Glasgow Times

Life after soap for former EastEnder

- BY HANNAH STEPHENSON A Matter Of Facts by Shaun Williamson is published by Cassell, £ 16.99. Available now

EASTENDERS’S hapless buffoon Barry Evans would have been hopeless in a pub quiz – but you’d certainly want his alter ego, actor Shaun Williamson, on your team.

“The only good thing for me that came out of lockdown was trying to find out if there is a national quiz obsession and if people are as excited as I am,” says the former soap star who also sent himself up on Ricky Gervais’ hit comedy Extras and Life’s Too Short.

His quizzing victories include two Pointless trophies and he was a winner in the first series of Celebrity Mastermind in

2003 ( his specialist subject was Richard Burton).

“Quizzing combines our two national passions of drinking and wanting to be right,” he declares.

Williamson, 54, has spent time in lockdown completing his quizzing memoir A Matter Of Facts, which charts his performanc­e in the World Quiz Grand Prix and sees him move upwards in British quiz rankings.

Quiz questions, facts, plus his experience and knowledge are interspers­ed with tales of his life on and off screen, his relationsh­ip with alcohol and the discovery that he had a secret son. He’s able to retain social histories and is an avid reader of autobiogra­phies. His weaknesses, he says, are figures and science. The book shows how he has improved his skills through memory training, practice and even hypnosis. And it gave him something to do during lockdown.

“Lockdown wiped out my income. This was the first year we could have broken even, but that’s gone down the Swanee because a lot of my income came from live performanc­es. I do stand- up and singing on cruise ships, at festivals and holiday camps.

“I’m luckier than some actors because I’ve got savings, but this profession has been left high and dry.”

Today, he lives in Kent with his second wife, Adele, who works in childcare, and is still recognised as amiable loser Barry Evans, the EastEnders character he played for 10 years before moving on to theatre and panto as well as TV shows including Celebrity Big Brother and Britain’s Brightest Celebrity Family. He left EastEnders in 2004 and admits the legacy of Barry has perhaps precluded him from meatier roles.

“You make a conscious decision when you leave a soap that you either stay on the path of being a serious dramatic actor or you become a TV personalit­y and I erred towards the latter.”

He married Adele in 2018. What’s married life like second time around?

“Great,” he says simply. “Melanie ( his first wife and former manager) was a very important part of my life. We had 25 years together and two beautiful children ( Joe and Sophie) so it’s terrible when these things end. Sometimes things just come to a natural conclusion.”

Yet only seven years ago Williamson’s life was unsettled when he discovered that he had another son, Gary, from a relationsh­ip he’d had with a circus performer 32 years earlier, when he was 22.

“After we split up, she told me she was pregnant. I was going to America to work but told her when I returned I would help out. When I got back, she had married a man who had gone on the birth certificat­e as the father.

“It was easy in my twisted mind to think ‘ It’s his’, but I knew in the back of my mind that this would come to the fore one day.”

When Melanie contacted him to say she’d received an email from an old friend from the circus who wanted to get back in touch with him, he knew. Gary, who was living in Ireland at the time, was looking for a reconcilia­tion. They met in a hotel in Belfast. Williamson admits he was full of trepidatio­n.

“I felt really nervous – you’re not sure whether he’s going to be aggressive or resentful. But he was an absolutely charming lad and is a great stepbrothe­r to Joe and Sophie.”

He has gained a new generation of fans who have seen him as a satirical parody of himself in Extras.

“You need to keep the ball in the air when you leave a soap, otherwise you go through this dangerous period when, if you don’t get something quickly, people perceive you as being a one- hit wonder. When the call came, Ricky said, ‘ You’re going to get the mickey taken out of you’ and I said, ‘ Go for it!’ I even gave them some of the ammunition in the end.”

He went on to appear in Life’s Too Short with Warwick Davis.

He’s already started a second book about health, alcohol and fitness and his quest to get from 15 ½ stones to below 13, but he’ll keep quizzing too, he insists.

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