
  • Aladdin (Theatre Royal, Bath)
  • Dick Whittington (Shaw Theatre)
  • Author

    George Layton has written three books of fictional short stories, entitled The Fib and Other Stories, The Swap and Other Stories and The Trick and Other Stories. The tales describe family life in the North of England in the post-Second World War era. The books have been part of the National Curriculum in British schools, and film versions are in the works. Myles McDowell quotes Layton's The Balaclava Story as an example of how adults are often mostly absent from children's fiction.

    References

    George Layton Wikipedia