Michael Hugh Medwin, OBE (18 July 1923 – 26 February 2020) was an English actor and film producer.[1]
Life and career
Medwin was born in London.[1] He was educated at Canford School, Dorset, and the Institute Fischer, Montreux, Switzerland.[2] He first appeared on stage in 1940.[2]
As well as his role in Shoestring, he played Colin's boss Mr Langley (of the Langley Book of Horror) in the Mel Smith comedy series Colin's Sandwich.[2] In 1961, Medwin played the lead named Michael in BBC Radio Light Programme comedy series about an advertising company called Something to Shout About.[8] In the same year he was the lead role in all 26 episodes of the comedy series Three Live Wires.
He made many film appearances, taking a leading role as Ginger Edwards in the 1953 Guy Hamilton film The Intruder, for which one critic wrote that Medwin "gives a brilliant study of a good fellow gone wrong."[9]
Others included Carry On Nurse (1959) and The Longest Day (1962), before turning to producing films.[1] Among the films he produced for Memorial Enterprises, a company he established with actor Albert Finney, are Charlie Bubbles (1967), directed by Finney, and Lindsay Anderson's If.... (1968), which won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.[10][11] He worked again with Anderson on O Lucky Man! (1973), continuing the story of the Mick Travis character from their earlier film.[6][7] Medwin has been quoted many times as saying "I knew at a young age I was going to be an actor: acting has always been in my bones". He also said that Charles Laughton and Edward G. Robinson were the two biggest influences in his life of acting, and considered that being appointed OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) in the 2005 Queens Birthday Honour's List for Services to Drama the single greatest thing that ever happened to him.[12]
As a play producer, his work includes Spring and Port Wine, Alpha Beta, A Day in the Death of Joe Egg, Forget Me Not Lane and Another Country.[3] Medwin formed with David Pugh in 1988, David Pugh Limited, a West End and Broadway theatrical production company, of which he remained chairman until his death on 26 February 2020.
^Campbell Dixon, The Daily Telegraph, 17 October 1953, quoted on the programme note for 'Projecting the Archive - The Intruder', BFI Documentation Unit, 2012.