John Thaw

John Thaw
Born
John Edward Thaw

(1942-01-03)3 January 1942
Gorton, Manchester, England
Died21 February 2002(2002-02-21) (aged 60)
OccupationActor
Years active1958–2001
Spouses
(m. 1964; div. 1968)
    (m. 1973)
    Children3, including Abigail Thaw

    John Edward Thaw CBE (3 January 1942 – 21 February 2002) was an English actor in television, stage and cinema, best known for his television roles starring as Detective Inspector Jack Regan in The Sweeney (1975—78) and as Detective Chief Inspector Endeavour Morse in Inspector Morse (1987—2000).

    For four consecutive years Thaw was nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor for playing Morse, winning in 1990 and 1993.[1] In 1988, he was also nominated for the BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for the film Cry Freedom and in 2001 was awarded the BAFTA Fellowship.[2]

    Early life

    Born in Gorton, Manchester, to John Edward ("Jack") Thaw, a tool-setter at the Fairey Aviation Company aircraft factory, later a long-distance lorry driver, and Dorothy (née Ablott).[3] Dorothy left when he was seven years old. He and his younger brother, Raymond Stuart (Ray) had a difficult childhood due to their father's long absences. Thaw grew up in Gorton and Burnage, attending the Ducie Technical High School for Boys, gaining just one O Level. He entered the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) at the age of 16 (two years underage), and won the Academy's Vanburgh Award.[4][5] Ray emigrated to Australia in the mid-1960s.[6]

    Career

    In 1960, Thaw made his stage début in A Shred of Evidence at the Liverpool Playhouse and was awarded a contract with the theatre. His first film role was a bit part in The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner (1962) starring Tom Courtenay and he also acted on stage opposite Laurence Olivier in Semi-Detached (1962). In 1963/64, he appeared in several episodes of the BBC series Z-Cars as a detective constable. Between 1964 and 1966, he starred in two series of the ABC Weekend Television/ITV production Redcap, playing the hard-nosed military policeman Sergeant John Mann. He was also a guest star in an early episode of The Avengers. In 1967 he appeared in Bat Out of Hell and in the Granada TV/ITV series, Inheritance, alongside James Bolam and Michael Goodliffe; TV plays including The Talking Head, and episodes of series such as Budgie, where he played against type as an effeminate failed playwright with a full beard and a Welsh accent.

    Thaw was cast in the police drama series The Sweeney (1975–1978) alongside Dennis Waterman and Garfield Morgan, playing the hard-bitten, tough-talking Flying Squad detective Jack Regan. It established him as a major star in the United Kingdom. He followed this with the sitcom Home to Roost (1985–1990), which co-starred Reece Dinsdale, about a divorced father whose teenage son moves back in with him after choosing as a child to live with his mother. The show ran for four series.

    Thaw's role as Detective Chief Inspector Endeavour Morse in Inspector Morse (1987–93, with later specials until 2000), cemented his fame. Alongside his put-upon Detective Sergeant Robert "Robbie" Lewis (Kevin Whately), Morse became a high-profile character—"a cognitive curmudgeon with his love of classical music, his drinking, his classic Jaguar and spates of melancholy".[7] According to The Guardian, "Thaw was the definitive Morse, grumpy, crossword-fixated, drunk, slightly anti-feminist, and pedantic about grammar."[8] Inspector Morse became one of the UK's most popular TV series; at its peak in the mid-'90s, ratings hit 18 million people, about one third of the British population.[9][10] He won "Most Popular Actor" at the 1999 National Television Awards and won two BAFTA awards for his role as Morse.

    He subsequently played liberal working-class Lancastrian barrister James Kavanagh in Kavanagh QC (1995–99, and a special in 2001). Thaw also appeared in two sitcoms—Thick as Thieves (London Weekend/ITV, 1974) with Bob Hoskins and Home to Roost (Yorkshire/ITV, 1985–90). Thaw is mainly known in America for the Morse series, as well as the BBC series A Year in Provence (1993) with Lindsay Duncan.

    He appeared in a number of films for director Richard Attenborough, including Cry Freedom, where he portrayed the conservative South African justice minister Jimmy Kruger (for which he received a BAFTA nomination for Best Supporting Actor), and Chaplin where he played the English music hall impresario Fred Karno alongside Robert Downey Jr. (Chaplin).[11]

    Thaw also appeared in the TV adaptation of the Michelle Magorian book Goodnight Mister Tom (Carlton Television/ITV). It won "Most Popular Drama" at the National Television Awards, 1999.[12]

    During the 1970s and 1980s, Thaw appeared in productions with the Royal Shakespeare Company and National Theatre.[13][14]

    He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1981 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews in the foyer of the National Theatre in London.[15]

    Personal life

    In 1964, Thaw married Sally Alexander,[16] a feminist activist and stage manager, later professor of history at Goldsmiths, University of London. They divorced four years later.[17] He met actress Sheila Hancock in 1969 on the set of So What About Love?[18] She was married to fellow actor Alexander "Alec" Ross. They became friends, but she refused to have an affair as she did not want to disrupt her daughter's life.[18] Following the death of her husband (from oesophageal cancer) in 1971, Thaw and Hancock married on 24 December 1973 in Cirencester.[18][19] They remained together until his death in 2002 (also from oesophageal cancer).[20]

    He had three daughters (all actresses): Abigail from his first marriage to Sally Alexander, Joanna from his second marriage to Sheila Hancock, and he also adopted Sheila Hancock's daughter Melanie Jane, from Hancock's first marriage to Alec Ross.[17][21] His granddaughter Molly Whitmey made a cameo in the Endeavour episode Oracle (series 7, episode 1, broadcast 9 February 2020) as the younger version of her grandmother Sally Alexander.[22]

    Thaw was a committed socialist[23] and a lifelong supporter of the Labour Party.[24] He was appointed a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE) in March 1993 by Queen Elizabeth II.[25] In September 2006, Thaw was voted by the general public as number 3, after David Jason and Morecambe and Wise, in a poll of TV's 50 Greatest Stars for the past 50 years.[26]

    Illness and death

    A heavy drinker until going teetotal in 1995,[18] and a heavy smoker from the age of 12,[21] Thaw was diagnosed with cancer of the oesophagus in June 2001.[27][28] He underwent chemotherapy in hope of overcoming the illness, and at first had appeared to respond well to the treatment. However, just before Christmas 2001 he was informed that the cancer had spread and the prognosis was terminal.[29]

    He died on 21 February 2002,[21] seven weeks after his 60th birthday, the day after he signed a new contract with ITV,[30] and the day before his wife's birthday. At the time of his death he was living at his country home, near the villages of Luckington and Sherston in Wiltshire,[31] and was cremated in Westerleigh, near Yate in South Gloucestershire, in a private service.[32] A memorial service was held on 4 September 2002 at St Martin-in-the-Fields church in Trafalgar Square, attended by 800 people including Charles, Prince of Wales, Richard Attenborough, Tom Courtenay and Cherie Blair.[33]

    Television

    Year Title Role Notes
    1961 The Younger Generation Customer / Max / Edward / Charlie / Peter / Denny / Martin
    1961-1964 ITV Play of the Week Various 3 episodes
    1962 Probation Officer Stan Liddell 1 episode
    Smashing Day Stan TV film
    Nil Carborundum ACI Neville Harrison
    1963 BBC Sunday-Night Play Charlie Episode: "So Long Charlie"
    ITV Television Playhouse Barritt Episode: "The Lads"
    Z Cars Detective Constable Elliot 4 episodes
    1963–1965 The Edgar Wallace Mystery Theater Alan Roper / David Jones "Five to One" / "Dead Man's Chest"
    1964 The Avengers Captain Trench Episode: "Espirit De Corps"
    1964–1966 Redcap Sergeant John Mann 2 series
    1966 Bat Out of Hell Mark Paxton 5 episodes
    Drama 61-67 Harry Fox Episode: "The Assassin at the Door"
    1966-

    1973

    BBC Play of the Month Various 3 episodes
    1967 Inheritance Will Oldroyd Miniseries
    1969 The Borderers Sir Richard Episode: "Dispossesed"
    Strange Report Inspector Jenner Episode: "Revenge - When a Man Hates"
    1969-1973 ITV Saturday Night Theatre Various 4 episodes
    1971 ITV Sunday Night Drama Him Episode: "Turn of the Year: Parcel"
    Budgie Denzil Davies Episode: "Sunset Mansions, or Whatever Happened to Janey-Baib?"
    The Onedin Line Carby Episode: "Mutiny"
    1971-1972 Armchair Theatre Tony/Peter 2 episodes
    1972 Pretenders Fast Jack Episode: "The Paymaster"
    The Frighteners Wood Episode: "Old Comrades"
    ITV Playhouse Williams Episode: "Refuge for a Hero"
    The Adventures of Black Beauty Jack Desmond Episode: "The Hostage"
    1973 The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes Lt. Holst Episode: "The Sensible Action of Lieutenant Holst"
    The Protectors Mario Carpiano Episode: "Lena"
    1974 Armchair Cinema DI Jack Regan Episode: "Regan"
    Thick As Thieves Stan
    The Capone Investment Tom
    1975–1978 The Sweeney Det. Insp. Jack Regan
    1976 The Morecambe & Wise Show Guvnor Christmas special
    1978 Play for Today Dinny Matthews Episode: Dinner at the Sporting Club
    1980 Drake's Venture Francis Drake TV film
    1984 Killer Waiting Major Peter Hastings
    Mitch Mitch
    BBC Television Shakespeare Hubert de Burgh Episode: The Life and Death of King John
    1985–1990 Home to Roost Henry Willows 4 series
    1987–2000 Inspector Morse Detective Chief Inspector Endeavour Morse 33 television films
    1987 The Return of Sherlock Holmes Jonathan Small Episode: The Sign of Four
    1989 Bomber Harris Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris TV film
    1991 Stanley and the Women Stanley Duke Miniseries
    1992 A Year in Provence Peter Mayle
    1995 Screen One George Jones Episode: "The Absence of War"
    1995–2001 Kavanagh QC James Kavanagh, Q.C. 6 series
    1998 Goodnight Mister Tom Tom Oakley TV film
    1999 Plastic Man Joe McConnell
    The Second World War in Colour Narrator Documentary
    2000 Monsignor Renard Monsignor Augustine Renard Miniseries
    2001 The Glass Jim Proctor

    Film

    Year Title Roles
    1962 The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner Bosworth (uncredited)
    1963 Five To One Alan Roper
    1965 Dead Man's Chest David Jones
    1968 The Bofors Gun Featherstone
    1970 Praise Marx and Pass the Ammunition Dom
    The Last Grenade Terry Mitchell
    1972 Dr. Phibes Rises Again Shavers
    1977 Sweeney! Detective Inspector Jack Regan
    1978 Sweeney 2
    1981 Killing Heat Dick Turner
    1987 Cry Freedom Jimmy Kruger
    1988 Business As Usual Kieran Flynn
    1992 Chaplin Fred Karno
    1996 Masculine Mescaline The Man

    Theatre

    Year Title Role Notes
    1958 Cymbeline
    As You Like It
    The Cherry Orchard
    Pillars of Society
    The Taming of the Shrew
    A Winter's Tale
    The Lady's Not For Burning
    Twelfth Night
    Macbeth
    1959 Hobson's Choice
    Paradise Lost
    Antigone
    Alcestis
    Faust
    1960 The Knight of the Burning Pestle (press night) Michael Open Air Theatre, Avonbank Gardens, Stratford-upon-Avon
    A Shred of Evidence
    The Wind and the Rain John Williams Liverpool Playhouse
    Staircase
    1961 The Fires Raisers
    Chips With Everything
    Two into One
    1964 The Father
    1962 Women Beware Women (press night) Sordido New Arts Theatre
    1962-1963 Semi-Detached Robert Freeman Saville Theatre
    1967 Around the World in 80 Days
    Little Malcolm and His Struggle Against the Eunuchs
    1969 So What About Love? Dicky Criterion Theatre
    1970 Random Happenings in the Hebrides
    1971 The Lady from the Sea A Stranger Greenwich Theatre
    1972 Chinamen
    The New Quixote
    Black and Silver
    The Two of Us
    1973 Collaborators
    1976 Absurd Person Singular
    1977 The Two of Us
    1978-1980 Night and Day Dick Wagner Phoenix Theatre, London
    1981 Serjeant Musgrave's Dance Serjeant Musgrave National Theatre – Dorfman, National Theatre, London
    1982-1983 Henry VIII Royal Shakespeare Company, Stratford-Upon-Avon
    1983 The Time of Your Life (press night) Nick The Other Place, Stratford-upon-Avon
    Twelfth Night (press night) Sir Toby Belch Royal Shakespeare Theatre
    Henry VIII (press night) Cardinal Wolseley Theatre Royal, Newcastle
    1984 Twelfth Night (press night) Sir Toby Belch Theatre Royal, Newcastle upon Tyne
    The Time of Your Life (press night) Nick Gulbenkian Studio, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Pit, London
    Henry VIII (press night) Cardinal Wolseley Theatre Royal, Newcastle upon Tyne
    Pygmalion Alfred Doolittle Shaftesbury Theatre
    1985 Where There's a Will (press night) Barbican Theater
    1986 Two into One
    1988 All My Sons
    1993-1994 The Absence of War Right Hon. George Jones MP National Theatre, London
    2001 Peter Pan

    Honours and awards

    Year Award Category Work Result
    1977 Evening Standard British Film Award Best Actor Sweeney! Won
    1988 BAFTA Best Actor in a Supporting Role Cry Freedom Nominated
    1990 BAFTA TV Best Actor Inspector Morse Won
    1991 Nominated
    1992 Nominated
    1993 Won
    1995 Aftonbladet TV Prize, Sweden Best Foreign TV Personality – Male (Bästa utländska man) Won
    1998 National Television Award Special Recognition Award Inspector Morse Won
    Most Popular Actor Won
    1999 Goodnight, Mister Tom Won
    2000 Monsignor Renard Nominated
    2001 Inspector Morse and Academy Fellowship Won
    2002 Buried Treasure Nominated

    In 1994, Thaw was awarded with CBE. A memorial bench is dedicated to Thaw within the grounds of St Paul's Covent Garden.[34]

    References

    1. ^ "Actor". Bafta. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
    2. ^ "Awards Search". Bafta. Retrieved 8 February 2025.
    3. ^ "The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/76933. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
    4. ^ ""Inspector remorse; Thaw's pain over lost childhood.." The Free Library. 1998 Scottish Daily Record & Sunday". The Free Library. Retrieved 27 November 2023.
    5. ^ "John Thaw - Obituary". The Scotsman. 25 February 2002. Retrieved 27 November 2023.
    6. ^ Dibben, Kay (10 March 2002), "Mother's rejection that haunted my brother John Thaw – Brisbane man tells of family heartache", The Sunday Mail
    7. ^ "John Thaw: Forever Morse". BBC News. 21 February 2002. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
    8. ^ "No one else should play Inspector Morse, says his creator Colin Dexter". The Guardian. 25 March 2014. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
    9. ^ McCann, Jaymi (22 October 2017). "Inspector Morse's legacy: John Thaw's daughter makes Endeavour appearance". Express.co.uk. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
    10. ^ "Great Britain population mid-year estimate – Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
    11. ^ McCarthy, Todd. "Chaplin". Variety. Retrieved 20 February 2025.
    12. ^ Goodnight Mister Tom synopsis Archived 24 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine. ITV. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
    13. ^ "Twelfth Night (1983)". University of Warwick. 2016. Archived from the original on 30 October 2020. Retrieved 15 March 2025.
    14. ^ Young, Hugo (28 September 1993). "Hugo Young: the lethargy of Labour in the absence of war". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 19 July 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2025.
    15. ^ This Is Your Life, retrieved 23 June 2025
    16. ^ Shut It!
    17. ^ a b McGowan, Bob; Avery, Catherine (22 September 2002). "Mystery of John Thaw fortune". Express on Sunday.
    18. ^ a b c d Driscoll, Margarette (19 December 2004). "The Morse Saga – Interview". The Sunday Times.
    19. ^ Lee, David (22 February 2002). "Friends' tribute to Morse star Thaw". The Scotsman.
    20. ^ Guinness, Daphne (11 November 2004). "Morse: More Sad, More Angry Than You Ever Knew". The Sydney Morning Herald.
    21. ^ a b c "John Thaw – Obituary". The Times. 23 February 2002.
    22. ^ "It's a family affair: John Thaw's daughter Abigail stars in Endeavour's new series 7 with daughter Molly playing her mother Sally..." Ox In A Box. 4 February 2020.
    23. ^ "John Thaw: Forever Morse". BBC News. 21 February 2002.
    24. ^ Sengupta, Kim (5 September 2002). "Prince and Cherie Booth at Thaw memorial". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 13 June 2022.
    25. ^ "No Mystery Here". The Buffalo News. 19 March 1993.
    26. ^ "Who dares WINS, Rodders! – David Greatest TV Star for 50 Years". News of the World. 10 September 2006.
    27. ^ "John Thaw Has Throat Cancer". London Evening Standard. 19 June 2001.
    28. ^ "John Thaw Pledges Comeback as He Reveals Cancer Battle". The Guardian. 20 June 2001.
    29. ^ "Thaw's Cancer Setback". Herald Sun. 6 January 2002.
    30. ^ "Thaw signed new contract". Wales on Sunday. 7 April 2002. Archived from the original on 24 June 2022. Retrieved 12 June 2022 – via The Free Library.
    31. ^ "Sold Down the River". Western Daily Press. 19 April 2006.
    32. ^ Cowling, James (27 February 2002). "Actor Thaw Remembered for 'Generosity and Kindness'". Gloucestershire and Wiltshire Counties Publications.
    33. ^ "Charles joins Thaw memorial". BBC News. 4 September 2002.
    34. ^ "London's Famous Bench Dedications". Londonist.com. 21 October 2016. Archived from the original on 6 March 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2018.

    Bibliography

    • Hancock, Sheila (2004). The Two of Us: My Life with John Thaw. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-0-7475-7020-2
    • John Thaw: The Biography. Stafford Hildred and Tim Ewbank. London: Andre Deutsch. ISBN 0-233-99475-0