Leonard White (5 November 1916 – 2 January 2016)[1] was a British actor and television producer. In the latter role he was responsible for The Avengers and Armchair Theatre.
Early life
White was born in Newhaven, East Sussex.[1][2] His father was a bookmaker and racehorse owner, and his mother ran a wholesale newsagents business.[2] He was introduced to acting by the headmaster of his school, who ran a boys' Shakespearean acting troupe.[2][3]
From acting he turned his hand to directing, which led to his career as a television producer.[2] In 1957, he completed a training course for television producer/directors run by the Canadian CBC Television.[4] In 1960, Sydney Newman, a former CBC producer who had moved to Britain to work for the ITV contractor ABC Weekend TV, invited him to join the company as an associate producer.[4] White's credits include Police Surgeon and The Avengers, which he co-created with Newman, as well as many episodes of the anthology series Out of This World, Armchair Theatre and ITV Playhouse.[4] A few years before he died he narrated summaries of lost episodes of Series 1 of The Avengers to accompany reconstructions based on tele-snaps and production stills.[5]
Memoirs
He published a memoir, Armchair Theatre: The Lost Years, in 2003, and the first volume of his autobiography, Many Moons and a Few Stars, in 2010.[3]
Death
White died in the Abundant Grace nursing home in Seaford, East Sussex on 2 January 2016.[5] He was survived by a niece and five grandchildren, [6] and one great-grandson.
References
^ ab"WHITE, Leonard". BFI Film & TV Database. Archived from the original on 5 November 2013. Retrieved 28 November 2013.