Glyn Houston

Glyn Houston

Actor
Born
October 25, 1925
Died
June 30, 2019
Awards
1 wins, 1 nominations

The younger brother of matinee idol Donald Houston attended elementary school in Wales but was largely self-educated with a love of sports and a strong leaning towards the arts and humanities. Glyn's working life began on his grandmother's milk round in Tonypandy. After leaving the Rhondda Valley he…

Biography

The younger brother of matinee idol Donald Houston attended elementary school in Wales but was largely self-educated with a love of sports and a strong leaning towards the arts and humanities. Glyn's working life began on his grandmother's milk round in Tonypandy. After leaving the Rhondda Valley he held down a variety of short-lived jobs and war-time appointments: with the Bristol Aeroplane Company, as a gunner with the Fleet Air Arm, a labourer on the docks at Cardiff and with the Military Police. Eventually posted to Singapore, Glyn served with the Royal Signals Regiment where his comedic potential was first recognised. Having joined the Entertainments National Service Association (and being promoted to Acting Sergeant) he put together a variety show for serving troops which toured India.

Following demobilisation at war's end, brother Donald helped him secure a position as assistant stage manager with the Guildford Repertory Theatre. On-the-job training in touring plays was to provide the foundation for a screen career which began when the director Basil Dearden created a part specifically for him in the Ealing production of The Blue Lamp (1950). Over the next six years, Glyn would appear regularly in films playing assorted working class types, sailors and soldiers (frequently Cockneys) in dramas with a crime, naval or military theme. These included classic productions like The Clouded Yellow (1950), The Cruel Sea (1953), Turn the Key Softly (1953) (famously, as Joan Collins's first onscreen lover) and The One That Got Away (1957). Many were small parts or even cameos, but occasional leads eventually followed. In Solo for Sparrow (1962), Glyn enjoyed a rare starring turn as a Scotland Yard Inspector turned private eye who brings down a gang of villains (one of them a young Michael Caine). He had a further leading role as yet another policeman in Emergency (1962), surfaced in a couple of Hammer horrors and played the comic foil in four Norman Wisdom farces, beginning with A Stitch in Time (1963). From 1958 Glyn also appeared in a staple of TV shows, live broadcasts, anthologies, soap operas and classic adaptations (notably, Lord Peter Wimsey's impeccable manservant Mervyn Bunter in Clouds of Witness (1972)) and Rosa Bud's guardian Grewgious in The Mystery of Edwin Drood (1993) .

His most consistent stock-in-trade characters continued to be serious professionals, generally in uniformed garb as officers (Colonel Wolsey in Doctor Who (1963) "The Awakening"), or, most frequently, police inspectors and superintendents (Outbreak of Murder (1962), Gideon C.I.D. (1964), Z Cars (1962), Softly Softly (1966)). Though he maintained a prolific career on stage in plays by Chekov, Shaw, Miller and others, his one self-confessed regret was not having become a leading light on the Shakespearean stage. Glyn Houston became recipient of a Bafta Cymru special award in 2008 for outstanding contribution to film and television. His autobiography, "Glyn Houston, A Black and White Actor", appeared the following year.

Actor

A Light on the HillA Light on the Hill(2000)
A Light in the ValleyA Light in the Valley(1998)as Cast member
The Sherman PlaysThe Sherman Plays(1993)as Ronald Judge
The BillThe Bill(1984)as George Taft
The Mystery of Edwin DroodThe Mystery of Edwin Drood(1993)as Grewgious

Archive Footage

The Footage DetectivesThe Footage Detectives(2021)as Self
Return to Little Hodcombe(2011)as Colonel Ben Wolsey
Auntie's BloomersAuntie's Bloomers(1991)as Self

Known for

Contribute to this page Ā· Edit page

Photos 7

Jimmy Hanley and Glyn Houston in The Blue Lamp (1950)Glyn Houston in The Brigand of Kandahar (1965)Glyn Houston and Heather Seymour in The Saint (1962)Glyn Houston and Duncan Lamont in The Brigand of Kandahar (1965)Glyn Houston and Barbara Shelley in The Secret of Blood Island (1965)Patrick McGoohan and Glyn Houston in Secret Agent (1964)

Credit Score: Glyn Houston

1098765
1952195319541955195619571958195919601961196219631964196519661967196819691970197119721973197419751976197719781979198019811982198319841985198619871988198919901991199219931994
Colonel Ben Wolsey
Tue Nov 23 1976 – Wed Dec 06 1989
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownā˜…WinsNomsVotes
1Doctor Who12.501963•8.40241372
2A Horseman Riding By6.501978•7.600181
3Breakaway3.251980•6.90058
4Tiger Bay3.0019597.5143642
5The Mystery of Edwin Drood2.501993•6.60078
6Are You Being Served?2.501977•6.1003239
7Payroll2.501962•7.0001093
8The Great Game2.501953•6.100179
9Hell Below Zero2.381954•5.800609
10A Night to Remember2.0019587.90119275