James Bolam
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| James Bolam | |
|---|---|
| Born | 16 June 1935 Sunderland, County Durham, England |
| Years active | 1961 - present |
| Spouse(s) | Susan Jameson |
James Bolam (born 16 June 1935 in Sunderland, County Durham) is an English actor, perhaps most associated with his portrayal of the lovable layabout Terry Collier in the hit BBC sitcoms The Likely Lads and Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?.
After attending Bede Grammar School, Sunderland, Bolam left the North-East. Much like his fellow Likely Lad Rodney Bewes, he was formally trained in London and first appeared on screens in the early 1960s, initially in popular TV shows such as Z-Cars and the gritty northern films A Kind of Loving and The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner. He appeared along with John Thaw in the 1967 Granada TV serial, Inheritance.
The Likely Lads made Bolam a huge star during its 1964 to 1966 run. Bolam himself adapted the shows for BBC radio soon afterwards, and then went on to appear in films such as O Lucky Man!, Otley and Half a Sixpence before the lads returned, in colour, in 1973.
Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads ran for two series, in 1973 and 1974. These were repeated in late 1974, and a new episode, a 45-minute Christmas special, was broadcast on Christmas Eve that year.
In 1975 Bolam appeared alongside the original cast in a further BBC radio series adapted from the 1973 TV series, and in 1976 there was a further reunion in a feature film spin-off from the series, simply entitled The Likely Lads. Bolam's co-star Bewes revealed in 2005 that the two actors had not spoken in nearly thirty years, roughly the amount of time since that film had been made. The rift, according to Bewes, developed over nothing more than his leaking to a journalist that Bolam's wife was pregnant. Bolam has never commented on what caused it. That year, Bolam made a return to straight drama as Jack Ford in the BBC television series When the Boat Comes In, which ran until 1981.
Since then, Bolam has gone on to become one of the highest-paid stars on British TV[citation needed], mostly in comedies, appearing in shows such as Only When I Laugh (as Roy Figgis), The Beiderbecke Affair (as Trevor Chaplin), The Beiderbecke Tapes, Andy Capp (in the title role), The Beiderbecke Connection, Second Thoughts (as Bill Macgregor), Midsomer Murders, Pay and Display, Dalziel and Pascoe, Born and Bred (as Dr. Arthur Gilder), and New Tricks (as Jack Halford).
In 1978 he played Willie Garvin in a BBC World Service radio adaptation of the Modesty Blaise book Last Day in Limbo. In 1982 he provided the voice for The Tod in the animated film version of The Plague Dogs, and in the year 2000, he played Sir Archibald Flint in the Doctor Who audio play The Spectre of Lanyon Moor.
In 2002, he also played the notorious Harold Shipman in the ITV adaptation of Brian Masters' book on the case, Prescription for Murder. He portrayed the eponymous Prime Minister in the 2006 BBC documentary The Plot Against Harold Wilson.
He also appeared in Frank Loesser's musical How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying at the Chichester Festival Theatre during the 2005 summer season.
Fiercely private, Bolam lives in Wisborough Green, West Sussex with his wife, the actress Susan Jameson (who co-starred with him in the TV series When the Boat Comes In and the current series New Tricks). They have a daughter.

