Robin Mark Askwith (born 12 October 1950) is an English actor and singer who has appeared in a number of film, television and stage productions.
Making his film debut as Keating in the film if.... (1968), a role he would reprise in Britannia Hospital (1982), Askwith went on to appear in many films including Otley (1969), Alfred the Great (1969), Nicholas and Alexandra (1971) and The Canterbury Tales (1972), the horror films Tower of Evil (1972), The Flesh and Blood Show (1972) and Horror Hospital (1973) and the comedy films Bless This House (1972), Carry On Girls (1973) and No Sex Please, We're British (1973). However it was his role as Timothy Lea in the Confessions film series that would make him a household name.
Askwith has appeared on television as Fred Pickering in Beryl's Lot (1973–1975), Dave Deacon in Bottle Boys (1984–1985) and Ritchie de Vries in Coronation Street (2013–2014).
In 1975, at Drury Lane's New London Theatre, Askwith was voted "Most Promising Newcomer – Male" at the Evening Standard British Film Awards. Askwith's most recent television roles include Emmerdale, Benidorm and a main role in The Madame Blanc Mysteries.
Early life
Askwith was born in Southport, Lancashire<!--Lancashire pre-1974-->, England, the eldest child of Nelson and Hazel Askwith (née Cookson). His father was an accountant but served in the Royal Navy during the Second World War and his mother in the Women's Royal Naval Service (WRENs). As a young child, he swam in a pool contaminated with insects; later that day Askwith's mother found him fully submerged underwater in the bath. Taken to hospital in an ambulance, Askwith was found to have contracted polio and had to spend nine months in an isolation ward at Southport Infirmary and had to learn how to walk again. The next-door neighbour of a friend was Carry On actor Kenneth Connor, and so Askwith began attending a local amateur dramatics group. He also did a stint of modelling for catalogues and appeared in several commercials for baked beans and Fairy Liquid.
Askwith then appeared on television in series such as Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) and Father, Dear Father,
Askwith published his autobiography, titled The Confessions of Robin Askwith in 1999. In 2000, Askwith had a role in the horror film The Asylum.
Askwith made a cameo appearance in the film Run For Your Wife, released in the UK on 14 February 2013. Askwith also appeared in an episode of Emmerdale in 2015. His role as con-man Marcus Hornby in the TV comedy drama Benidorm was broadcast in January 2016, and his episode of Casualty aired later that year.
In 2021, he joined the cast of Channel 5's drama series The Madame Blanc Mysteries appearing alongside Sue Holderness, Sally Lindsay and Steve Edge as a series regular. The first series received a positive reception which led to a Christmas special broadcast in 2022 succeeded by a second series to be broadcast in 2023. In December 2022, Askwith appeared in the fourth and final episode of the quartet, Strike: Troubled Blood, on BBC1. His character, Steve Douthwaite, plays one of the suspected killers in the J. K. Rowling-inspired mystery crime drama.
In 2023, it was announced that he would appear in the eighth series of Inside No. 9, and his name was used in the promotion for episode 5, Hold on Tight!. However the episode was fake and never produced, instead the hoax quiz show 3 by 3 was episode 5 of the series.
In 2024 Askwith appeared in the ninth series of Inside No. 9, trying to get Shearsmith and Pemberton to create a real-life version of Hold on Tight!.
Stage work
Askwith's extensive work on stage, includes numerous farces such as Run For Your Wife, Casanova's Last Stand, One for the Road plus the stage Confessions sequel The Further Confessions of a Window Cleaner and Terry Johnson's Dead Funny. From 11 December 2012 – 27 January 2013, he appeared at the Mill at Sonning, Reading, Berkshire in Ray Cooney's farce Caught in the Net.
In pantomimes, Askwith has appeared with the Chuckle Brothers in Dick Whittington, with Frank Bruno and Sooty in a Wolverhampton production of Goldilocks and the 3 Bears and in various productions of Aladdin as Abanazar.
More unusual stage roles include the title role in a production of Brecht's The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui, and the Child Catcher in a 2006 touring production of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
Personal life
Askwith had relationships with the actresses Cheryl Hall and later Linda Hayden during the 1970s. Askwith married actress Leonie Mellinger in 1988 but they later divorced. From 1996 to 2002, he was married to Mary Smith, an aromatherapist.
Askwith lives on Gozo, a Mediterranean island near Malta, having moved there in 1991, where his hobbies include swimming, underwater diving and yachting; however he regularly returns to the UK for tours, events and filming.
- Play By Play – Kings Head Theatre, London (1975)
- The Further Confessions of a Window Cleaner – UK Tour (1977)
- The Further Confessions of a Window Cleaner – Rhodesia (1978)
- I Love My Wife – Prince of Wales Theatre, London (1978)
- Who Goes Bare? – UK Tour (1979)
- The Further Confessions of a Window Cleaner – New Zealand Tour (1980)
- The Further Confessions of a Window Cleaner – UK Tour (1980)
- Confessions From A Health Farm – New Zealand Tour (1981)
- Casanova's Last Stand – UK Tour (1982)
- The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui – Cambridge Theatre Company (1982)
- Aladdin – Theatre Royal, Lincoln (1983)
- Run For Your Wife – Criterion Theatre, London (1984)
- Run For Your Wife – Criterion Theatre, London (1985)
- Doctor in the House – UK Tour (1985)
- Run For Your Wife – New Zealand Tour (1986)
- Funny Peculiar – Australia Tour (1986)
- Jack and the Beanstalk – Wimbledon Theatre, London (1986)
- Run For Your Wife – New Zealand Tour (1987)
- Run For Your Wife – Criterion Theatre, London (1987)
- Aladdin – De Montfort Hall, Leicester (1987)
- Les Enfants Terribles – Avignon Drama Festival (1988)
- One for the Road – Mercury Theatre, Colchester (1988)
- Dick Whittington – Richmond Theatre (1988)
- Run For Your Wife – Jersey (1989)
- One for the Road – UK Tour (1990)
- One for the Road – Australia Tour (1991)
- One for the Road – New Zealand Tour (1992)
- Cash on Delivery – Theatre Royal, Windsor (1993)
- Dick Whittington – Theatre Royal, Bath (1993)
- Run For Your Wife – UK Tour (1994)
- Cinderella – Wimbledon Theatre, London (1994)
- Doctor in the House – UK Tour (1995)
- Dick Whittington – New Theatre, Cardiff (1995)
- Aladdin – Lyceum Theatre, Crewe (1996)
- Dick Whittington – Lyceum Theatre, Sheffield (1997)
- Dick Whittington – Darlington Civic Theatre (1998)
- Aladdin – Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford (1999)
- Jack and the Beanstalk – Theatre Royal, Nottingham (2000)
- Goldilocks and the Three Bears – Grand Theatre, Wolverhampton (2001)
- Aladdin – Theatre Royal, Newcastle upon Tyne (2002)
- Bedside Manners – Pier Theatre, Bournemouth (2003)
- Aladdin – Milton Keynes Theatre, Milton Keynes (2003)
- Aladdin – New Wimbledon Theatre, London (2004)
- Canterbury Tales – The Castle, Nottingham (2005)
- Chitty Chitty Bang Bang – Sunderland Empire Theatre (2005)
- Dead Funny – UK Tour (2007)
- Aladdin – Cliffs Pavilion, Southend-on-Sea (2008)
- Aladdin – Theatre Royal, Lincoln (2010)
- Funny Money – The Mill at Sonning, Reading (2011)
- Caught in the Net – The Mill at Sonning, Reading (2012)
- Jack and the Beanstalk – Cliffs Pavilion, Southend-on-Sea (2017)
- Aladdin – Darlington Hippodrome (2018)
- Aladdin – Hull New Theatre (2019)
Recordings
- 1975: Appears on the Confessions of a Pop Performer – Original Soundtrack Album
- 1977: Single Confessions/This Space Is Reserved for You (credited as Robin Aswith)
- 1994: Audiobook cassette, HarperCollins Audio – Ian Botham: My Autobiography – Don't Tell Kath read by Robin Askwith
References
Further reading
- Simon Sheridan Keeping the British End Up: Four Decades of Saucy Cinema 2011 (fourth edition) (Titan Publishing, London)
- The Confessions of Robin Askwith by Robin Askwith (Ebury Press) 1999 ()
External links
- Robin Askwith interview
