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Wilfrid Brambell was an Irish film and television actor, born in Dublin, best known for his role in the British television series Steptoe and Son. He also starred alongside The Beatles in their film A Hard Day's Night.
On leaving school he worked part-time as a reporter for the Irish Times, part-time as an actor at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin, before becoming a professional actor for the Gate Theatre. In World War II he joined the Forces entertainment organisation ENSA.
His television career began during the 1950s, when he was cast in small roles in three Nigel Kneale / Rudolph Cartier productions for BBC Television: as a drunk in The Quatermass Experiment (1953), as both an old man in a pub and later a prisoner in Nineteen Eighty-Four (1954) and as a tramp in Quatermass II (1955). All of these roles earned him a reputation for playing old men, though he was only in his forties at the time.
It was this ability to play old men that led to his casting in his most famous role, as Albert Steptoe, the irascible father in Steptoe and Son. Initially this was a one-off play on the BBC's Comedy Playhouse strand: but its success led to a full series being commissioned, which lasted throughout the 1960s and into the 1970s. There were also two feature film spin-offs, a stage show and an American re-make entitled Sanford and Son, based on the original British scripts.
The success of Steptoe and Son made Brambell a high profile figure on British television, and earned him the major role of Paul McCartney's grandfather in The Beatles' first film, A Hard Day's Night. A running joke is made throughout the film of his character being 'a very clean old man'. This is in reference to his on-screen son, Harold, in Steptoe and Son constantly referring to his father as 'you dirty old man!' (In real life too, he was nothing like his Steptoe persona, being dapper and well-spoken).
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This tension partly related to Brambell's difficult private life. As he battled with alcoholism, he frequently forgot his lines and blocking and caused other problems both on and off the set. Brambell was also a homosexual at a time when it was almost impossible for public figures to be openly gay. He was arrested and charged for 'cottaging' in the early 1960s and subsequently holidayed annually in Asia. Earlier in his life he had been married, from 1948 to 1955, but the relationship ended after his wife gave birth to the child of their lodger in 1953.
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Brambell himself died in London less than three years later, of cancer. He was seventy-two. News of his death received far less attention than that of his co-star, and his funeral only attended by a handful of people. He left £170,000 to his partner.
The Curse of Steptoe, a BBC TV docu-drama was broadcast in March 2008 on digital BBC channel BBC FOUR, featuring Phil Davis as Brambell and Jason Isaacs as Harry H Corbett.