Buster Merryfield

Buster Merryfield

Merryfield as Uncle Albert in Only Fools and Horses
Born Harry Merryfield
27 November 1920(1920-11-27)
Battersea, London, England
Died 23 June 1999(1999-06-23) (aged 78)
Poole, Dorset, England
Occupation Actor
Years active 1966–1997
Spouse Iris M. Mountford (m. 1942–1999) «start: (1942)–end+1: (2000)»"Marriage: Iris M. Mountford to Buster Merryfield" Location: (linkback:http://localhost../../../../articles/b/u/s/Buster_Merryfield_eccf.html); his death

Harry "Buster" Merryfield[1][2][3] (27 November 1920 – 23 June 1999) was an English actor best known for starring in the BBC comedy Only Fools and Horses.

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Early life

Born in Battersea, South London, England, Merryfield was from a working-class background. His father, also called Harry Merryfield, was a packer, and his mother Lily Merryfield (née Stone), was a part-time waitress. He was given the name "Buster" by his grandfather, as he weighed nine pounds at birth, and it stuck throughout his entire life, not least because he refused to divulge his real name to anyone during his lifetime and it only became open knowledge after his death.

He always prided himself on his fitness, following a strict fitness regime of daily press-ups and swimming sessions. Unlike his TV character, forever replenishing his mariner's pipe, Merryfield never smoked. His efforts to stay fit could be traced back to his time as a child Boxing star in the 1930s. He was British schoolboy champion in 1936 and Southern Command army champion in 1945. Merryfield was also a keen amateur football player.

Buster was a keen Millwall Football Club fan and regularly attended games at The Den.

Career

Before turning professional as an actor Merryfield was a keen amateur actor and director. His productions of John Osborne's The Entertainer, The World-My Canvas by Ruth Dixon and A View from the Bridge by Arthur Miller, for the now defunct amateur theatre group The Characters, won Best Play at the Woking Drama Festival in 1966, 1968 and 1969 respectively.[4] He also won the Best Actor trophy for his roles in The Entertainer and The World-My Canvas.[5]

Merryfield finally became a professional actor at the age of 57, after working for the Westminster Bank (later the National Westminster Bank) for nearly 40 years, interrupted by his war service. In contrast to his most famous character, Merryfield spent the war in the army, where his fine physique resulted in him being made a PT and jungle warfare instructor. It was during the war that he first discovered his love of acting when he served as an entertainments officer, putting on shows for the other troops. However, upon the end of the war, married and with his wife expecting a daughter, he opted to return to his job at the bank. At Natwest he rose through the ranks, and by the time of his early retirement, in 1978, he was a bank manager at the Thames Ditton branch in Surrey.

When he retired, Merryfield persuaded a repertory company to take him on. He performed at the Connaught theatre in London, in plays such as "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolour Dreamcoat", and in "Equus" alongside Bernard Bresslaw. Also, small parts on Television came his way. Merryfield appeared in "Hannah" in 1980, as Professor Challis in "The Citadel" in 1983 and as a Bishop in "Strangers and Brothers" in 1984.

Merryfield joined Only Fools and Horses in January 1985, as the former seafaring Albert Gladstone Trotter, known as Uncle Albert, who was Grandad Trotter's globetrotting long-lost brother, and who was known for Uncle Albert's catchphrase of "During the war..." The character took over the role of senior citizen member of the irrepressible Trotter family from Lennard Pearce who played Grandad, after Pearce died suddenly and unexpectedly in December 1984. Coincidentally, nine months earlier, in March 1984, Merryfield appeared in two episodes of a Shroud for a Nightingale alongside Lennard Pearce.

Merryfield also did a lot of work for various charities, notably the Royal National Lifeboat Institution. He wrote his autobiography, "During the War and Other Encounters" in 1996.

In December 1997, he fell over at the British Comedy Awards whilst walking up to the stage to collect an award for David Jason for his part in Only Fools and Horses. Despite cutting his forehead, he continued on and collected the award. Even after Only Fools and Horses finished at the end of 1996, Merryfield appeared in Pantomime at Christmas 1997 and 1998.

Death

Buster Merryfield died in Poole General Hospital on 23 June 1999, as a result of a brain tumour. He was survived by his wife Iris, whom he married in April 1942, his daughter, Karen, and two grandchildren. His body was buried in Verwood, Dorset. His wife, Iris, died three years later from natural causes.

Appeared in

References

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