Kenneth MacDonald

Actor

Popular As Kenneth MacDonald (English actor)

Birthday November 20, 1950

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Manchester, England

DEATH DATE 2001-8-6, Hawaii, U.S. (50 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#36153 Most Popular

1950

Kenneth MacDonald (20 November 1950 – 6 August 2001) was an English actor who was best known for the parts of Gunner Nobby Clark in It Ain't Half Hot Mum and Mike Fisher in Only Fools and Horses.

MacDonald was born in Manchester, the son of Scottish heavyweight wrestling champion Bill MacDonald, who died of kidney failure at the age of 43 when Kenneth was 13.

He attended Xaverian College preparatory school in Fallowfield, Manchester, St Anthony's preparatory school in Stony Stratford, Buckinghamshire, and went on to St Bernardine's Franciscan College in Buckingham, where he took part in school productions, notably The Business of Good Government, in which he played Herod, and Arsenic and Old Lace.

Ken left school at eighteen to help support his mother Emily.

He took a job at a Kellogg's cornflakes factory.

During night shifts he would perform Hamlet and other Shakespeare plays that he had learned at school, earning the nickname "Hamlet".

1970

MacDonald also appeared in the Granada Television Rentals television adverts of the late 1970s and made a cameo appearance in one episode of Goodnight Sweetheart, playing Mr Jones alongside his Only Fools and Horses co-star Nicholas Lyndhurst.

He also appeared in an episode of The Thin Blue Line as a club owner.

1972

MacDonald's first television role was Benny in Softly, Softly in 1972.

1974

MacDonald featured regularly in the BBC sitcom It Ain't Half Hot Mum, running from 3 January 1974 to 3 September 1981.

It was set in the jungles of Burma and India during the Second World War and MacDonald played the character Gunner "Nobby" Clark, a member of a Royal Artillery Concert Party.

1975

In 1975, he made a guest appearance in series 2, episode 1, of Last of the Summer Wine.

Forked Lightning.

He played a mechanic.

A year later he moved to London and joined the National Youth Theatre.

1976

MacDonald met his wife Sheila while he was appearing in panto in Crewe in 1976.

She was the costume designer at the time.

1977

He appeared in a 1977 episode of Dad's Army.

1983

When he landed the part of pub landlord Mike in the Only Fools and Horses episode "Who's a Pretty Boy?" in 1983, it was initially believed to be a one-episode role.

1986

They had two children: William (born 1986) and Charlotte (born 1989).

He also had a minor part as Jacko's brother in the BBC sitcom Brush Strokes which ran from 1986 to 1991, in which he was married to the less than faithful Gloria.

1992

In 1992, MacDonald had a brief appearance on the Channel 4 soap Brookside as George Webb, a racist owner of a petrol station.

His character Mike in Only Fools and Horses was not killed off.

1996

However, the character became a series regular, appearing until Christmas 1996.

Also in 1996 he played Inspector Jennings in Heartbeat series 6 episode 16.

In 1996 he played DI McCluskey in Crocodile Shoes II alongside Jimmy Nail.

2001

When the programme was revived for three episodes from 2001, after MacDonald's death, Mike was imprisoned for trying to embezzle money from the brewery.

MacDonald died suddenly on 6 August 2001 at the age of 50 after suffering a massive heart attack while on holiday with his family in Hawaii.

Seven days after his death, MacDonald's guest appearance on BBC television drama Merseybeat was aired, with the episode dedicated to his memory.

He was buried on 16 August 2001 in Section Z, Grave 140 at Teddington Cemetery, Teddington, in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames.