John Wells
Acting • Born 1936-11-17 – Died 1998-01-11
Biography
Wells started in cabaret at Oxford and began his television career as a writer on That Was The Week That Was, the 1960s weekly satire show that launched the careers of David Frost and Millicent Martin, among others, and also appeared in the television programme Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life, as well as in The Secret Policeman's Other Ball. Besides making cameo appearances in films such as Casino Royale (1967) and Rentadick (1972), television dramas like Casanova (1987), an episode of Lovejoy (1991) and comedy shows like Yes Minister, he also wrote television scripts and screenplays, such as Princess Caraboo (1994). In 1971, with John Fortune, he published the comedy classic A Melon for Ecstasy, about a man who consummates his love affair with a tree. Wells played the headmaster of Thursgood's Preparatory School in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1979). Wells was one of the original contributors to the satirical magazine Private Eye and contributed to Mrs Wilson's Diary, the long-running spoof journal of the wife of Prime Minister Harold Wilson. From 1979 he repeated that success with Dear Bill, a series of letters (co-written with Richard Ingrams) supposedly sent by Denis Thatcher, husband of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, to Bill Deedes. Wells developed the feature into a stage farce, Anyone for Denis?, first performed in 1981, in which he played Denis Thatcher. Co-starring Angela Thorne as Mrs. Thatcher, the play was a major West End hit, toured the UK and was adapted for television.He co-wrote Alice in Wonderland, a musical adaptation of Lewis Carrol’s novel with Carl Davis, which debuted at The Lyric Theatre in the West End, London.[3] Wells also played Denis Thatcher in the Bond movie For Your Eyes Only (1981). In 1991, he and Thorne again played the Thatchers in Dunrulin, a one-off TV sitcom-like satirical look at the couple in retirement.[4] He also voiced Arnold the Elephant, Edward the Monkey and Bert in the children's TV series Charlie Chalk. In 1988, Leonard Bernstein started working on a new version of his much-revised operetta Candide. The author of the original book, Hugh Wheeler, had died, and John Wells was asked to help revise the text.[5] The first production of this "final version", by Scottish Opera, was followed by a "final revised version" in 1989, performances of which have been released on CD and DVD. An insert in the DVD ("Bernstein and Voltaire"), written by Wells, explained what Bernstein had wanted in this final revised version. Wells authored Rude Words in 1991, a history of the London Library, for the institution's 150th anniversary. In 1997, Wells appeared in the BBC situation comedy Chalk as ineffectual headmaster Richard Nixon.[6] His fellow cast members do not recall him being ill on set, but he was too unwell to participate in the second series.[7] Wells' last book, House of Lords, was a best-seller and published a year before his death in 1998. The book is a historical and humorous study of the British peerage system.
Filmography
39 credits
For Your Eyes Only
Movie • 1981
Denis Thatcher, esposo de la Primera Ministra

Anyone for Denis
Movie • 1982
Denis Thatcher

Revolution
Movie • 1985
Corty

Dutch Girls
Movie • 1985
Headmaster

Let's Sleep On it
Movie • 1976

The Bobo
Movie • 1967
Pompadour Major Domo

Rentadick
Movie • 1972
Owltruss

30 Is a Dangerous Age, Cynthia!
Movie • 1968
Honorable Gavin Hopton

The Secret Policeman's Other Ball
Movie • 1982
Self - Various Roles

Consuming Passions
Movie • 1988

The Flying Alberts (Brucey Lacey edit)
Movie • 1965

Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes
Movie • 1984
Sir Evelyn Blount

Casino Royale
Movie • 1967
'Q's' Assistant

Every Home Should Have One
Movie • 1970
Tolworth

The Light Princess
Movie • 1978
Bee (voice)

Stones
Movie • 1976
Porton

Love's Labour's Lost
Movie • 1985
Holofernes

Princess Caraboo
Movie • 1994
Reverend Hunt

The Mystery of the Disappearing Schoolgirls
Movie • 1980
Pigeon (voice)

Cinderella: The Shoe Must Go On
Movie • 1986
Denis, King Charming

Bottom Mindless Violence
Movie • 2004
Doctor (archive footage)

The Giftie
Movie
Frank

Q...
TV • 1969

Charlie Chalk
TV • 1988

Chalk
TV • 1997
Richard Nixon

Rumpole of the Bailey
TV • 1975
Daniel Derwent

Lovejoy
TV • 1986
Linden Walker

Yes, Prime Minister
TV • 1986

Rude Health
TV • 1987

100 Years of Warner Bros.
TV • 2023
Self

The End Of The Pier Show
TV • 1974
Various Characters

Wogan
TV • 1982
Self

Anyone for Denis?
TV • 1982
Denis Thatcher

Filthy Rich & Catflap
TV • 1987
Judge

Bottom
TV • 1991
Doctor

Playhouse
TV • 1974
Porton

Have I Got News for You
TV • 1990
Self

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
TV • 1979
Headmaster

Absolutely Fabulous
TV • 1992
Uncle Humphrey