Features
‘One of the best sitcoms ever’
North-East actors David Nellist and Scott Frazer
have a script by world famous writers and the
legacy of iconic TV characters Bob Ferris and
Terry Collier working in their favour for Durham
Gala's world premiere, they tell Viv Hardwick
BY pure
coincidence,
actors David
Nellist and Scott
Frazer met at
Newcastle Central
Station on their way to
rehearsal, the same way that
Bob and Terry are reunited in
The Likely Lads, the play which
is bringing world attention to
Durham's Gala Theatre next
week.
Frazer, who plays Terry, says:
"In the play my next line is
bloody hell' and I thought I'd
say that just to impress David.
So hopefully the luck is already
written into this."
There's already speculation
about director Simon
Stallworthy's inspired decision
to turn the legendary sitcom
into a two-act drama leading to
a national tour at the very least.
The 1960s and 1970s
Newcastle-inspired series made
household names of Rodney
Bewes and James Bolam - not
forgetting Bridget Forsyth who
played Bob's long-suffering
girlfriend/wife Thelma
Chambers - and all three actors,
Nellist, Frazer and Susie
Burton, are aware that this is a
premiere like no other.
Nellist agrees that he's
landed one of the roles of his
acting career: "I worked with
Simon on The Far Corner (the
play based on Harry Pearson's
book) two years ago and he
approached me in February
when I was in in Nicholas
Nickleby in Canada. Simon
obviously saw something
aspirational in me and could
see me as Bob.
"I'm intimidated only in the
way that audiences will come
with a preconception of the
success of the television series.
We're not trying to be Rodney
Bewes or Jim Bolam, we're
playing Bob Ferris and Terry
Collier as written by Dick
Clement and Ian la Frenais. You
can't deny that's what they're
thinking when they walk
through the door, but you're
hoping that by creating a piece
of theatre that within ten
minutes they've forgotten that
we don't look like Bewes and
Bolam."
He agrees that it's so fondly
remembered because The
Likely Lads broke the mould in
terms of placing working class
characters into a sitcom. It also
put the North-East on the map.
"It wasn't patronising at all
about the region. These were
real characters and other
people were going through
exactly the same dilemmas as
Bob and Terry," adds Nellist.
The plot here centres on the
Whatever Happened To The
Likely Lads? series of 1973
which sees Terry returning
from Army service just as his
best friend is about to settle
down to married life on the Elm
Lodge Housing Estate (actually
the Highfields Estate in
Killingworth).
"Terry insults Bob by saying
that he's living the same life as
everybody else. Getting up in
the morning listening to Jimmy
Young and getting their leg over
twice a week and I'm
thinking twice a week?'," he
says.
Nellist feels that the two
Hollywood-based scriptwriters
have still got a good ear for
North-East issues to be able to
create this latest script.
He didn't know Scott Frazer
previously, so part of the
challenge for both is making it
look to an audience that the two
men have been friends since
being five-year-olds.
"I met James Bolam last year
when I was doing Nicholas
Nickleby and his wife had been
in the original production. He
seemed to be a really quiet and
unassuming man," reveals
Nellist when asked about the
darker side of The Likely Lads,
which saw Bolam and Bewes
never speak again after
completing a film in 1976.
Frazer opens a conversation
about playing Terry Collier
with an real-life "injustice of the
world" rant after having to pay
£100 for a replacement car key.
"It's only an Astra for God's
sake," he says. "I probably lost it
in the excitement of landing the
role of Terry.
"I think it's safe to say that
my Terry is going to be Dick
and Ian's Terry. They've
fashioned a bloody good stage
play out of The Likely Lads and
I certainly recognised the
characters out of reading it, so
it doesn't need any additional
spin.
"I do feel safe that the words
are very, very Terry Collier and
they are very funny. So as long
as I remember what to say and
don't bump into the furniture
I'm in good hands."
He feels it's wonderful to be
back in the region with such a
one-off opportunity.
"It's such a dream come true.
I know that's a tired cliché but it
is true for me. It was one of the
things that got me excited,
particularly when I heard it was
being written by Dick and Ian
for the Gala. A friend of mine
sent me a casting breakdown
and I got onto my agent and
said they're going to do The
Likely Lads with the original
writers, can you get me seen for
this?' And I must have rung her
about once a week saying is
there a meeting yet?'
Fortunately for me, one came
through."
Frazer feels that The Likely
Lads will adapt for the stage
because of the funny but fromthe-
heart' nature of the comedy.
"Over the two hours you get
what happened in the TV series
very cleverly put together. I
don't look a great deal like
James Bolam and I certainly
wouldn't try to emulate him but
the audience is still going to see
similarities because the jokes,
the rhythms and situations are
all from the originals. I saw the
set today and that looks really
exciting too," adds Frazer, who
managed to get hold of the
original 1965 TV series to help
with his portrayal.
"When you talk of the great
British sitcoms, most of them,
like Basil Fawlty, never move.
When you look at the two years
of Whatever Happened, it's got
to be one of the finest sitcoms
this country has ever
produced."
He and Nellist are both
London-based actors. In Frazer's
case he went to Lamda to train
having felt that his experience
in the first two Catherine
Cookson films and a Newcastle
College acting course might not
be enough to land acting work.
"People wonder why we do
acting and a lot of the time you
put your hand in your pocket
and feel a leg," says Frazer. "I
guess the reason is when it's
good it's so very, very good and
right now it's very, very good."
* The Likely Lads runs from
Wednesday until Saturday,
June 21 at the Gala Theatre,
Durham. Box Office: 0191-332-
4041 www.galadurham.co.uk
10:30am Thursday 5th June 2008
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