Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

David Jason on his life as Del boy

- BY EMILY RETTER Senior Feature Writer

Sir David Jason tried keeping a diary during lock down but, ultimately, he could only describe how bored he felt. It was, he says, the first time in quite a while in his distinguis­hed career that his “gravest fears” came true – the acting work dried up.

With the large amount of time on his hands he did something he usually tends to avoid for fear of getting nostalgic, he watched, well... himself, in classic BBC sitcom Only Fools and Horses.

Sir David, who played Del Boy Trotter, says he finds dwelling too long on that time – one of the most enjoyable periods of his life, making a hit show with people he loved – can land him in a rabbit hole where he ends up morosely wishing he could do it all over again.

“Making Only Fools was fun, love and joy, and you think ‘Why aren’t I doing it now?’... I try not to get myself involved in an emotional crisis like that,” he explains. But, thumbs twiddling, he found himself watching the 1989 episode when Del falls through a wine bar hhatch. h And it had him in fits of giggles.

He says: “It gave me great joy. The hatch scene still makes me laugh out loud. Normally I’m very critical of what I do, I don’t enjoy watching very much. But that one just works.”

The 80-year-old’s usual resistance to dwelling on the past means “I do tend to live in the moment”, he explains.

His trick is to keep busy, be that with work – retirement is a firm no-go – or doing DIY at his Buckingham­shire home, where he lives with wife Gill and daughter Sophie, 19.

He was born David White in 1940, the son of a fishmonger. David, from North London, was an electricia­n and painter/ decorator before becoming an actor.

His latest book – A Del of a Life: Lessons I’ve Learned – a wonderful collection of tales looking back through the decades, was written as he grew increasing­ly frustrated during lockdown.

It turns out he doesn’t much like the suggestion he’s in the winter of his life. When I mention the word mortality, I’ m shut down .“You’ re depressing me!” he protests.

To make his point, he demonstrat­es exactly how us young’uns wrongly characteri­se older generation­s.

He would know, he says, because he did it himself in his 30s in one of his earliest TV roles when he played Blanco, the ageing and doddery prisoner banged up with Ronnie Barker in 1970s sitcom Porridge.

In a nano-second, the brilliant actor grows frail before my eyes, his mouth becoming a gummy, toothless gurn, eyes rheumy with confusion. “Cor blimey, Fletch, what’s this all about? I can’t understand any of it,” he dodders.

He adds with a grin and a teasing sparkle in his eye: “I think you understand what I mean... sorry, what was your name again? The perception of being old when you’re young is vastly exaggerate­d.

“Age as far as I’m concerned is just a number. It’s not for all of us, unfortu

We were told off for laughing dressed as Batman and Robin

nately, but for most of us we’re still up there,” he gestures to his head. “And down there for dancing,” he adds, nodding to his feet.

Sir David is as vital as ever, still flying helicopter­s as a hobby, and this year passing his pilot’s licence test again with a clean bill of health.

“I have always been fascinated by flying, space research, all of that. Flying is a challenge to leave the earth, get

wings, an escape,” he says. Writing his book has brought many memories to the surface, particular­ly of his time on Only Fools, which first aired in 1981.

He recalls how cast and crew, many of whom have now died, had a ball.

Some scenes were almost too funny to film. “The one I never forget is Nick Lyndhurst [who played Rodney Trotter] and myself dressed as Batman and Robin, sitting in the van waiting for the cameras to turn over,” he says.

“To look at Nick dressed as Robin trying to be serious, and me trying desperatel­y to be serious, and the more serious Nick got the funnier he became – until in the end the director said ‘Listen, you’re contracted to be actors, control yourselves, stop laughing at yourselves!’.” Sir David, who also starred in shows such as A Touch of Frost, and Open All Hours, knows the role of Del Boy might easily have slipped through his fingers.

He believes he was only fifth in line to play the part – Jim Broadbent was among those ahead of 5ft 6in David, who was initially thought too short.

Another twist of fate is that Sir David had previously almost been cast in sitcom Dad’s Army instead.

He was promised the role of Lance Corporal Jones, before discoverin­g Clive Dunn had landed it.

“That was a particular­ly hard disappoint­ment,” Sir David says. “I hadn’t had that sort of break, so to find out I had the part, so overjoyed, and on the same day I found it had been cast behind my back...

“But on reflection, I don’t wish I could have been in it.

Because I lost that job it made me available for everything else I did, in other words on e of the biggest things that ever happened to me in television, being cast as Derek Trotter.” Yet at the height of the show’s popularity, Only Fools wasn’t all fun.

Sir David struggled with fame. “I was always very quiet to the point of being shy at school and afterwards. “I got i nv o lv e d i n a mat e u r dramatics because it gave me an opportunit­y to pretend I was a different person, sometimes a person with a much stronger personalit­y than me. I loved hiding myself in the character, so when people recognised me on the street it was rather embarrassi­ng.” Until early this year, he had never accepted an invitation to attend a fan convention.

Some of the people there told him Only Fools had saved their lives, bringing them back from the edge in the darkest throes of depression.

“I realised that particular character has given people a lot more than I ever imagined was possible,” he says.

“I’m pleased to say there is more in me than just Derek Trotter. But I’m grateful for old Del and his mob.”

A Del of a Life: Lessons I’ve Learned, by David Jason is published by Century, hardback £20.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? DYNAMIC DUO As Batman and Robin
YOUNG AND OLD As an aspiring actor. Below, as Blanco in Porridge in the 70s
GLASS ACT As Del in chandelier scene in 1982
DYNAMIC DUO As Batman and Robin YOUNG AND OLD As an aspiring actor. Below, as Blanco in Porridge in the 70s GLASS ACT As Del in chandelier scene in 1982
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? GOING.. He falls through bar alongside Roger Lloyd Pack in 1989
CLASSIC Hilarious scene in BBC sitcom
TEAM With Lyndhurst & Lennard Pearce
LAUGHS Only Fools Horses in 1991
GOING.. He falls through bar alongside Roger Lloyd Pack in 1989 CLASSIC Hilarious scene in BBC sitcom TEAM With Lyndhurst & Lennard Pearce LAUGHS Only Fools Horses in 1991
 ??  ?? NATIONAL TREASURE Sir David and his new book
NATIONAL TREASURE Sir David and his new book

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom