John Savident
John Savident (born 21 January 1938) is an English actor, known for his numerous television roles, including his portrayal of Fred Elliott in the soap opera Coronation Street from 1994 to 2006. He is also known for his performance as Monsieur Firmin in the West End cast of The Phantom of the Opera
John Savident | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1966–2019 |
Known for | Role of Fred Elliott in Coronation Street (1994–2006) |
Spouse | Rona Hopkinson (m. 1961) |
Children | 2 |
Early life
Savident was born in Guernsey and still lived there at the time of the German occupation of the island in 1940. He and his family escaped to Britain in a fishing boat. During his early years, he was a police officer before turning to acting as his profession.
Career
Savident created the role of Monsieur Firmin in the original production of Phantom of the Opera, which opened on 9 October 1986 at Her Majesty's Theatre in Haymarket, London.[1] He appeared as the renegade scientist Egrorian in a 1981 episode of the cult science fiction TV series Blake's 7.[2] He also had other television appearances in Danger Man, The Saint, Callan and Doctor Who. He played Doctor Meredith in The Remains of the Day.
Coronation Street
Despite his many film and TV roles, including civil servant Sir Frederick Stewart in Yes, Minister and a part in A Clockwork Orange (1971), it was only when Savident joined the cast of Coronation Street as the bellicose but romantic butcher Fred Elliott during the 1990s that he became a household name.[3][4] He made his first appearance on the show in 1994 and his character quickly became popular with viewers.[5]
In December 2005, Savident announced that he was to leave Coronation Street citing (undisclosed) "personal reasons". His character died of a stroke nine months later, in October 2006. He later revealed that he had retired from the show "because he wanted to spend more time with his family in Hertfordshire".[6]
Later work
Savident was one of the readers on the BBC's online Advent Calendar in December 2006. That year, he appeared in the pantomime Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs as the henchman at Manchester Opera House, alongside his former Coronation Street co-star Suranne Jones, as well as Justin Moorhouse and an all-star seven dwarves including Warwick Davis.
In 2007, he was touring as the lead in a production of Hobson's Choice.[7] He appeared on Loose Women on 19 March 2009 to discuss his part as Sir Joseph Porter in the Gilbert and Sullivan operetta HMS Pinafore, which toured the United Kingdom during the spring and summer of 2009.[8]
He guest-starred in the Christmas special episode of Holby City in 2012, playing patient Rupert Pool.[9] He voiced the character Pendle in the Doctor Who audio-drama Order of the Daleks.[10]
Personal life
On 1 December 2000, Savident was stabbed twice in the neck at his home in Manchester by Michael Smith, who claimed he was acting in self-defence. Savident said at the time, "I suddenly felt somebody come up behind me and whizz me round so I was face down on the bed and then I felt a prick on my throat". Smith demanded three thousand pounds from Savident, and the keys to his classic Morgan sports car. Savident had met Smith in Heenans bar, following a personal appearance at an event for World AIDS Day. They then went to Savident's home – apparently to discuss the theatre – which Smith claimed was a euphemism for sex. In September 2002, Smith, by then aged 30, was sentenced to seven years in prison. He had been charged with wounding Mr Savident with intent to cause him grievous bodily harm, and robbing him of his wallet, credit cards, a silver money clip and cash, a Georg Jensen watch and ring, keys, and an invitation to Coronation Street's 40th anniversary birthday party.[11] The next week on Coronation Street, the large sticking plaster on his character's neck was explained as a "butchering accident".
Savident has been married to Rona Hopkinson since 1961; the couple have two children and several grandchildren.
Filmography
- Robbery (1967) – Policeman with Dog (uncredited)
- The White Bus (1967) – Supporter
- The Avengers (1968) - Henry Winthrop
- Inadmissible Evidence (1968) – Mr. Watson
- Otley (1969) – Businessman
- Before Winter Comes (1969) – British Corporal
- Battle of Britain (1969) – RAF Officer (uncredited)
- Waterloo (1970) – Muffling
- A Family at War (1970-1972, TV Series) – George Askew
- Man of Straw (1972, TV series) – Von Wulchow
- The Raging Moon (1971) – Fete Guest
- A Clockwork Orange (1971) – Conspirator Dolin
- Tightrope (1972) - Forrester
- Penny Gold (1973) – Sir Robert Hampton
- Hitler: The Last Ten Days (1973) – Hewel
- Diamonds on Wheels (1974) – Steward
- Butley (1974) – James (uncredited)
- QB VII (1974) – Anaesthetist
- Galileo (1974) – Second Senator
- Looking For Clancy (1975) – Sir John Kernan
- Trial by Combat (1976) – Oliver Griggs – Police Commissioner
- Raffles (1976) (TV series) Series 1, Episode 10 Mr. Justice Raffles - Daniel Brigstock
- Rachel and the Beelzebub Bombardiers (1977) – Captain Verney, MP
- 1990 (1977) – Dan Mellor
- The Professionals (1978) - Robert Plumb (Servant of Two Masters episode)
- Blake's 7 (1979) – Samor
- Yes Minister (1980)
- Blake's 7 (1981) – Egrorian
- Doctor Who: The Visitation (1982) – The Squire (1 episode)
- Gandhi (1982) – Manager of the Mine
- Blackadder (pilot) (1982) - King of England
- Oliver Twist (1982, TV Movie) – Mr. Fang
- The Wicked Lady (1983) – Squire Thornton
- The Bill (1984, TV Series) – Video shop owner
- Little Dorrit (1987) – Tite Barnacle
- A Summer Story (1988) – A Banc Clerk
- Camping (1990) – English camper
- Mountains of the Moon (1990) – Lord Murchison8
- Impromptu (1991) – Buloz
- Hudson Hawk (1991) – Auctioneer
- Mr.Bean Takes an Exam (1991) - examination invigilator
- Jeeves and Wooster (1992) (TV Series) Series 3, Episode 2 Edgar Gascoyne Bickersteth, 8th Duke of Chiswick
- Brain Donors (1992) – Edmund Lazlo
- Mrs 'Arris Goes to Paris (1992) - Mr Armont
- The Remains of the Day (1993) – Doctor Meredith
- Tom & Viv (1994) – Sir Frederick Lamb
- Coronation Street (1994–2006) – Fred Elliott (1,063 episodes)
- Middlemarch (1994) – Raffles
- Othello (1995) – 2nd Senator
- Loch Ness (1996) – Dr. Binns
- Sharpe - Sharpe's Regiment (1996) - Maj. Gen. Sir Barstan Maxwell
- The Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall (2011) – Monsieur Firmin
- The Life and Times of Mim Stewart (2019) – Gary Brennan
Notes
- "The Phantom of the Opera, Her Majesty's, London". the Guardian. 10 October 1986.
- "Blake's 7 : Orbit (1981) - Brian Lighthill | Cast and Crew | AllMovie" – via www.allmovie.com.
- "John Savident". BFI. Archived from the original on 6 August 2016.
- News, Manchester Evening (18 May 2011). "I've got no time for Corrie now, says actor John Savident". Manchester Evening News.
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has generic name (help) - "Corrie at 60: Some of the beloved soap's most memorable characters". The Leader.
- "Savident was 'disappointed' by Corrie chiefs". Digital Spy. 28 December 2008. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
- "Theatre review: Hobson's Choice at Chichester Festival Theatre". British Theatre Guide.
- "Review: HMS Pinafore, Carl Rosa Opera, Theatre Royal Bath". The Wiltshire Gazette and Herald.
- "BBC One - Holby City, Series 15, And We Banish Shade". BBC.
- "218. Order of the Daleks". bigfinish.com. Retrieved 7 March 2019.
- John Savident (10 December 2002). "Man jailed for attack on Street star". BBC News. Retrieved 13 August 2011.