Lloyd Lamble


Lloyd Nelson Lamble was an Australian actor who worked in theatre, television, radio and film. He lived and worked for most of his life in the United Kingdom.

Biography

Personal life

Lloyd Lamble was born in Melbourne, Victoria, to William HS Lamble and Francis AS Lamble. He was the youngest of four children, all boys. His father William Lamble was a viola player in the Sisserman String Quartet and in symphony orchestras in Melbourne; secretary of the ; a music teacher, pianist, organist, choirmaster and composer. His grandfather was a music professor.
Lloyd was married three times in Australia. His first marriage to Marjorie ended in divorce. His second marriage to Barbara Smith also ended in divorce, though they had two children together. His third marriage was in his early thirties to actress Lesley Jackson. Lloyd and Lesley adopted two children and remained together for over 60 years.
Lamble was president of Actors' Equity from 1942 to 1948.
In the early 1950s, Lloyd could not get acting work. After a year of selling clothing door-to-door to survive, he left Australia to live the rest of his life in Britain.
He donated a copy of his 1994 unpublished autobiography to the National Library of Australia. The book reveals that he was not satisfied with his personal or professional achievements, despite his obvious talents and successes.

Early career in Australia

Before his voice broke, Lloyd Lamble became ‘head boy’ in the choir of All Saints' Church St Kilda, Melbourne and that gained him a scholarship for Wesley College, Melbourne. His academic record was not outstanding, though he was a keen swimmer and gymnast.
At the age of 17, Lamble became a junior radio announcer for Melbourne commercial radio station 3DB – a post he describes as ‘little more than an office boy’. Senior announcing jobs followed at 3KZ and 3AW. At this time he also did some dance-hall crooning.
His professional stage career started in 1934 when he was chosen for the lead juvenile role in production of Fresh Fields. Two years later he played the role of Danny, a psychotic murderous Welsh pageboy, in Night Must Fall.
While he was still at 3AW, he began acting with the Lee Murray Radio Players and that established him as a radio actor. In lighter vein, he was straight man to Roy Rene and a compere and fall guy to Bob Dyer.
Lamble opened a successful school of radio and theatre acting in 1937: the ‘Radio-Theatre Guild’.
Lloyd's stage career developed fast in 1940 at Sydney’s Minerva Theatre, where he played parts that included: Malvolio in Twelfth Night, Lennie in Of Mice and Men and Shylock in The Merchant of Venice. He played 12 stage parts in that year and 35 in the 16 years between 1934 and 1950.
From 1936 to 1950 Lamble toured Australia and New Zealand as an actor and director. In 1944 he was leading man and producer in a six-play tour for J.C. Williamson’s in New Zealand. In 1945 he formed his own short-lived performing company – ‘L.L. Enterprises’ – and took plays on tour in Queensland, Australia.
Lloyd Lamble was well known in both the Australian Lux Radio Theatre and the Australian Macquarie Radio Theatre. His first play for Lux was in 1939. Soon he was highly sought-after by other radio stations including the Australian Broadcasting Commission, and later the British Broadcasting Corporation.
In spite of Lloyd's political left-leanings, he was enlisted by the Australian government to read war propaganda on radio, probably for his strong voice that easily commanded authority.
Lloyd Lamble wrote several radio dramas, one of which is in the National Archives of Australia. In 1947, he won a Macquarie Award.

Career in the UK

One of Lamble's first acting roles in Britain was in 1952, playing in the comedy Curtain Up, alongside Margaret Rutherford and Robert Morley. Lamble had earlier toured with them in his native Australia. Throughout the rest of his life he played hundreds of acting roles in Britain: on the stage, in radio, television and film.
Twice daily at the 1977 Edinburgh Festival, Lloyd performed two one-man plays as a double-bill, each running for over an hour. He is well-remembered for his many roles as authority figures, some of which were: Joyce Grenfell's police-superintendent-fiancée in the St. Trinian’s series; Quentin Crisp's father in The Naked Civil Servant; and Sir Oliver Surface in The School For Scandal.
In his seventies, Lamble appeared in a six-month season at the Scottish Dundee Repertory Theatre, where he played the leading role in four out of six repertory plays. He then played a long season in London's West End in the revival of Me and My Girl.

Death

Lamble died in Falmouth, Cornwall on 17 March 2008, aged 94. His death not being announced until well into the April when his funeral also took place. He was survived by his third wife Lesley Jackson, his son Tim, his daughter Elizabeth, his adopted son Lloyd Wallis Lamble, adopted daughter Caroline, three grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

Filmography