Arthur Mullard


Arthur Ernest Mullard was an English actor and singer.
Following military service and a brief boxing career Mullard found work as a cockney character actor in film and TV comedy, notably in the series Romany Jones. Soon after his death, it was alleged that he had committed acts of extreme domestic violence and sexual abuse.

Early life

Mullard was born in a humble background in Islington, London. He started work at the age of 14 as a butcher's assistant and joined the Army at 18. It was there that he began boxing, becoming champion of his regiment. When he left the army after three years, he had a short stint at boxing professionally. This ended after 20 fights over three years, following a knock-out from which he lost his memory. He married Florence Rose in the second quarter of 1939. He is recorded in the 1939 Register as a general labourer living with his parents at 35 Douglas Street, Islington. He rejoined the army in the Second World War, becoming a Warrant Officer in the Royal Artillery.

Career

Acting

Following the end of the war in 1945 Mullard sought work as a stuntman at Pinewood and Ealing film studios, from which he drifted into uncredited bit-parts in British films such as Oliver Twist, The Lavender Hill Mob and The Ladykillers.
Mullard's face and cockney accent lent themselves to a certain character and he graduated to more visible roles in comedy films and on television. It was on television that Mullard made a name for himself, first as a straight man for Tony Hancock, Frankie Howerd and Benny Hill, then in The Arthur Askey Show. It was the London Weekend Television series Romany Jones, first aired in 1973, which gave Mullard his highest profile, playing Wally Briggs, a crafty caravan-dweller. Popular in its time, the show did not find critical favour and has subsequently been named as one of the worst British sitcoms ever made.
So popular was Mullard's character that a sequel, Yus, My Dear, was broadcast in 1976, in which Wally and his wife Lily had moved out of their caravan into a council house. The series gained modest ratings, though it too received critical broadsides as one of Britain's worst-ever sitcoms.
Mullard was regularly a guest in other programmes and television commercials. He and Watts also reprised their roles of Wally and Lily appearing in the film Holiday on the Buses, the last feature-length version of the popular On the Buses comedy series of the time.
Mullard also appeared in Ladies Who Do, Morgan!, The Great St Trinian's Train Robbery, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and Adventures of a Plumber's Mate. In 1986, invited by producer Victor Lewis-Smith, Mullard hosted an edition of Midweek on BBC Radio 4 to replace regular host Libby Purves during her temporary absence.

Singing

In 1967, Mullard recorded "I Love You, You Love Me"/"Was It Something I Said?" on the Masquerade label. This was followed the same year by an album, Arthur Mullard of London The LP included Mullard's cover of the Beatles' "Yesterday", jokes and philosophy. More singles followed in the 1970s, including 1974's "Not Now Arthur"/"If I Only Had My Time Again", and in 1975 "I Only Have Eyes for You"/"One 'Fing 'N' Annuver" with "Yus My Dear"/"Arthur" released in 1976.
He entered the UK Singles Chart in 1978 with his cover of "You're the One That I Want" with Hylda Baker, who was in her seventies. The single, which peaked at Number 22 in the UK, was taken from the album Band On The Trot.
The single was his last professional success during Mullard's life; there followed an uncredited narration on the Glenn Close-led live-action
101 Dalmatians'', released in 1996 after his death.

Personal life

In 1996, after Mullard's death, the Sunday Mirror reported that a This Is Your Life special about Mullard was planned, until it was cancelled after producers contacted his eldest son and discovered Mullard's history of extreme domestic violence and years of sexual abuse against his daughter, starting when she was 13.
His wife Florence committed suicide by an overdose of sleeping tablets in 1961 after suffering from poor physical and mental health. Her death was said by her daughter to be partly the result of the extreme physical and mental violence Mullard perpetrated against her. She left a suicide note which said, "I don't want to live any more because of what you're doing with Barbara. Please look after my Johnny." Mullard continued to live in a council house in Islington after his success and spent much of his free time socialising in local pubs. He died in his sleep on 11 December 1995, aged 85. Despite his alleged acts of child sexual abuse against her his daughter nursed him in his dotage. He left her and one of her brothers £5,000 each; he left £250,000 to a children's home.
He wrote an autobiography, Oh, Yus, It's Arthur Mullard.

Selected filmography