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When he reflected on his childhood he said it had been : "Peculiar in some ways because I never knew my father because he died when I was one year old, in an accident on a rugby pitch. He got kicked in the chest and died of pneumonia. So I never knew him unfortunately".
"During the War, Nottingham didn't have that many bombing raids. We used to go under the stairs and I was slapped round the ear twice" (Michael was five at the time) because they'd got the radio and this voice came on and there was something about his voice that fascinated me. It was Winston Churchill of course and I became a great fan of his and he wasn't a saint, and I realised why they were listening because you could hear the bombs going off and Messerschmitts flying over the house".(link) (link) He said he could tell the difference between a Messerschmitt and a Dornier just by listening to the engine noise.
At school Michael said : "By the time I was seventeen I decided Catholicism wasn't for me or any kind of organised religion". He left school with one 'A' level in Philosophy at the age of seventeen in 1952 and it was around this time that he recalled seeing the comic Harry Secombe at the Nottingham theatre, who sang 'Nessun Dorma' and said that each word translated into English meant "None shall kip".(link).
The following year he was enrolled in the Army for his two years National Service. It was here that he became involved in amateur theatre and directed a production of 'The Happiest Days of Your Life' which, written by John Dighton, was shown at the cinema in 1950.(link) It depicted the complications that ensue when because of a bureaucratic error a girls' school was made to share premises with a boys' school.When Michael was demobbed two years later he became a trainee accountant with the Coal Board. At the same time he said : "I got into an amateur theatre company when I was about twenty-one, called the 'Co-operative Art Centre' . It was a marvelous company. Ken Loach was a contemporary of mine and was a marvelous actor and he was about nineteen at the time and he wasn't left-wing at all in those days". Michael himself said : "I nearly joined the Communist Party because they were all very left-wing teachers, We used to sing 'The Red Flag' and 'Cwm Rhondda' and 'Guide Me O Thou Great Redeemer'".Now, before he took his accountancy final exams, he left his job at the Coal Board and briefly worked in the Nottingham Fish Market where the bad language he learned was a revelation to him. At the age of twenty-three in 1958, he won a scholarship to the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London, where he now had the distinction of being five years older than everyone else on his course, but doubtless let his maturity play for him amongst his fellow students.
He now got his first taste of professional acting in reparatory theatre and said : "In the summer holidays we did ten weeks in Bangor in Northern Ireland. I played Danny in 'Night Must Fall' and loads of farces and comedies". After his graduation in 1961 he made his debut at the Salisbury Playhouse where he played Corporal Green in 'The Amorous Prawn', before joining the Bristol Old Vic for two seasons in 1963. It was here that he was paid £14 a week when he joined and was up to £18/19 when he left.
In 1965 his next important professional move was to start a five year tenure with the Royal Shakespeare Company, where he started on less money than he was paid in Bristol, but was rubbing shoulders with the likes of Ian Holm, Eric Porter and Peggy Ashcroft. He started at the Aldwych Theatre with 'Henry V' directed by Trevor Nunn with Ian Holm as the King.
In 1967, at the age of thirty-two, he made a trip to Broadway to play in Harold Pinter's 'The Homecoming', directed by Peter Hall, in which he replaced Michael Bryant as Teddy, the brother who returns to the US and leaves his wife in London to “take care of” his father and siblings. (link)
In 1968 he made his first step into film when he played Demetrius in Shakespeare's play 'A Midsummer Night's Dream', directed by Peter Hall. Disappointingly, it was generally poorly received by critics, with Penelope Houston, reviewing the film for The Spectator, writing : 'Mr Hall's lovers caper in their mini-skirts and flowered Beatle blouses around a stately home so sparsely furnished that you feel the removal men are either assembling or dismantling. Make-up seems to present unlikely difficulties: Peaseblossom, Mustard Seed and their confreres appear startlingly haggard, as though late nights ministering to Titania were taking their toll'. (link) In a conversation with fellow actor, David Warner many years later, the two of them reflected that, of the film cast, they were the only two who had not received an honor.
In 1969 ITV beckoned and Michael joined the cast of the 'The Power Game' for thirteen episodes as the character Lincoln Dowling. It was dominated by the character and actions of John Wilder a captain of industry and on the board of a merchant bank, played by the formidable Patrick Wymark and was a massive ratings success with the viewers.(link) A mark of his rising success can be seen in the fact that Roy Dotrice and Alan Howard had unsuccessfully auditioned for his part. It is interesting to note that both Michael and Patrick had a Catholic upbringing, had been unruly pupils at school and were mature students at drama school.
In the following year Michael's star on television was in ascendancy when he starred in BBC TV's Wednesday Play as 'Mad Jack', the true story of Second Lieutenant Siegried Sassoon, who, on convalescence leave during the First World War he began a strident protest about the progress of the War. In the process he courted controversy in the face of objections from his superior officers and the advice of his friends. Henry Raynor, The Times's Television Critic, found his performance : 'Attractive for gentleness and self-mockery". It was this and Michael giving measured readings of Sassoon's often haunting poetry - in conjunction with Tom Clarke's sensitive script, that so impressed the judges of 1971's International Television Festival in Monte Carlo, who awarded the play their major prize. (link) (link)
It was also in 1970 that Michael starred as Charles Dickens in the 'The Hero of My Life' for Thames Television. (link) In addition, he played Beethoven in a BBC TV series of biographies (link) However, it was playing the character of Henry Ireton, Oliver Cromwell's son-in-law that he came to international recognition in Colombia's £9 million film starring Richard Harris as Oliver Cromwell and Alec Guinness as King Charles.(link)
Finally, in 1971, at the age of thirty-six, Michael occupied centre stage in 'Nicholas and Alexandra', playing Tsar Nicholas II of Russia during his deposition in the 1917 Revolution. Michael said of his role : "I based it on King Hussein of Jordan as that kind of character who didn't want to be in that situation. I didn't think he wanted to be Tsar, but had inherited all the barbarism of his predecessors. He went along with it because of the whole family background of the ruthlessness of the Russian regime at that time. He was a sort of country gentleman in some ways. He loved his family. He was weak leader. He could have organised something better if his son hadn't had hemophilia. Who knows ? A lot of decisions were made because the son wasn't going to live that long". (link)
He also acknowledged that the film, professionally, did him no good and said : "Nobody made their name from that film at all. I think I could have had success later on if I hadn't been playing such a weak man. I had to play and redubbed bits after because it made the part even weaker". In 1973 he thought that his next film, 'Bequest to the Nation' in which Peter Finch played Admiral Nelson and he played Captain Hardy would improve his standing but it was not a success at the box office. (link)
However, in the same year and back on television, he played Mr Rochester in the five-part BBC television drama serial. Michael would have been pleased that, although considered as not without fault by the critics, it was considered by many to be the best adaptation of Charlotte Brontë’s romantic classic, true to the original story, with dialogue taken directly from the novel and with convincing chemistry between Michael and Sorcha Cusack.(link) (link)
Surprisingly, of himself, Michael said : “Few people realise that I’m a natural clown with an irrepressible sense of the ridiculous. I love comedy but for some reason I always seem to be cast as the tortured hero”. He left evidence of this throughout his career : He once pretended to be the theatre director Trevor Nunn and offered his services to Bolton Wanderers Football Club as a masseur; wrote suggestive love letters to Dame Thora Hird in the guise of a randy retired colonel; received a long reply after he wrote to London Zoo posing as a pensioner who owned a parrot that he claimed had once had a vocabulary of 1,500 words but had developed a 'seizure of the tongue'; sent an 'official letter' from the Royal Shakespeare Company to the Speaker of the House of Commons, offering to perform Henry V to MPs after which the Speaker duly contacted the RSC, which was forced to put on a hastily-assembled show in Westminster as a result.
In 1978, with Malcolm McDowell he played in a BBC TV adaptation of Dornford Yates’ 'She Fell Among Thieves' by Tom Sharpe.(link) However, it was perhaps in 1979 that he stepped into his greatest television role as Peter Guillam, in John Le Carré’s 'Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy'. He was totally credible as the poker-faced, hard-bitten but loyal MI6 operative who George Smiley, played by Alec Guinness, relied on to help him uncover a double agent at the heart of British intelligence. At the time of its release in the United States in 1980, Washington Post, television critic Tom Shales called the series : "Intricate and fascinating," and described its episodes as : "Six scintillating and delectable hours".(link)
In the 1980s it was clear that the nature of Michael's contribution to film and television was beginning to change and he was also vying with Robert Powell and Ray Brooks for the title of 'King of the Advert Voiceover'. Few television commercial breaks seemed complete without Michael promoting anything from teabags to cleaning products, all with his signature Shakespearean diction.(link)
1981 he narrated the film 'From a Far Country', the biography of Pope John Paul II which started in 1926 when the boy Karol Wojtyla was celebrating Christmas with his father in Poland and followed the other important stations of the life of the Pope, during and after the Second World War up to his final visit to Poland in 1979 to say "good bye". (link)
In the 1980s he turned in stylish and well-received leading performances in Noël Coward’s 'Private Lives', at the Duchess, opposite Maria Aitken in 1980. The following year, in a West End revival of 'The Sound of Music' he played Captain von Trapp with Petula Clark and reviewers predicted that women would be “swooning in the aisles” after his more than passable rendition of Edelweiss.
In 1984 he played in one episode, 'The best Chess Player in the World', of Roald Dahl's ITV series Tales of the Unexpected'. His character 'GB' lived his life according to logic and he told the story of how he became the best in the world.(link)
In 1986 Michael was viewed by millions when he came to their tv screens in the popular, long running 'Doctor Who' series, playing Valeyard, an evil version of the Doctor, in 'The Trial of a Time Lord', comprising the whole of Season 23. In this the High Council of the Time Lords appointed the Valeyard as prosecutor at the Sixth Doctor's trial, hoping to have him executed and thereby removing the sole witness to their near destruction of life on Earth. (link) Interviewed in 2023 Michael said that at the time : "I keep saying to Doctor Who supporters :"I'm not touting for work, but I am one of the Doctors. I am the evil side of the Colin Baker character. I am one of the Doctors and I'm very proud of that".
On television, he was a favourite side-kick of David Jason in 13 episodes of David Nobbs’s 'A Bit of a Do' in 1989, as the solicitor, Neville Badger, in a series of social functions and parties across West Yorkshire. (link) Also in four episodes of 'The Darling Buds of May' in 1992 as Ernest Bristow, the brewery owner.
He appeared again with Jason in the 1996 episode of 'Only Fools and Horses' in which Del Boy and Rodney become millionaires and which reached a television audience of nearly 25 million.(link) In 2009 he played in another collaboration with David Jason in the television movie 'Albert’s Memorial' , a touching tale of old war-time buddies making sure one of them is buried on the German soil where first they met. (link)
When it came to his political beliefs in his twilight years, he had continued to adhere to socialism because, as he said : "I thought humanitarianism was part of socialism" but "I've got very disillusioned. A disillusioned socialist because socialism doesn't exit any more, I don't think".
In 2007, playing a Catholic cleric alongside David Suchet in Roger Crane’s 'The Last Confession' at the Haymarket Theatre, a play about financial and political infighting at the Vatican, he wasn't afraid to admit that he would have preferred something more slapstick and said :
“It sounds naive, but basically I love to entertain people. I love to make them laugh. I love to make them cry. And thirdly I like to make them think, but most of all just to entertain”.
Michael sings 'Edelweiss' (link)
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Caroline : 'He was one of my favourite actors. I had forgotten that he played Tsar Nicholas II, I used to watch it and now those memories have come flooding back. Its a lovely tribute, thank you for sharing'.
Michael Jayston Site : 'This was a wonderful overview of Michael Jayston’s life and career'.
Paul Deaux : 'Thank you for the link. Excellent piece of writing on your part. I saw him in Nicholas and Alexandria in my junior year of college in 1971. Any time I think of the Tsar, his face is what I see'.
Badger : 'Thank you so much; it was a fascinating insight & taught me a good few things'.
Gina Headden : 'Thanks for this. I knew some of it but by no means all. Michael Jayston was so kind to me the few times we communicated/met, and he was the best Rochester I’ve seen on TV (or film) yet. I also saw him on stage when he toured as Martin Dysart in Equus. He was excellent in that'.
Supplier Strategies : 'Thank you. A very thorough account of Mr Jayston's life'.
Jack Alexander Nisbett : 'That's a beautiful tribute. Thank you for sharing and thank you for writing such a wonderful piece'.
Graham Barnfield : 'Thanks. A good read'.
He was a great actor and superb as Peter Guillam.
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