



Richard Briers is the consummate comic actor. He does serious pieces as well of course, but it is his series like ‘The Good Life’ that I remember most of all. A real gentleman and great actor.
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Although he has confessed he began his career knowing absolutely nothing about acting,
Richard Briers has developed into an immensely popular actor. In the 1960s, '70s
and '80s he became the quintessential situation comedy husband with three defining
roles; newlywed George Starling, the self-
Encouraged by his cousin Terry-
He had his first comic starring role in the legal comedy series Brothers in Law (BBC,
1962). Shortly afterwards, he confirmed his talent with his role as George Starling
in the popular Marriage Lines (BBC, 1963-
Briers continued to make his mark as a comic actor, teaming up with Arthur Lowe in
seven Ben Travers Farces (BBC, 1970), with Michael Hordern in a series of two-
He struck gold with John Esmonde and Bob Larbey's middle-


By no means 'just' a comedy actor, Briers' work has embraced Nöel Coward (Hay Fever, BBC, 4/8/1968), Alan Ayckbourn (The Norman Conquest Trilogy, ITV, 1977) and Shakespeare (Twelfth Night, ITV, 1988).
Briers' warm, expressive voice has become a familiar fixture of commercials and,
notably, children's animation: Bob Godfrey's Roobarb (BBC, 1974-
His early film appearances were sporadic and largely minor, but through his association with Kenneth Branagh he has expanded his cinematic career with Henry V (1989), Peter's Friends (1992), Much Ado About Nothing (1993), Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1994), In the Bleak Midwinter (1995), Hamlet (1996) and Love's Labours Lost (2000). Other films include A Chorus of Disapproval (d. Michael Winner, 1989), Unconditional Love (US, 2001) and Smee in Peter Pan (US/UK/Australia, d. P.J. Hogan, 2003).
In recent years, he has turned to one-