Bernard Hepton
Francis Bernard Heptonstall better known by the stage name Bernard Hepton, was an English theatre director and actor. Best known for his stage work and television roles in teleplays and series, he also appeared briefly on radio and in film.
Early life and education
Hepton was born in Bradford, West Riding of Yorkshire and said he was born in the same street as J.B. Priestley thirty years earlier. His father, Bernard senior, was an electrician, while his mother Hilda was from a mill-working family. Brought up as a Catholic, he attended St Bede's Grammar School in the city. His short-sight meant he was unable to serve in the army during the Second World War, but he trained as an aircraft engineer and draughtsman while undertaking firewatching duties.Theatre
Hepton trained at the Bradford Civic Playhouse under director Esme Church. He had extensive stage experience as an actor in repertory, especially in Scarborough and York. In 1952, he joined Birmingham Rep under Barry Jackson, later himself becoming the theatre's artistic director in 1957. Later, for a brief period from 1963, he was director of the Liverpool Playhouse, but resigned during his first season. Productions of the Max Frisch play The Fire Raisers and John Osborne's Luther were not well-received locally because of their content. He was responsible for orchestrating the fight sequences in Laurence Olivier's film version of Richard III and an Old Vic production of Hamlet with lead Richard Burton in 1953.Television
On television, he played Caiaphas in the 1969 Dennis Potter play Son of Man. He was cast as the Kommandant in Colditz and later appeared for the same production team as Albert Foiret in three seasons of Secret Army. Before that he made a guest appearance in an episode of the first series of Catweazle where he played a naturalist. Other notable performances included Thomas Cranmer in both The Six Wives of Henry VIII and Elizabeth R. He reprised the role in the film adaptation of the former, Henry VIII and His Six Wives. Hepton acted in adaptations of John le Carré's novels, as Toby Esterhase in the BBC Television versions of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and Smiley's People, and George Smiley in the radio adaptations. He appeared in I, Claudius as Pallas and in the comedy series The Squirrels.Having played Inspector Goole in An Inspector Calls and Sir Thomas Bertram in Mansfield Park, he appeared as Sam Toovey in the 1989 television adaptation of Susan Hill's ghost story The Woman in Black.
Radio and film
On radio, Hepton played the role of Albert, in Stranger in the Home by Alan Dapre, also the role of The Old Man in the Corner, the amateur, and mostly sedentary, sleuth in the BBC dramatisations of The Teahouse Detective by Baroness Orczy. He also starred in Robert Barr's quirky detective radio series "Galbraith" as Inspector Bill Galbraith on BBC radio.Hepton's appearances in feature films were less frequent, he made his debut in 1949. He made a brief appearance as Thorpey, a gangster, in the classic British film Get Carter, and another small role, as Milton Goldsmith, in Voyage of the Damned.
Personal life and death
Hepton was married to actress Nancie Jackson from 1957 until she died in 1977. Jackson played his wife Alice in A Man for All Seasons, and they settled in Barnes, south-west London. He married Hilary Liddell in 1979; she died in 2013. He died on 27 July 2018, aged 92. He was survived by a niece and nephew.Filmography
Film credits
- A Boy, a Girl and a Bike as Cyclist
- Richard III as Soldier
- Get Carter as Thorpe
- Henry VIII and His Six Wives as Archbishop Thomas Cranmer
- Barry Lyndon as Man selling painting to Barry
- Voyage of the Damned as Milton Goldsmith
- The Plague Dogs as Stephen Powell
- Gandhi as G.O.C, British army in India
- The Holcroft Covenant as Commander Leighton
- Shadey as Captain Amies
- Stealing Heaven as Bishop
- Eminent Domain as Slovak
- The Baroness and the Pig as Soames
Television credits
- A Man for All Seasons as Sir Thomas More
- The Life of Henry V as Chorus
- Compact - director, two episodes
- Swizzlewick - producer, 20 episodes
- Thursday Theatre - producer, two episodes
- United! - producer, 28 episodes
- Play of the Month: The Devil's Eggshell as Lord Portmanteau
- Great Expectations as Wemmick
- The Spanish Farm as Captain Dormer
- Out of the Unknown: The Fosters as Harry Gerwyn
- The Wednesday Play: Son of Man as Caiaphas
- The Elusive Pimpernel as Chauvelin
- W. Somerset Maugham: Lord Mountdrago as Dr Audlin
- Play For Today: Robin Redbreast as Fisher
- The Six Wives of Henry VIII as Archbishop Thomas Cranmer
- Elizabeth R as Archbishop Thomas Cranmer
- Omnibus: Paradise Restored as Oliver Cromwell
- The Organisation as Rodney Spurling
- Follow the Yellow Brick Road as Colin Sands
- Colditz as Kommandant
- Play of the Month: The Adventures of Don Quixote as Village Priest
- A Pin to See the Peepshow as Herbert Starling
- Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em as Webster
- The Squirrels as Mr Fletcher
- Sadie, It's Cold Outside as Norman Potter
- Orde Wingate as Palmer
- I, Claudius as Pallas
- Secret Army as Albert Foiret
- Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy as Toby Esterhase
- Blood Money as Det Chief Supt Meadows
- Kessler as Albert Foiret
- An Inspector Calls as Inspector Goole
- Smiley's People as Toby Esterhase
- Mansfield Park as Sir Thomas Bertram
- Dear Box Number as Walter Cartwright
- A Profile of Arthur J. Mason as Arthur J. Mason
- Bleak House as Krook
- Bergerac as Sir Geoffrey Newton
- Honour, Profit & Pleasure as Bishop of London
- The Disputation as Raymund de Penjaforte
- The Life and Loves of a She-Devil as Judge Bissop
- The Lady's Not for Burning as Hebble Tyson
- The Charmer as Donald Stimpson
- The Contract as Henry Carter
- The Woman in Black as Sam Toovey
- A Perfect Hero as Arthur Fleming
- The Old Devils as Malcolm Cellan-Davies
- Dandelion Dead as Mr Davies
- Emma as Mr Woodhouse
- Midsomer Murders: Death of a Hollow Man as Harold Winstanley
- Heartbeat: Bread & Circuses as Colonel Barber/James Barker
- Emma Mr. Woodhouse