Sunday Express

The cast a family

- By Garry Bushell

SID OWEN is peeved when we speak. A tabloid newspaper has used the publicatio­n of his autobiogra­phy as an excuse to regurgitat­e scandals from when the actor was at the peak of his 1990s fame as Ricky in Eastenders.

“The premise of the book, the reason for doing it, was to give a bit of hope to people, especially people suffering with their mental health,” Sid tells me, a clear note of frustratio­n in his voice.

“It was to show people at the bottom that you can come from nothing and achieve things...not to drag up old news.”

The book, From Rags To Ricky, certainly does that.

Owen’s extraordin­ary, Dickensian story takes him from child thief to soap stardom and beyond.

Born David Sutton in Islington, North London, Sid was the son of a violent, abusive armed robber dad, and a barmaid mother who died when he was seven-years-old.

A chubby child – the “Sid” came from his nickname, Steak and Kidney Sidney” – he was lured into a life of petty crime by his three elder brothers.

“It was council estate living then, day by day,” he says.

“It was survival. We grew up struggling, trying to live on benefits.

“It wasn’t so easy to get handouts, you had to learn to think on your feet. Crime was all around me – crime was all I knew.”

Acting was his salvation. Without it, he says, “I might have got a job in a bank, but the likelihood was I’d have been robbing it.”

Three giant characters changed his life – the drama coach Anna Scher, the late Cockney comedian Mike Reid, who played his Eastenders screen father Frank Butcher, and movie star Al Pacino.

“Mike Reid felt sorry for me, he took me under his wing and that was what I craved,” Sid recalls. “He advised me and looked out for me.”

Owen was 16 and living in a squat when he got the part.

The BBC One soap became his surrogate family: “It was like a whole family unit. It gave me that structure, that make-believe family to keep me normal. Nick Berry was like my wise older brother.

“Mike was special. He was hilarious to work with but on screen he was always frustrated with Ricky or

angry with him. He used to go red in the face, he was so into it. It looked so real. It was terrifying.

“Once he had to slap me, but

Mike arched his hand so I wouldn’t get the full impact. Even so, when he arched it over my ear I almost went deaf and was seeing stars...but it looked so good on screen.

“Mike left us too soon, he was 67...it was such a shame.”

Sid, now 49, misses Eastenders but says: “The schedule was very hard. I was doing it from the age of 16, you feel like you’re missing out on your teens and your 20s.

“My mates were travelling, I couldn’t. That’s why I left the first time. I came and went four or five times.” The producers asked him back this year, but the dates clashed with his book.

“I would go back, 100 per cent,” he says. “It was a big part of my life;

it was good to me. I’ll never forget it. The 1990s were the glory days. It was the pinnacle for Ricky and Bianca” – played by Patsy Palmer. “Our wedding got 20 million viewers” – 10 times more than the soap has pulled

recently.

ANNA SCHER, whose theatre school was near his estate, opened the door for his career. “She was my saviour,” says Sid. “She was affordable, poorer kids could enrol for 25p a week and she had a genuine interest in troubled kids.

“Her classes helped me channel my energy and anger into acting and improvisin­g. Anna let us swear which was a huge release.

“It takes you away from where you’re at. If I swore at home my aunt would stick soap in my mouth.”

Sid lived with his maternal aunt Carol, but clashed with her partner. Consequent­ly he spent a lot of time with his friend’s family, the Wooders.

His first major acting high was playing Al Pacino’s screen son in the 1985 Hollywood movie Revolution when he was 13. “In one scene I get captured by the enemy, whipped by Donald Sutherland and tied to a cannon.

“It was eight or nine pages of dialogue and we shot it for a week, freestyle and improvisin­g.

“I got the part because I could improvise. That’s one of my proudest moments, that and all the memorable scenes with Patsy, the moving storyline about a still-born baby, deep stuff.”

New Yorker Pacino, who had drank and smoked from an early age, was another good influence, disciplini­ng Sid for running wild on the film set: “I had ADHD – he’d have a word in my ear to calm me down. He was fond of me.”

Owen says he has never been happier than he is now: “As you get older, you don’t torture yourself. I don’t smoke or take drugs any more. I train four or five times a week. I run and I swim, nothing too tricky. An hour’s run or an hour’s swim. I cope better now. I’m a good cook and I’ve got an amazing girlfriend, Victoria.

“We’ve been together a year but we dated 23 years ago. She’d say my best attribute was my cooking and my worst snoring.”

In 2012 Sid left

Eastenders but even now the spectre of Ricky hangs over him.

“I get recognised every day,” he says. “I still get people shouting ‘Rickkayyyy!’, there’s nothing original. It’s crazy, even abroad.

“It can get very touchy feely when people are drunk. It can be a bit intrusive – you learn to stay in control. All the repeats are on now, so it’s come full circle.

“It can happen anywhere. I was in panto in Bournemout­h 20 years ago, having a pee, and a guy who was stood there, covered in blood with a copper interviewi­ng him, turned to me and said, ‘Mate, can I have an autograph?’”

LITTLE wonder Sid lived in France for 20 years. “I was a bit of a hermit,” he laughs. “But lockdown was OK for me – as an actor you can sit on your bum for months between jobs. It’s something you get used to.”

Sid, who starred in the final series of ITV1 prison drama Bad Girls in 2006, said his ambition is to do “a good gangster movie or a good British crime drama TV series, like an English Sopranos, set in London.

He revealed: “I would always take Peaky Blinders over any medical programmes”.

Sid has a home in Kent and a rented flat near London’s Tower Hill.

A Celebrity Masterchef veteran, he relaxes by watching cooking shows, loves the comedy of Jimmy Carr and Ricky Gervais, and “all sorts of music”.

But prod him and he talks about his love of reggae, Madness and 80s stars like Bad Manners, the Style Council and Sham 69.

“Nick Berry got me into Sham,” he laughs. “They were heavy.”

Sid had a rather heavy start in life himself, starting stealing at the age of four, but he has no regrets and no remorse. “I did nothing that bad,” he says. “Otherwise, you’d know about it. I was never a hardened criminal.

“Back then, we were told we were problem children, now we’d get help. I come from a very mixed-up dysfunctio­nal family and just being here today and getting through it and doing the right thing makes me feel proud.

“I’ve been lucky.”

‘As you get older you don’t torture yourself’

From Rags to Ricky by Sid Owen (Macmillan,

£18.99) out now

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 ??  ?? TOUGH GUYS: Sid Owen starring in ITV’S Bad Girls in 2006; and with his on-screen father Mike Reid in Eastenders
TOUGH GUYS: Sid Owen starring in ITV’S Bad Girls in 2006; and with his on-screen father Mike Reid in Eastenders
 ??  ?? LITTLE STAR: Sid as a schoolboy; and above
with Al Pacino
LITTLE STAR: Sid as a schoolboy; and above with Al Pacino
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 ??  ?? Picture: HUMPHREY NEMAR
PROUD: Sid says he has never been happier than he is now; right, getting married to on-screen wife Patsy Palmer, which pulled in 20 million viewers back in 1997
Picture: HUMPHREY NEMAR PROUD: Sid says he has never been happier than he is now; right, getting married to on-screen wife Patsy Palmer, which pulled in 20 million viewers back in 1997
 ??  ?? LET’S COOK: Sid Owen in Celebrity
Masterchef
LET’S COOK: Sid Owen in Celebrity Masterchef

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