Hattie Jacques
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Hattie Jacques (Template:IPAc-en; born Josephine Edwina Jaques; 7 February 1922 – 6 October 1980) was an English comedy actress of stage, radio and screen. She is best known as a regular of the Carry On films, where she typically played strict, no-nonsense characters, but was also a prolific television and radio performer.
Jacques started her career in 1944 with an appearance at the Players' Theatre in London, but came to national prominence through her appearances on three highly popular radio series on the BBC: with Tommy Handley on It's That Man Again; with ventriloquist Peter Brough on Educating Archie; and then with Tony Hancock on Hancock's Half Hour. After the Second World War Jacques made her cinematic debut in Green for Danger (1946), in which she had a brief, uncredited role. From 1958 to 1974 she appeared in 14 Carry On films, playing various roles including the formidable hospital matron. On television she had a long professional partnership with Eric Sykes, with whom she co-starred in his long-running series Sykes and Sykes and a.... The role endeared her to the public and the two became staples of British television.
In private, Jacques led a turbulent life. She was married to the actor John Le Mesurier from 1949 until their divorce in 1965, a separation caused by her five-year affair with another man. Jacques, who had been overweight since her teenage years, suffered ill-health soon after the separation from Le Mesurier and her weight rose to nearly Template:Convert. She died of a heart attack on 6 October 1980, at the age of 58. Her biographer, Frances Gray, considers Jacques had a "talent for larger-than-life comedy which never lost its grip on humanity", while she could also display "a broader comic mode" as a result of her "extraordinary versatility".Template:Sfn
BiographyEdit
Early life: 1922–1944Edit
Jacques was born Josephine Edwina Jaques on 7 February 1922 at 125 Sandgate High Street, Sandgate, Kent.Template:Sfn She was the youngest child of Robin Rochester Jaques, an officer in the British Army and later a flying officer in the Royal Air Force, and Mary Jaques (Template:Nee Thorn), a nurse who served in the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD).Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
The Jaques family were predominantly non-theatrical, with the exception of Mary who appeared in the small role of Harry Hathaway in the Christmas pantomime Robinson Crusoe at the Palace Theatre, Cologne, in 1920.Template:Sfn Mary enjoyed the theatre, and took Jacques to live performances from an early age. The result had a "profound effect" on the young girl, particularly a love of dance.Template:Sfn Robin Rochester Jaques, who attained the rank of flight lieutenant with the RAF, was a keen sportsman and became a semi-professional footballer. He signed to Clapton Orient and Fulham F.C., but his career was cut short when he died in a flying accident on 8 August 1923.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Upon his death, Mary, Jacques and her elder brother Robin moved from Newton in Lincolnshire to London,Template:Sfn where Jacques was sent to the Lady Margaret primary school in Chelsea. In July 1930 Jacques started her secondary schooling at the Godolphin and Latymer School in Hammersmith,<ref name="D Tel: Lewis" />Template:Sfn and also attended a local dance school, the Dean Sisters Academy, where she was a principal dancer in the academy's shows.Template:Sfn She left Godolphin and Latymer in the summer of 1939 with unremarkable grades.Template:Sfn She continued intermittently with amateur theatricals, and in May 1939 appeared with the Curtain Club in Barnes in productions of Fumed Oak and Borgia.Template:Sfn
At the outbreak of the Second World War Jacques became a nurse in the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD); she served in a mobile unit in London, attending bombed sites during the Blitz.Template:Sfn After a reorganisation in the VAD,Template:Efn Jacques sought new work and, in the summer of 1943, she became a welder in a factory in north London,Template:Sfn a job that lasted until the end of the year.Template:Sfn Around this time she became romantically involved with an American soldier, Major Charles Kearney. Jacques later claimed that the pair had been engaged and that Kearney had been killed in action,Template:Sfn although her biographer, Andy Merriman, discovered that Kearney had a wife and children in the United States when he had proposed to Jacques, and had returned to them after the war.<ref name="D Tel: Lewis" />Template:Efn
Early post-war work: 1944–1950Edit
In 1944, after being auditioned by Leonard Sachs,Template:Sfn Jacques made her professional theatrical debut as Josephine JacquesTemplate:Sfn—adding a "c" to her birth name as she did soTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn—at the Players' Theatre, London in a revue called Late Joys.Template:Sfn Almost immediately she became a regular performer with the company, appearing in music hall revues and playing the Fairy Queen in their Victorian-style pantomimes.<ref name="D Tel: Lewis" /> Her biographer, Frances Gray, described the Players' as being Jacques's drama school, as she acted, directed, wrote lyrics and "developed the persona she was to use in pantomime for years, the large, bossy, but vulnerable fairy queen".Template:Sfn It was while appearing in a Late Joys revue in June 1946 that she made her debut on television, when the show was broadcast on the BBC.Template:Sfn While appearing at the Players' in 1946 she acquired the nickname "Hattie" after performing in the minstrel show Coal Black Mammies for Dixie. A member of the backstage staff compared her "blacked up" appearance with the American actress Hattie McDaniel, known for her work in Gone with the Wind, and Jacques adopted the name for the rest of her life.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
Jacques made her big-screen debut, briefly and uncredited, in the 1946 film Green for Danger, directed by Sidney Gilliat.Template:Sfn In December that year, she joined the Young Vic Theatre Company and played Smeraldina in The King Stag. The play ran at the Lyric Theatre for a month before going on a five-month tour of the UK.Template:Sfn It received favourable reviews; the Gloucestershire Echo described the piece as "a noble play", and thought that Jacques was "very solidly in step".<ref name="Glos Echo: Stag" /> In March 1947 Alberto Cavalcanti's film Nicholas Nickleby was released, in which Jacques had her first credited big-screen role as Mrs Kenwick.<ref name="BFI: Filmog" /> While engaged at the Players' in June 1947, Jacques was introduced to the actor John Le Mesurier and the two began a relationship. Le Mesurier was married but estranged from his wife.Template:Sfn
In August 1947 Ted Kavanagh, the scriptwriter of the BBC Home Service show It's That Man Again (ITMA), visited the Players' and invited Jacques to audition for the series, which she did on 18 September, for a fee of five guineas.Template:Sfn She became so nervous during the audition that Tommy Handley, the show's star, held her hand, which she found made her more nervous.Template:Sfn Jacques joined the cast of ITMA as the greedy schoolgirl Sophie Tuckshop,Template:Sfn where she "would regale listeners with terrifying accounts of epic binges",Template:Sfn before finishing her stories with the catchphrase "But I'm alright now".Template:Sfn Jacques started her run in ITMA in September 1947, at the beginning of series eleven, which ran for 38 episodes,Template:Sfn and was paid ten guineas per episode.Template:Sfn
For much of 1948 Jacques continued to record episodes of ITMA for half the week, while spending evenings in the Players' Theatre; she also found time during the spring to record the role of Flora in No, No, Nanette for the BBCTemplate:Sfn and appear at the Whitehall Theatre in Bates Wharf with the Under Thirty Theatre Group.Template:Sfn Later that year she appeared as a singer at the Three Cripples tavern in the David Lean film Oliver Twist.<ref name="BFI: Filmog" /> In September she started recording her second series of ITMA—the show's twelfthTemplate:Sfn—before returning to the Players' for the Christmas pantomime, The Sleeping Beauty in the Wood.Template:Sfn In the latter performance, The Times commented that Jacques "must surely be among the funniest fairies" in her role as the Fairy Queen Antedota—which was one of her favourite parts.Template:Sfn<ref name="Times: Sleeping Beauty 1948" />
Tommy Handley died suddenly on 9 January 1949; the BBC decided that he was "so much the keystone and embodiment of the actual performance" of ITMA, that they cancelled the show immediately.Template:Sfn Jacques later remarked that Handley was "one of the greatest radio performers we have ever known. I learned ... so much from him".Template:Sfn Later that year Le Mesurier divorced his wife; shortly after the divorce came through, Jacques proposed to him, asking, "don't you think it's about time we got married?"Template:Sfn The couple wed on 10 November that year, at Kensington Registrar's Office.Template:Sfn<ref>General Register Office, England and Wales Civil Registration Indexes, volume 5c, p. 2328.</ref> After a week's honeymoon in Southsea,Template:Sfn she returned to the Players' where she was engaged to appear as Marrygolda in the Christmas pantomime Beauty and the Beast.Template:Sfn
Increasing fame: 1950–1958Edit
In the early months of 1950 Chance of a Lifetime was released into British cinemas; it was a film in which Jacques "really made her mark", according to her biographer, Andy Merriman.Template:Sfn Chance of a Lifetime is a social and industrial relations drama based in a plough factory whose manager cedes control to the workforce. Jacques played Alice, a welder: when she was offered her fee for 17 days filming, she replied "I've done this job welding Bailey and Pontoon Bridges and I know how hard it is. That's not enough money!" and the offer was raised accordingly.Template:Sfn The film critic Geoff Mayer considered that Jacques had "the best scene in the film with her mock seductive dance in front of an angry [Niall] MacGinnis".Template:Sfn
On 6 June 1950 Jacques was cast in the first episode of the weekly radio show Educating Archie as Agatha Dinglebody. The "Archie" of the title was the ventriloquist's dummy Archie Andrews, operated by Peter Brough. The first series ran for 29 weeks until 19 December.Template:Sfn In the show Jacques appeared alongside Max Bygraves, Julie Andrews, Beryl Reid and—in the second series—Tony Hancock.Template:Sfn It was on this programme that she first worked with Eric Sykes, who was providing scripts for the series. Sykes had been impressed with Jacques since he visited the Players' in 1948. He later wrote that she "moved about the stage with an elegance and grace as if she owned it. At the end of her act, to great applause, she leapt in the air, finishing in the splits, landing as softly as a snowflake in July".Template:Sfn After the show Sykes was introduced to Jacques backstage and thought that the meeting was "the beginning of a new flight" in his professional life.Template:Sfn At the end of the series Jacques returned to the Players' to appear in the Christmas pantomime, Ali Baba and the Thirty-nine Thieves, which she and Joan Sterndale-Bennett had adapted after they had copied it out long-hand at the British Museum.Template:Sfn The reviewer in The Times thought that Jacques was "as appealing as last year",<ref name="Times: Ali Baba" /> in her performance as Ali Baba's wife, Cogia.Template:Sfn
Throughout 1951 Jacques continued to mix work in different media, including appearing as Mrs Fezziwig in the film Scrooge starring Alastair Sim;Template:Sfn from 3 August until 25 January 1952 she appeared in a second radio series of Educating Archie,Template:Sfn as well as appearing in the related stage show, The Archie Andrews Christmas Show at the Prince of Wales Theatre from December 1952 to January 1953.Template:Sfn She again appeared in—and co-adapted—a Christmas pantomime at the Players' Theatre, Riquet with the Tuft, a French fairy tale by Charles Perrault.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn In 1952 Jacques also portrayed Mrs Jenks in John Gilling's comedy horror film Mother Riley Meets the Vampire, co-starring Arthur Lucan and Bela Lugosi.Template:Sfn
Jacques became pregnant in 1952, but worked through most of her pregnancy, appearing in the Players' revue The Bells of St Martins between August and November 1952: she slid down the table and did the splits at the endTemplate:Sfn—something The Times thought was "especially good",<ref name="Times: Bells of St Martins" /> although The Manchester Guardian considered that she was "monumental of person but surprisingly thin of voice".<ref name="Guardian: Bells of St Martins" /> Le Mesurier reported that he was "faintly relieved" when the revue came to an end because of her exertions,Template:Sfn added to which she appeared in the 27 episodes of the third series of Educating Archie between September 1952 and June 1953.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn She then directed—but did not appear in—the Players' Christmas pantomime of 1952, Babes in the Wood. In March 1953 Jacques gave birth to her first son, Robin, and returned to work after a few days to film Up to His Neck.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Later that year she provided the lead alongside Le Mesurier in the 38-minute "movie-masque" The Pleasure Garden; filmed in 1952, it won the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} at the 1954 Cannes Film Festival.<ref name="BFI:Pleasure Gdn" /> From October until April 1954 she was in series four of Educating Archie,Template:Sfn while in December 1953 she also appeared in and directed Cinderella at the Players'; The Times commented that "Miss Jacques as actress, playing a deliciously arch and absent-minded Fairy Queen, goes a long way to retrieve the failure of Miss Jacques as dramatist".<ref name="Times: Cinderella" />
In 1954 Jacques continued to work on radio. Between April and July she was in Paradise Street, a spin-off series from Educating Archie, while in June she was in Archie in Goonland, a one-off special programme that was a collaboration between Educating Archie and The Goon Show.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn As well as recording in series five of Educating Archie, she was also cast as Mrs Leathers for 18 episodes of Mrs Dale's Diary between February and April 1955.Template:Sfn She both produced and directed Twenty Minutes South, first at the Players' Theatre, and then for 105 performances at the St Martin's Theatre and finished the year by appearing in seven episodes of The Granville Melodramas on ITV between October and December.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
A second pregnancy led to the birth of a son, Kim, "who came rollicking and laughing into the world in October 1956, a trifle before his allotted time", according to Le Mesurier.Template:Sfn In June 1956 Jacques appeared in an episode of The Tony Hancock Show on ITV; this led to the role of Hancock's secretary, Griselda Pugh, in the BBC radio series Hancock's Half Hour. She appeared in 16 episodes from November 1956 to February 1957, alongside Hancock and regulars Sidney James, Bill Kerr and Kenneth Williams.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Efn Jacques's arrival on Hancock "provided an additional boost to the series", according to television historian Richard Webber.Template:Sfn She appeared again in five further episodes of Hancock's Half Hour between April and June 1957,Template:Sfn and again for a further 20 episodes between January and June 1958,Template:Sfn before a special edition on Christmas Day 1958.Template:Sfn She spent much of 1958 at the London Palladium, undertaking 380 performances of the revue Large as Life, alongside Terry-Thomas, Eric Sykes and Harry Secombe.Template:Sfn She appeared in the sketches "Concerto for Three Buffoons" with Secombe and Sykes, "The Good Old Days", and the two full company numbers that closed each of the two halves of the show.<ref name="LaL Programme"/>
The Carry On series: 1958–1963Edit
When the first Carry On film was made in 1958, Jacques formed part of the cast. This series would go on to employ the same group of actors who would collectively become known as the "Carry On team". Jacques appeared in 14 of these films over a 15-year periodTemplate:Sfn and like many of her Carry On co-stars, she quickly became typecast. A recurring role for Jacques was a no-nonsense matron which she played in five of the films – Carry On Nurse,Template:Sfn Carry On Doctor,Template:Sfn Carry On Again Doctor,Template:Sfn Carry On CampingTemplate:Sfn and Carry On Matron.Template:Sfn She became known by the team as a "Mother Hen" figure,Template:Sfn and was a close friend to many of her co-stars, including Kenneth Williams and Joan Sims, whom Jacques provided with a great deal of advice and practical help. In return, Sims regarded Jacques as her "greatest friend", and as "both a sister and a mother to me".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Jacques would frequently invite Sims, Williams and Hawtrey to her house for Christmas dinner.Template:Sfn
Jacques began her association with the Carry On series in March 1958Template:Sfn with the first film in the series, Carry On Sergeant.Template:Sfn She played the small role of Captain Clark, a "battleaxe medical officer"Template:Sfn who fails to believe the fabricated ailments of the hypochondriac Private Horace Strong, played by Kenneth Connor.Template:Sfn The following year she played "Matron" for the first timeTemplate:Sfn in Carry On Nurse, a film which broke that year's box office records, selling more than 10 million tickets in British cinemas.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Although Jacques's role was still relatively small, she appeared in perhaps the best known scene of the film, in which she retrieves a daffodil from Wilfrid Hyde-White's buttocks, put there by a mischievous nurse as revenge for his constant harassment of the staff.Template:Sfn So popular was Jacques's scene, that the producers imported two million plastic daffodils from Japan which were then used to promote the comedy.Template:Sfn Other characterisations followed, including the formidable maths mistress Grace Short in Carry On Teacher (1959)Template:Sfn and the friendly Police Sergeant Laura Moon in Carry On Constable (1960).Template:Sfn Of the former film, Derek Prouse of The Sunday Times thought that Jacques "triumph[ed] over material so remorselessly juvenile that one is battered into a kind of fascinated admiration".<ref name="SX: Teacher" />
On 29 January 1960 Jacques appeared in the first episode of the BBC comedy series Sykes and a..., co-starring with Eric Sykes as a pair of twins; Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler were also regulars in the cast.Template:Efn Jacques's character—Hattie (Hat) Sykes—was "a middle-class, slightly pretentious lady struggling to keep her dignity as the men made fools of themselves".Template:Sfn Sykes and a... went on to run for sixty episodes over nine series during the next five years.Template:Sfn According to the media historian Graham McCann, the show was "one of the best-natured, least pretentious and most successful British sitcoms of the 1960s".Template:Sfn Because of the success, Jacques and Sykes "became embedded in the public mind as a priceless comic partnership";<ref name="BFI: Sykes and a" /> to capitalise, they released a comedy album entitled Eric and Hattie and Things!!!, but it failed to chart.Template:Sfn In September 1960 she starred in her second television series, Our House, alongside Charles Hawtrey, Bernard Bresslaw and Joan Sims; Jacques played the librarian Georgina Ruddy, who was forced to keep quiet at work and so made up for it by being extremely noisy at home.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Later that year she played minor roles in two films: Watch Your Stern, with many of the Carry On regulars, and School for Scoundrels, opposite Ian Carmichael. After these her screen time increased with the part of Nanette Parry in Make Mine Mink in which she co-starred with Terry-Thomas and Athene Seyler. She later described this as her favourite film.Template:Sfn
In October 1961 Jacques appeared on Desert Island Discs, and said that she would be too lonely on such a quiet island for someone of her temperament.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn By this time Carry On had become a leading film franchise, with the author Robert Ross describing it as a "phenomenon".Template:Sfn That year's film, Carry On Regardless, was the fifth in the series; Jacques received a fee of £100 for the small role of a disgruntled hospital sister, who appeared briefly on screen alongside the English character actor Kynaston Reeves. Jacques was initially intended for a major part in the film, but she was unable to commit to a longer role because of ill health.Template:Sfn She appeared in her sixth Carry On, Carry On Cabby, in 1963, as "Peggy Hawkins", the emotionally neglected wife of taxi-firm boss "Charlie", played by Sid James.Template:Sfn Jacques later named the film as her favourite of the series, as she was allowed to drop her "battleaxe" persona and play the romantic lead opposite James.Template:Sfn
Private turmoil; new acting ventures: 1963–1967Edit
Jacques's private life became complicated in 1963. The previous year she had met John Schofield, a cockney used-car dealer, who chauffeured her to a Leukaemia Research Fund event. The couple became romantically involved after the driver gave her the attention and support that Le Mesurier did not.Template:Sfn When Jacques decided to move Schofield into the family home, Le Mesurier moved into a separate room.Template:Sfn He later commented about this period: "I could have walked out, but, whatever my feelings, I loved Hattie and the children and I was certain—I had to be certain—that we could repair the damage".Template:Sfn During these upheavals in her personal life, Jacques was surprised to be the subject of This Is Your Life in February 1963, when she was approached by Eamonn Andrews during rehearsal for the sixth series of Sykes and a.... Although Le Mesurier did not mention the marital situation when being questioned by Andrews, he made the comment that for Jacques "the home comes first", which Merriman considered had been said "rather pointedly".Template:Sfn Despite the matrimonial upsets, Jacques and Le Mesurier both appeared in the 1963 Tony Hancock film, The Punch and Judy Man.Template:Sfn In 1964 Le Mesurier moved out of the marital home,Template:Sfn made a decision to protect Jacques from any negative publicity, and allowed her to bring a divorce suit on grounds of his own infidelity. This ensured that the press blamed him for the break-up, casting Jacques as the victim in the matter.Template:Sfn
In 1964, as well as recording four episodes of the radio show Housewives' Choice, Jacques starred in her own television series, Miss Adventure, as the private investigator Stacey Smith. Although Jacques wanted the series to be full of suspense, the programmes were more comedic and she was disappointed with the results.Template:Sfn In August that year she appeared as Madame Arcati in an ITV production of Blithe Spirit. The play's writer, Noël Coward, felt that "finally someone had delivered a performance that wasn't overshadowed by Margaret Rutherford", who had originated the stage role in 1940 and played it in the 1945 film version.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
Jacques went to Rome in 1966 to film The Bobo with Peter Sellers; before this she went on a strict diet and lost five stone (32 kg), although she was disappointed that so few people noticed. She enjoyed the filming experience, calling it "one of the loveliest things I've worked on".Template:Sfn While she was in Italy, Schofield came out to stay, started an affair with an Italian heiress and broke off his relationship with Jacques; deeply upset, Jacques, who had had a weight problem since her teens,Template:Sfn began eating comfort food and her weight increased to nearly Template:Convert.<ref name="D Tel: Lewis" />
Return to Carry On: 1967–1974Edit
In the summer of 1967 the Carry On producer Peter Rogers assembled the cast for the 15th film of the series, Carry On Doctor. Rogers initially chose Joan Sims to play the role of the hospital matron but she declined the part, stating that Jacques's performance of the role in Carry On Nurse could not be bettered.Template:Sfn As such, Rogers cast Jacques as Matron, with Sims accepting a smaller role as the timid assistant of the film's lead character Francis Bigger, played by Frankie Howerd.Template:Sfn Jacques's screen time was increased from Carry On Nurse, as the producers considered her part to be an extension of the earlier role.Template:Sfn Carry On Doctor was released in December of that year, to much success.Template:Sfn
Jacques started 1968 by appearing with Spike Milligan and Frank Thornton in thirteen episodes of the sketch show The World of Beachcomber, based on the Beachcomber column in the Daily Express newspaper and broadcast on the BBC from January to April.Template:Sfn Shortly after the series finished, she appeared alongside Frankie Howerd in his sketch show, Howerd's Hour, on ITV.Template:Sfn She continued her busy schedule with appearances in six films for 1969,Template:Efn including another with Sellers, The Magic Christian. Here she portrayed a character named Ginger, who was described as a "grotesque figure", with an "insatiable lust for bestsellers on the atrocities of World War Two".Template:Sfn She also appeared on television alongside Harry Secombe and Roy Castle in Pickwick, which was based on the musical of the same name,<ref name="BFI: Pickwick" /> and in Carry On Christmas, broadcast on Christmas Eve.Template:Sfn Although 1969 had been busy, 1970 was relatively quiet in terms of her professional output: apart from an episode of Catweazle,Template:Sfn she appeared alongside Willoughby Goddard in a six-episode series of Charley's Grants.Template:Sfn She spent May and June filming Carry On Loving, in which she played Sophie Bliss, released in September that year.Template:Sfn Another Carry On film followed in 1971, Carry On at Your Convenience, where she played Beattie Plummer, the housebound wife of Sid Plummer, played by Sid James.Template:Sfn In the same year she completed another series with Sykes, Sykes and a Big, Big Show, a music and sketch programme which had six episodes, broadcast between February and April.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
Two further Carry On films followed for Jacques in 1972: Carry On Matron, for which she was engaged in the title role,Template:Sfn and Carry On Abroad, as Floella, the fiery Spanish cook at a half-finished hotel. As well as the film being Charles Hawtrey's last, it also marked a reduction in Jacques's screen time; she spent only one week filming her scenes. During post-production, the film's insurers became concerned about Jacques's deteriorating health. In a letter to the series producer Peter Rogers, they expressed their reluctance to insure her on set in any future film.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
During the course of 1972 Jacques co-starred in the first series of Sykes, in which she played Hattie Sykes, "the wide-eyed, less-knowing but remarkably patient sister-cum-mother-figure";Template:SfnTemplate:Efn at its height, Sykes had 17 million viewers.Template:Sfn In February 1972 Jacques was at home with her son Robin to watch Le Mesurier win the British Academy of Film and Television Arts "Best Television Actor" award for his portrayal of a "boozy British aristocrat ... who became a spy for the Soviets"Template:Sfn<ref name="BFI: 72 awards" /> in Dennis Potter's television play Traitor.<ref name="traitor" /> Jacques cried when her ex-husband won the award, and divulged to her son that she "wasn't crying out of professional resentment or even envy about Joan Le Mesurier ... but from an unhappiness that, through her own actions, she lost John or there was now no-one with whom to spend her life".Template:Sfn
After Carry On: 1974–1980Edit
Final appearancesEdit
In 1974 Jacques's sons were arrested for possession of cannabis, and her house was searched by police. In the same week that the two boys appeared in court, she received official notification of the intention to appoint her as an OBE. In order to protect her sons from further press intrusion she declined the honour.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Later that year, while filming the third series of Sykes, she suffered a cancer scare and lost a considerable amount of weight. Despite this she refused to interrupt the busy production schedule; when filming was completed on 5 December she underwent surgery at Charing Cross Hospital for what proved to be benign tumours on her kidneys.Template:Sfn
In 1976 Jacques appeared in a promotional advertising film for British Rail, which pitted her against racing driver Jackie Stewart in a race to London.<ref name="SC: race" /> From 1976 onwards Sykes and Jacques appeared together in the stage play A Hatful of Sykes, both in the UK and internationally.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn During the course of the different tours relations between the two stars became increasingly strained and Sykes altered the act several times to ensure he received more acclaim than Jacques.<ref name="D Exp: heart breaking" /> While appearing in Blackpool in 1977 Jacques's health became problematic as she suffered from arthritis and ulcerated legs, which required daily dressing. Because a dressing room was arranged that avoided her needing to use stairs, Sykes accused her of receiving special treatment.Template:Sfn When the show moved to Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), Sykes "began to behave rather strangely ... and he even accused Hattie ... of not being able to deliver a proper feed line".Template:Sfn By the time the show appeared in Brighton in 1979 the relationship between the two "was rapidly deteriorating", and, although the pair praised each other in public, Jacques felt hurt by Sykes's treatment of her.Template:Sfn Despite the differences, the pair filmed the seventh series of Sykes in 1979,Template:Sfn and—in April 1980—the television film Rhubarb Rhubarb; although her part was a small one, she looked "a little unsteady on her feet", according to Merriman.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
Death and tributesEdit
In May 1980 Jacques's doctor advised her against travelling to Greece on holiday as planned, so she visited Ireland instead. During the return ferry crossing she told her friend Bruce Copp that "You know I'm not going to live long".Template:Sfn Her health remained poor, and insurance companies refused to insure her for film work. By October her weight had risen again; she had problems breathing and was again admitted to Charing Cross Hospital. She took a weekend break from hospital and returned home to Eardley Crescent, where on 6 October she died from a heart attack in her sleep at the age of 58; she was also suffering from kidney failure.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Jacques's funeral took place at Putney Vale Crematorium, where her ashes were scattered. Her sons refused to allow Sykes entry to the funeral because they resented the way he had treated her during the stage show;<ref name="D Exp: heart breaking" /> Sykes was upset by the exclusion and failed to understand why he had been banned. The other notable absentee from the funeral was Joan Sims, who "stayed in her home and spent the day drinking, reading old letters from Hattie and wallowing in self pity", according to Merriman.Template:Sfn
Kenneth Williams was deeply saddened by the loss of his friend, and wrote that "all the chums have died ... one is left marooned on the shore ... the tide is receding and leaving some incongruous wrecks exposed ... I fear I am one of them".Template:Sfn John Le Mesurier described Jacques as "a remarkable lady ... [who] had an aura of love and kindness about her",<ref name="D Exp: Laughter & Tears" /> while her obituary in The Times observed that "she will be remembered with affection by all who saw her".<ref name="Times: Obit" /> A month after the funeral, a memorial service was held at St Paul's, Covent Garden, otherwise known as the Actors' Church,<ref name="D Exp: Laughter & Tears" /> which was described by Le Mesurier as a "joyous occasion".Template:Sfn
A memorial plaque to Jacques is situated in St Paul's, Covent Garden.Template:Sfn In November 1995 a blue plaque was unveiled by Eric Sykes and Clive Dunn—a colleague from her Players' Theatre days—at her former house: 67 Eardley Crescent, Earls Court, London.<ref name="PA: Blue plaque" /> In 2002 plaques were unveiled for Jacques, Sid James and Tony Hancock at BBC Broadcasting House in London.<ref name="D. Post: Jacques plaque" />
In 2011 Jacques and Le Mesurier's marriage was the subject of a BBC Four biographical film called Hattie, which focused on Jacques's affair with John Schofield.<ref name="BBC: Hattie"/> She was played by Ruth Jones, who Robin Le Mesurier thought "had captured my mother perfectly".<ref name="Mail: Robin: Secret lover" /> Jones was thrilled at playing Jacques whom she considered to be her comedy heroine, describing her as an "incredibly talented and fascinating woman both on and off screen".<ref name="W Mail: Jones" /><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
ReputationEdit
The writer Susan Leckey described Jacques as "one of the best-loved British comedy stars",Template:Sfn while Jacques's obituarist in The Times observed that "she was invariably successful" at making people "laugh with, rather than at you".<ref name="Times: Obit" /> Peter Chapman of The Independent stated that Jacques was "blessed with remarkable grace, delicacy and warmth, giving her an almost unique comic appeal".<ref name="Indie: Heroes" /> Sunday Life said that for decades she was "Britain's favourite silly, sexually frustrated, fat woman".<ref name="S Life: man-eater" /> Nina Wadia of Goodness Gracious Me considers Jacques along with Joan Sims and Barbara Windsor to have "paved the way for younger comediennes in Britain today", remarking that "if it had not been for women like Hattie and Barbara, there is no way that younger actresses would have any role model, or probably the ambition to do what they do".<ref name="SM: last laugh" />
Jacques's biographer, Frances Gray, highlighted two aspects of the actress's abilities; in her appearances in the sequence of post-war Dickens adaptations (Nicholas Nickleby, Oliver Twist, Scrooge and Pickwick) Jacques "reflected her talent for larger-than-life comedy which never lost its grip on humanity", while in other films, such as Mother Riley Meets the Vampire, she displayed "a broader comic mode". In her later career Jacques showed "a comic talent of extraordinary versatility. In Sykes her performance had to be a foil for the main character; in the Carry Ons she blossomed".Template:Sfn As a singer she was also praised; Jonathan Cecil of The Spectator said that her "bell-tone voice with its cut-crystal diction—perfect for radio—had an edge of pain which suggested a greater depth to her talents than she was generally allowed to express".<ref name="Spec: BiB" /> The actor Neville Phillips, who toured with Jacques, described her as having a "pretty voice" and able to "take an innocuous old Victorian or Edwardian ballad and with just a few intonations and expressions give it another meaning entirely".Template:Sfn
Gray observes that "Jacques is enduringly associated with the role of hospital matron"Template:Sfn and her portrayal of the character in five films had a lasting impact on both her legacy and on the role and view of Matrons in the National Health Service. An article in The Guardian by Mark Lawson mixed fiction with reality when he wrote that "standards of hygiene have slipped since Hattie Jacques ran NHS wards".<ref name="Guard: Lawson" /> According to The Scotsman, the 2003 Labour Party Conference "applauded deliriously because the government has revived Hattie Jacques", in relation to a change in government policy.<ref name="Scots: LP conf" /> After complaints about the NHS in 2008, the Western Morning News suggested the government should "clone a Hattie Jacques-type matron to run a tight ship everywhere".<ref name="WMN: streamline" /> NHS nurses have complained about the stereotype: in August 2013 the Nursing Times quoted one matron, who protested that they were "not like Hattie Jacques anymore".<ref name="NT: Matron campaign" />
Alan Simpson, the co-writer of Hancock, enjoyed writing for Jacques, and thought that she was "almost like a fella in terms of playing comedy; you didn't write for her thinking she's a woman so we've got to write the feminine point of view. That made it easier for us".Template:Sfn Neville Phillips thought she was a "complete revelation", adding "although she was a large lady (very large, in fact), her movements were dainty, light and graceful, and she had a way of playing comedy that put me in mind of the great Beatrice Lillie ... a subtle, sophisticated actress".Template:Sfn Her friend Bob Monkhouse thought that her career was overshadowed by her size: "She was such a great comedienne ... everyone wanted her but the movers and shakers of entertainment didn't perceive her as anything other than a fat lady".<ref name="D Exp: heart breaking" /> Garth Pearce, writing in the Daily Express, noted that "she always chose to play women in funny situations, rather than refer directly to her weight. She concentrated on the script and its interpretation instead of winning easy laughs by playing 'the fattie'."<ref name="D Exp: Thousand laughs" /> The approach of writers differed in how they dealt with the characters they asked Jacques to portray. Morwenna Banks and Amanda Swift consider Jacques to have been "unimaginatively cast as the 'fat person'" in ITMA,Template:Sfn while in Sykes, her weight was rarely referred to—and Jacques said that Sykes "hardly ever made jokes about my size which was a refreshing change".Template:Sfn Gray considers that "although often cast in broad comedy, she never played it broadly, but with an elegance of voice and body that belied all the clichés about women and weight".Template:Sfn
CreditsEdit
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External linksEdit
- Hattie Jacques at the British Film InstituteTemplate:Better source needed
- Template:Screenonline name
- [https://www.imdb.com/{{#if:
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- Hattie Jacques on Pathé News
- Hattie Jacques plaques recorded on openplaques.org