Genial Manchester-born comic actor Sam Kelly had a considerable gift
for timing and observation. His special forte was playing decrepit,
rheumy characters of more advanced years than his own actual age. Among
the many endearing impressions he made on the small screen, he is
probably best remembered as the illiterate crook 'Bunny' Warren in
Porridge (1974) and as the inept
German officer Hans Geering in
'Allo 'Allo! (1982), forever
abbreviating the Nazi salute to a shout of "Tler!" (which to many ears
sounded like 'klop' or 'club'). His other sitcom credits include Norman
Elston in
Now and Then (1983),
the servant Nathaniel Grunge in the Georgian period romp
Haggard (1990) and the chauffeur Sam
Jones in
On the Up (1990). Kelly's
expressive features also splendidly suited a varied gallery of
Dickensian characters: the timid Mr. Snagsby
(
Masterpiece Theatre: Bleak House (1985); the
undertaker Mr. Mould
(
Martin Chuzzlewit (1994);
the kindly manservant Giles
(
Oliver Twist (1999); and the
grocer Cudlipp (in
John Sullivan's ITV
adaptation
Micawber (2001)).
By his own admission, Kelly might have been content running a village
post office. He began his working life as a clerk in the Liverpool
civil service before enrolling at the London Academy of Dramatic Arts
at the age of twenty. He graduated in 1967 and then acted in regional
repertory theatre for five years. In the course of his subsequent
career, he made frequent appearances at London's West End, at the Old
Vic and at the Royal Court in plays ranging from "The Odd Couple" and
"HMS Pinafore" to "War and Peace". The stage was to remain his
preferred medium, allowing him to occasionally branch out into serious
roles (while regular television work necessarily paid the bills). His
dramatic performance as a sorrowful bachelor facing retirement in
"Grief" (2011) at the National Theatre was said to have been his best.
In 1977, Kelly co-founded the Croydon Warehouse Theatre, which operated
until its closure due to financial and structural problems in 2012.