Wilfred Pickles
Wilfred Pickles, OBE (13 October 1904 – 27 March 1978) was an English actor and radio presenter.
Early life and personal life[edit]
Pickles was born in Halifax in the West Riding of Yorkshire.[1] He moved to Southport, Lancashire, with his family in 1929, and worked with his father as a builder. He joined an amateur dramatic society, and in a local production there met Mabel Cecilia Myerscough (1906–1989), all of whose family had been connected with the stage.[2]
He remained a proud Yorkshireman, and having been selected by the BBC as an announcer for its North Regional radio service, he went on to be an occasional newsreader on the BBC Home Service during the Second World War. He was the first newsreader to speak in an accent other than Received Pronunciation, "a deliberate attempt to make it more difficult for Nazis to impersonate BBC broadcasters",[3] and caused some comment by wishing his fellow northerners "Good neet".[4]
Early career[edit]
His first professional appearance was as an extra in Henry Baynton's production of Julius Caesar at the Theatre Royal in Halifax in the 1920s.[5] Pickles soon became a radio celebrity, and pursued an acting career in London's West End theatre, on television and on film.
Other television and radio[edit]
He was the guest castaway on BBC Radio's Desert Island Discs on 2 January 1953; his chosen book was The Oxford Book of English Verse edited by Arthur Quiller-Couch, and his luxury a yellow waistcoat.
On television, among many performances, he appeared in Dr. Finlay's Casebook and For the Love of Ada, co-starring with Irene Handl.
He was in the play Come Laughing Home by Keith Waterhouse and Willis Hall on BBC Radio 4 in 1970. He also played the part of Horatio Hobson in the play "Hobson's Choice" on the BBC Saturday Night Theatre.
In 1971, he was the subject of This Is Your Life.
Publications[edit]
In 1949, Wilfred Pickles published an autobiography titled Between You and Me - The Autobiography of Wilfred Pickles.[8]
In 1955, Wilfred Pickles published an anthology of poetry and prose of the "north counties" of England. The book, My North Countrie, featured verses from a range of poets and writers including two Lancashire dialect verses, "A Bird Song Away" and "Th' Art Lookin' Sackless", from the award-winning weaver-poet Nicholas Freeston.[9]
In 1956, Mabel Pickles published a memoir of her relationship with Wilfred entitled Married to Wilfred.[10]
Later life[edit]
In 1950, Pickles was awarded the OBE for services to broadcasting.[11]
In 1955, he opened the Wilfred Pickles' School for Spastics at Tixover Grange, Rutland.[12] Also in 1955, he and wife Mabel celebrated their silver wedding anniversary by returning to the Sacred Heart Church in Southport, when they gave money for a statue of Saint Teresa Margaret of the Sacred Heart, which still stands in the church. They recorded an edition of Have a Go from the church hall (now demolished), and later performed a version of the show in the adjacent school for the children.
He appeared in the film Billy Liar, where he played the titular protagonist's father.
Pickles died in Brighton on 27 March 1978, aged 73, and is buried with his wife Mabel in Southern Cemetery, Manchester.