Sunday Mirror

SOME MOTHERS DO ’AVE ’EM STAR... 50 YEARS ON I’m so grateful to the 25m fans of Frank Spencer, even if filming did nearly kill me

- BY KAREN ROCKETT WAS PERFECT BETTY, STAR SAYS karen.rockett@sundaymirr­or.co.uk

EXCLUSIVE

FROM dangling hundreds of feet above the English Channel from a car’s exhaust pipe to rollerskat­ing beneath a moving lorry, Michael Crawford’s deathdefyi­ng stunts in Some Mothers Do ’Ave ’Em are TV legend.

But now, on the 50th anniversar­y of the first broadcast of the muchloved show, the star has revealed that one feat very nearly killed him.

Michael, who devised and performed all of hapless character Frank Spencer’s stunts himself, was almost suffocated by a pile of sand – just a few seconds longer and he would have been a goner, he admits.

Speaking from his home in New Zealand, the star, 81, says the plan was to end an episode with Frank standing behind a truck when it dumps its load of sand, burying him so just his beret is left on top.

PANIC

The BBC crew didn’t rehearse because it would have taken so long to move the sand back onto the lorry, so they did it in one take – with near-disastrous results.

Michael recalls: “I was supposed to lift up my arm as it tipped so that I could wave through the sand to get help if I couldn’t get out when the camera stopped rolling.

“But the sand was so heavy I could barely lift my arm. The sand was squashing my rib cage and I was unable to breathe.

“I was holding my breath for about 30 seconds and panicking. I eventually managed to push my hand through but had to wait until the credits had rolled because the audience would see my arm.

“Then I was waving like mad, franticall­y waving. They pulled me clear and cleared my mouth but another 15 seconds I would have been a goner. I was gasping for breath. That was close.

“It was pretty bad. That was the one I thought I might have gone too far this time but there was no health and safety in those days.”

Despite that close call, Michael got a buzz out of performing the stunts during his five years playing the accident-prone husband.

His favourite was when Frank, sitting his driving test for the 10th time, steers off a pier.

He says: “That was filmed in Sheppey where I grew up and so many people came out to watch, loads of people I knew.”

The scene where his character roller skates under a real lorry took a lot of prep, he reveals.

“I loved roller-skating as a kid, so I was determined to do a stunt because I was actually pretty good at it.

“We flagged down a passing lorry driver, off the A3 I think, and offered him £30 to drive in a straight line really slowly.

We put boards on his side windows so he couldn’t see me coming at him from the side because he would have braked automatica­lly and I would have been crushed under the wheels. I was bending and swerving all over the place and there was a camera on each side of

Another 15 seconds, and I would have been a goner... It was bad michael crawford ON BEING CRUSHED BY SAND

It was very important Frank had a wife who’d tolerate his failings

MICHELE DOTRICE

the lorry to get the money shot. By the time we’d rehearsed it many times the lorry driver was getting fed up, so we had to give him £50.”

The daredevil tricks were more than a thrill, the actor and tenor believes.

He adds: “I felt like we were really achieving something, that what we were doing was daring and modern.

“I always liked this kind of physical comedy, like Laurel and Hardy and Buster Keaton. I was Frank with my whole body. As an actor you want your audience to love what you do and they loved the stunts.”

Following its first broadcast on February 15, 1973, Some Mothers was soon attracting 25 million viewers keen to watch Frank lurch from disaster to disaster as he tried – and failed – to hold down a job to support his everpatien­t wife Betty and tot Jessica.

Now, it is impossible to imagine anyone else in the role – but Michael was cast after both Norman Wisdom and Ronnie Barker turned it down. The star laughs: “Luckily for me! I admired both of them but I don’t think they saw in the writing what I did. I saw a chance to make Frank my own.”

Real-life daughters Emma and Lucy, seven and nine when filming began, were the perfect inspiratio­n for the character.

“The fidgeting and wide-eyed wonder, their responses to things you say, the way you can see in their faces

their minds ticking over,” he says. “I wanted him to be an innocent, like a child, yet I wanted him to be married.

“It was important that he had the right wife, someone who would love him and be able to tolerate his failings.”

He describes Michele Dotrice as “perfect” as Betty and the reason the show was such a success, adding: “It really wouldn’t have been without her.”

The great friends, who speak on the phone weekly, reprised their roles in 2016 for a one-off special for Sport

Relief – with some milder stunts.

While live theatre is Michael’s first love – he won awards for roles in Phantom of the Opera and Barnum – he is forever grateful to Some Mothers Do ’Ave ’Em for boosting his success.

He says: “After Frank finished I had gained a whole new audience. Some 25 million used to tune in and many of those people came to see me on stage afterwards.

“I took Frank’s fans with me back to the theatre and I will always be grateful to him for that.

“He was wonderful and I will always feel very lucky to have played him.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? HIGH TIMES Car stunt for Sport Relief
HIGH TIMES Car stunt for Sport Relief
 ?? ?? DAREDEVIL Star did all the stunts
DAREDEVIL Star did all the stunts
 ?? ?? EXHAUST-ING Hanging from pipe
EXHAUST-ING Hanging from pipe
 ?? ?? FARES PLEASE Dangling from bus
FARES PLEASE Dangling from bus
 ?? ?? HAPLESSLY IN LOVE Michael and Michele play pair in show
HAPLESSLY IN LOVE Michael and Michele play pair in show
 ?? ?? GOOD PALS Stars remain close friends
GOOD PALS Stars remain close friends

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