Michael Knowles (actor)

Actor

Birthday April 26, 1937

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Spondon, Derby, Derbyshire, England

Age 86 years old

#45443 Most Popular

1937

Michael Sydney Knowles (born 26 April 1937) is a British actor and scriptwriter who is best known for his roles in BBC sitcoms written by Jimmy Perry and David Croft.

He often starred alongside Donald Hewlett with whom he first appeared in It Ain't Half Hot Mum.

They later appeared together in Rogue's Rock, Come Back Mrs. Noah and You Rang, M'Lord?

In Knowles' writing career, he co-adapted (with Harold Snoad) the radio version of Dad's Army and writing with Snoad the Dad's Army spinoff series It Sticks Out Half a Mile for radio, which became the television series High and Dry.

Knowles attended Bemrose Grammar School for Boys, Derby (now Bemrose School), where he stayed on into the 6th form and played the lead role in the school's production of Shakespeare's Henry V. Knowles considered reading medicine before deciding to become an actor.

Knowles started his acting career with the Watford Palace Theatre company which was being managed by Jimmy Perry.

It was at Watford where he also met many of his future co-stars including Colin Bean, John Clegg, Donald Hewlett, Jeffrey Holland, Frank Williams, and his future wife Linda James.

1969

Knowles made his earliest appearance in Dad's Army in the 1969 episode "The Loneliness of the Long Distance Walker", one of that series three missing episodes, but Knowles made four further appearances in the series.

Knowles later said of his time with Dad's Army that it "was my introduction to TV. It was quite awe-inspiring working with actors like John Laurie and John Le Mesurier, people I'd only seen in films before, and here I was actually working with them. I was very nervous but enjoyed my time very much."

1971

Knowles made his first film appearance in the 1971 feature film of Dad's Army, and the next year appeared in the film That's Your Funeral.

Knowles appeared in the first episode of Are You Being Served? and played the first customer that was served on the series.

Knowles later went on to co-write several episodes.

1972

Knowles first met Harold Snoad in 1972 when they were introduced by a mutual friend Jimmy Perry, and in 1973 it was decided that Dad's Army would be adapted for radio.

At the time David Croft and Jimmy Perry were writing series six and unable to adapt it themselves so it was suggested that Knowles and Snoad would do the first script, the BBC liked it and asked them to do another five.

In total the pair adapted 66 episodes for radio which were recorded at London's Paris Theatre.

1974

Knowles is best known for his role as Captain Jonathan Ashwood in the sitcom It Ain't Half Hot Mum (1974–81).

The series was written by Jimmy Perry and David Croft.

When Knowles asked how he ought to play his character, Croft said Captain Ashwood was rather like Knowles himself, a bit ‘silly arse’.

With Hewlett, he later worked on other series and many pantomimes.

It Ain't Half Hot Mum regularly got audiences of up to 17 million.

1975

Shortly after making his first appearance in It Ain't Half Hot Mum, Knowles had a recurring role in The Rough with the Smooth in 1975 playing the Vicar.

The series also starred Tim Brooke-Taylor, John Junkin and Richard Hurndall.

At the same time as The Rough with the Smooth Knowles appeared as the character of Nigel in the series Rogue's Rock, starring Clive Morton and Knowles’ and Donald Hewlett.

The next year Knowles went on to have a minor role in the film Spy Story starring Philip Latham.

1977

In 1977, Knowles featured alongside Hewlett again for Jeremy Lloyd and David Croft's second writing collaboration with the science fiction series Come Back Mrs Noah in which Knowles played the mathematician Fanshaw.

Unfortunately, the series ran for only 6 episodes with some even going as far as to say that it is Britain's worst ever TV sitcom.

The series has not been repeated in the UK but has in American where it was slightly more well received by audiences.

1980

Work started on writing the script in 1980 and when the first one was shown to Arthur Lowe he was so taken with it he unsuccessfully tried to persuade the BBC to make it a television series rather than radio.

1984

Knowles continued his double-act alongside Hewlett in the 1984 eight part BBC Radio sitcom Anything Legal as George, a laid-off city gent.

1986

In 1986, Knowles appeared in the film The End Of The World Man playing Sir George.

1988

In 1988, Knowles played The Honourable Teddy Meldrum in Jimmy Perry and David Croft's last collaboration You Rang, M'Lord? which ran until 1992.

The series was a success in Eastern Europe and especially in Hungary.

1989

In 1989, he voiced the Head of the Air Force in the animated movie The BFG, starring David Jason and based on the novel by Roald Dahl.

Knowles has appeared as Norrington Byng in the children's television series The DJ Kat Show and alongside David Walliams in the comedy sketch show Walliams & Friend, playing the father of Jack Whitehall alongside Whitehall's real life mother Hillary.

In 2021, Knowles appeared on British television for the first time in five years by being interviewed for the Channel 5 documentary Dad's Army: Secret Lives & Scandal. Others interviewees included Frank Williams, Arthur Lowe's son Stephen Lowe and John Le Mesurier's wife Joan Le Mesurier.

Knowles is first credited with writing four episodes of Are You Being Served including Cold Comfort, Big Brother, Shoulder to Shoulder and New Look. Knowles also appeared in two episodes including the pilot and Up Captain Peacock.

2017

In 2017, David Benson and Jack Lane adapted nine of the radio scripts for the theatre in a show called The Dad's Army Radio Hour (later called Dad's Army Radio Show) which they performed at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe.

2018

In 2018, Knowles along with four other former cast members attending an event in Budapest with 900 Hungarian fans.

2020

They went on to tour the country with the show until 2020 when the tour was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

After the radio adaptation of Dad's Army, Knowles once again teamed up with Snoad to write It Sticks Out Half a Mile, a radio spin-off to Dad's Army.