Pauline Yates

Pauline Lettice Yates (16 June 1929 21 January 2015)[1] was an English actress, best known for playing Elizabeth Perrin in the BBC television sitcom The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin. She also starred in Bachelor Father and Keep It in the Family.

Pauline Yates
Born
Pauline Lettice Yates

(1929-06-16)16 June 1929
Died21 January 2015(2015-01-21) (aged 85)
Northwood, London, England
OccupationActress
Years active1957–2002
Spouse(s)Donald Churchill (1960–1991)
Children2
Parent(s)Thomas S Yates
Marjorie Blackie

Early life and career

Yates was born in St Helens, Lancashire, on 16 June 1929. She began her acting career by joining Oldham Rep straight after leaving Childwall Valley High School for Girls.[2] At the age of 17 she made her stage debut in a dramatised version of Jane Eyre, playing Grace Poole.

In 1957 Yates was cast in the role of Estelle Waterman on Emergency Ward 10, after which she became a regular face on British Television and also appeared in a few British films. In the 1960s she made guest appearances on Armchair Theatre, Dixon of Dock Green, Z-Cars, Gideon's Way, Nightingale's Boys, The Human Jungle and The Ronnie Barker Playhouse, among others. (She appeared again with Ronnie Barker in Lines From My Grandfather's Forehead, a comedy sketch show for radio, which was first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 from 15 February 1971.) In 1970 she appeared as Mme Arnoux in Sentimental Education with Robert Powell. In 1972 she starred in her own series, Harriet's Back in Town, produced by Thames Television. The cast included William Russell and Sally Bazely. In 1975, she co-starred with Derek Nimmo in the short-lived sitcom My Honourable Mrs, in which she played Jane Prendergast, a housewife who becomes a Conservative MP like her husband Derek Prendergast (Derek Nimmo).[3] Yates was later cast as Elizabeth Perrin in The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin (1976–79).

Later life and career

Yates's ability as a comedy foil was further utilised in the ITV sitcom Keep It In The Family (Thames, 1980–82) where she played wife to the frustratingly eccentric comic-strip artist Dudley Rush (played by Robert Gillespie) that sustained five series; Yates did not feature in the 1983 series.

She appeared onstage in an Oxford Playhouse Company production of the Joe Orton play, What the Butler Saw at the Teatr y Werin in Aberystwyth, Wales, with William Russell and Michael Barrington in the cast. In 1987 she played the lead in Alan Ayckbourn's play Woman in Mind for the same company. Yates acted in David Pownall's Leicester Haymarket stage adaptation of Jane Austen's novel, Pride and Prejudice, directed by Bill Pryde in 1985. In 1989 Yates appeared in the play, Talking to Angels at the Theatre Museum in London.[4]

Personal life

Yates married actor/writer Donald Churchill[5] in 1960.[6] The couple had two daughters, Jemma and Polly, and lived for many years in Primrose Hill, North London.[7] Donald Churchill died on set in 1991 after filming his final episode of El C.I.D. for Granada Television in which he played the irascible harbour master Metcalf. Jemma Churchill is also an actress and Polly Churchill is a writer. Yates had three grandchildren.

Death

Pauline Yates died in London,[1] on 21 January 2015, aged 85.[8]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1960Identity UnknownJenny
1965Never Mention MurderZita
1965DarlingEstelle Gold
1967The Spare TyresDoreenShort
1968LionheartMother
1978The Four FeathersArmy NurseTV movie
1985She'll Be Wearing Pink PyjamasDiane
1992ElenyaElenya's VoiceVoice
gollark: You mean 16.6TH/s?
gollark: I see.
gollark: What currency are you mining?
gollark: Not *really*? You can't actually do very much with that sort of thing, but script kiddie types think you can.
gollark: That seems like too many. Don't want to fragment stuff too much.

References

  1. Lentz III, Harris (March 2015). "Obituaries". Classic Images (477): 58.
  2. Who's Who On Television, p 270. ITV Books in association with Michael Joseph (1982)
  3. "St Helens actress Pauline Yates dies, aged 85", Liverpool Echo, 22 January 2015.
  4. Obituary, theguardian.com, 26 January 2015; accessed 29 January 2015.
  5. "Donald Churchill", heraldscotland.com, 31 October 1991; accessed 29 January 2015.
  6. https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2015/jan/26/pauline-yates
  7. https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2015/jan/26/pauline-yates
  8. Pauline Yates, aka Mrs Reggie Perrin, dies at 85, chortle.co.uk; accessed 29 January 2015.




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