Pages

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

IN MEMORY OF WARREN CLARKE

     I watched the new version of Poldark, a swashbuckler British television series on PBS last Sunday and at the end saw a dedication to the actor Warren Clarke who had played his last role as Charles Poldark on the program. Americans will join their English cousins in missing this fine actor.
     His work as Albert Robinson in another series Sleepers that crossed to America's shores brought him to my attention and I watched the programs faithfully. The plot has the KGB integrating two agents into British Society. The agents forget why they've been sent and become as British as the native born. Warren Clarke played a moderate trade unionist, a happily married man with children and a council house in the north of England. When the KGB realizes what has happened they pursue the agents closely followed by the CIA and M15. I never missed an episode of the series.
     Reginald Hill's Dalziel and Pascoe crime fiction are classics and they were presented as a series on PBS featuring Clarke as Detective Superintendent Andy Daziel--fat, crude and complicated. I--along with many, many fans--never missed an episode.
      On reading his obit, I learned of all the stage roles Clarke had played and wished we had been able to see them here in America.
     Rest in peace Warren Clarke.


Download hot ebooks from Carina Press Audiobooks at audible.com!

2 comments:

  1. Loved him. Did you see him as the receptionist in the circus in 'Smiley's People' with Alec Guinness as Smiley. Warren played the character as very slightly camp and was perfect. He portrayed the external Dalziel as crude but also let the viewer see the internal articulate, educated and erudite human being. Sadly missed.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'd like to see Smiley's People again now that I'm more familiar with his work.

    ReplyDelete