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The Likely Lads Actor Rodney Bewes Dies
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http:// www.imd b.com/n ame/nm0 092639/
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A Classic Likely Lads when they were trying to avoid hearing the score of the football match.
https:/ /footba llpink. net/201 7/07/22 /footba ll-on-t he-smal l-scree n-part- 1-whate ver-hap pened-t o-the-l ikely-l ads-no- hiding- place/
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I understand they'll both die, Ric.ror. Both series of the Likely Lads are occasionally broadcast and available on DVD, so Bolam's block on repeats didn't last. He was annoyed, I believe, that Bewes told a reporter that Bolam's wife was pregnant. I can understand that, though refusing ever to speak to him again is feuding above and beyond the call of duty.
I also loved the Likely Lads (particularly the 60s black and white one rather than the 70s Whatever Happened to...series). I also liked him as Mr Rodney in Basil Brush. The chemistry with James Bolam was a joy to watch. Unlike Bolam, though, he didn't really play many other major roles- I am not sure why, but maybe he didn't like the limelight
I think NJ meant that Rodney liked to perform on stage.
//Bewes remained active as a stage performer in the 1990s and later with one-man versions of Three Men in a Boat and Diary of a Nobody, both of which shows he toured extensively in the UK. At the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 1997 he won the Stella Artois Prize for his one-man production of Three Men in a Boat. In July 2013, he was The Marshal (Philippe Pétain) in the Southwark Playhouse production of Peter Ustinov's The Moment of Truth.//
//Bewes remained active as a stage performer in the 1990s and later with one-man versions of Three Men in a Boat and Diary of a Nobody, both of which shows he toured extensively in the UK. At the Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 1997 he won the Stella Artois Prize for his one-man production of Three Men in a Boat. In July 2013, he was The Marshal (Philippe Pétain) in the Southwark Playhouse production of Peter Ustinov's The Moment of Truth.//
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