Patricia Hayes

Patricia Hayes
Born
Patricia Lawlor Hayes

(1909-12-22)22 December 1909
Streatham, London, England
Died19 September 1998(1998-09-19) (aged 88)
Resting place
Watts Cemetery Chapel, Compton, Surrey, England
OccupationActress
Years active1936–1996
Spouse
Valentine Brooke
(m. 1939; div. 1951)
Children3, including Richard O'Callaghan

Patricia Lawlor Hayes (22 December 1909 – 19 September 1998) was an English character actress. She is best known for playing the titular Edna in the Play for Today, Edna, the Inebriate Woman (1971), for which she won the British Academy Television Award for Best Actress.[1]

Early life

Patricia Lawlor Hayes was born in Streatham,[2] London, the daughter of George Frederick Hayes and Florence Alice Hayes. Her father was a clerk in the civil service and her mother was a schoolmistress. As a child, Hayes attended the Sacred Heart High School, Hammersmith.

Career

Hayes attended RADA, graduating in 1928. She spent the next 10 years in repertory theatre.[3]

She was featured in many radio and television comedy shows between 1940 and 1996, including Hancock's Half Hour, Ray's a Laugh, The Arthur Askey Show, The Benny Hill Show, Bootsie and Snudge, Hugh and I and Till Death Us Do Part. She played the part of Henry Bones in the BBC Children's Hour radio programme Norman and Henry Bones, the Boy Detectives from 1943 to 1965.

Hayes was cast in supporting roles for films including The Bargee (1964), The NeverEnding Story (1984), A Fish Called Wanda (1988) and was also featured as Fin Raziel in the Ron Howard film Willow (1988).

Her most substantial television appearance was in the title role of Edna, the Inebriate Woman (Play for Today, 1971) for which she won a BAFTA award. She provided the character voice for comedy puppet performances for television programmes such as Gran (Woodland Animations, 1982).

In April 1975, Hayes was interviewed by Roy Plomley for Desert Island Discs. A sizeable, but incomplete, extract is available to listen to and download via the programme's website on the BBC.[4]

In 1977, she appeared on the BBC's long running TV variety show The Good Old Days; she had been an early member of the Players' Theatre in London, an old time music hall club, from the 1950s onwards.

In 1978, Hayes was nominated for the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Actress in a Supporting Role for playing Rosalina in Filumena at The National Theatre.[5]

In 1985, she starred in the title role of the TV play Mrs Capper's Birthday by Noël Coward.[6]

In 1989, she appeared with her son Richard O' Callaghan in the Boon episode "The Rise of Fall of the Bowman Empire", where they played mother and son, Elsepth and Cecil Bowman respectively. [7]

Hayes played Miss. Willow, in one episode of the 1991 radio show, The Secret Life of Rosewood Avenue.

Personal life

The grave of Patricia Hayes at the Watts Cemetery Chapel in 2026

She was the mother of British actor Richard O'Callaghan (born Richard Brooke) by her marriage to Valentine Brooke, whom she divorced. She also had a daughter, Gemma Brooke, born in 1948. She never remarried. She was formerly the head of the British Catholic Stage Guild, which her son later chaired.

She was awarded an OBE in 1987.[3]

Death

Patricia Hayes died in September 1998 in Puttenham, Surrey.[2] She appeared posthumously in the 2002 film Crime and Punishment which had been filmed in 1993, but delayed because of a legal case.[8] She is buried at the Watts Cemetery Chapel, Compton, Surrey.[9]

Television roles

Year Title Role Notes
1938 When We Are Married Ruby Birtle
1957 to March 14, 1979 The Benny Hill Show Various (TV series)
1957 to 1958 Educated Evans Emma Troggs 9 episodes
1958 to 1960 Hancock's Half Hour Mrs. Cravatte/ Aunt Edie/ 3rd Old Woman 7 episodes
1959 The Four Just Men Miss Lee "National Treasure" (ep 1.13)
1960 to 1963 Bootsie and Snudge Various 5 episodes
1962 to 1966 Hugh and I Griselda Wormold
The Arthur Haynes Show Various 21 episodes
1962 to 1967 The Ken Dodd Show Various 6 episodes
1963 Maigret Didine Gulot "The Judge's House" (ep 4.9)
Boyd Q.C. Miss Twiss "End of Term" (ep 6.11)
1967 to 1969 The Very Merry Widow Katie
1967 to 1975 Till Death Us Do Part Mrs. Carey/ Min Evans 14 episodes
1968 Misleading Cases Mrs Jackson "Ill Met by Sunlight" (ep 2.5)
1968 to 1969 According To Dora Various 3 episodes
1968 to 1969 The World of Beachcomber Various 10 episodes
1969 The Galton and Simpson Comedy Joyce "Friends in High Places"
1970 Catweazle Mrs. Skinner "The Wisdom of Solomon" (ep 1.12)
1971 Grasshopper Island Lupus 9 episodes
Edna, the Inebriate Woman Edna Play for Today (ep 2.2)
The Trouble With Lilian Lilian 6 episodes
1971 to 1972 The Last of the Baskets Mrs Basket 13 episodes
1972 The Goodies Hazel, or "Hecate, Queen of Necromancy" "That Old Black Magic" (ep 3.4)
1974 Holiday With Strings Air Hostess TV movie
1975 Softly, Softly: Task Force Anne Hobbes "Female of the Species" (ep 7.8)
1977 London Belongs To Me Connie Coke 7 episodes
Galton and Simpson Playhouse Granny "I Tell You It's Burt Reynolds"
1979 to 1982 Spooner's Patch Old Lady/ Mrs Cantaford 14 episodes
1980 Juliet Bravo Doris Latham "Fraudently Uttered" (ep 1.2)
1981 Till Death... Min Reed 6 episodes
1983 The Witches and the Grinnygog Miss Bendybones 4 episodes
1983 Gran Gran, Narrator 13 episodes
1983 to 1984 The Lady Is a Tramp Old Pat 13 episodes
1984 Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense Gran Waters "And the Walls Came Tumbling Down"
1985 Marjorie and Men Alice Tripp 6 episodes
1986 to 1992 In Sickness and in Health Min Reed 3 episodes
1989 Boon Elsepth Bowman "The Rise and Fall of the Bowman Empire" (ep 3.12)
Casualty Mrs. Calthorn "Banking for Beginners" (ep 4.11)
1990 The Bill Mrs. Croft "Decisions" (ep 6.93)
1993 Lovejoy Lady Alfreston "A Growing Concern" (ep 5.3)
1994 Murder Most Horrid Mrs. Templecombe "Mangez Merveillac" (ep 2.5)
The Ruth Rendell Mysteries Grannie Nauls "The Master of the Moors" (2 parts)
Woof! Great Aunt Sarah "High Temperatures" (ep 7.8)
1995 Heartbeat Flo "Expectations" (ep 5.2)
The Tomorrow People Felicity Triplett 5 episodes

Selected filmography

  • Broken Blossoms (1936) – Minor role (uncredited)
  • Went the Day Well? (1942) – Daisy
  • When We Are Married (1943) – Ruby Birtle
  • The Dummy Talks (1943) – (uncredited)
  • Hotel Reserve (1944) – Woman
  • Candles at Nine (1944) – Gewndolyn – Maid
  • Great Day (1945) – Mrs. Beadle
  • The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (1947) – Phoebe
  • To the Public Danger (1948) – Postmistress
  • Poet's Pub (1949) – Mrs. Lott (uncredited)
  • La Rosa di Bagdad (1949) – Amin (English version, voice)
  • Skimpy in the Navy (1949) – (uncredited)
  • The Enforcer (1951) – Teenager (uncredited)
  • The Love Match (1955) – Emma Binns
  • The Battle of the Sexes (1960) – Jeannie Macdougall
  • Reach for Glory (1962) – Mrs. Freeman
  • Kill or Cure (1962) – Lily – Waitress
  • The Sicilians (1963) – Plane passenger
  • It's All Over Town (1964) – Charlady
  • Saturday Night Out (1964) – Edie's Mother
  • The Bargee (1964) – Onlooker (uncredited)
  • A Ghost of a Chance (1967, Children's Film Foundation) – Miss Woollie
  • The Terrornauts (1967) – Mrs. Jones
  • Can Heironymus Merkin Ever Forget Mercy Humppe and Find True Happiness? (1969) – Grandma
  • Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1969) – Miss Honeybun (uncredited)
  • Carry On Again Doctor (1969) – Mrs. Beasley
  • Fragment of Fear (1970) – Mrs. Baird
  • Raising the Roof (1972) – Aunt Maud
  • Super Bitch (1973) – Mamma the Turk
  • Love Thy Neighbour (1973) – Annie Booth
  • The Best of Benny Hill (1974) – Interviewer ('Words of Comfort') / Marie Quaint
  • Danger on Dartmoor (1980) – Mrs. Green
  • Cymbeline (1982) – Soothsayer
  • The NeverEnding Story (1984) – Urgl
  • Little Dorrit (1987) – Affery
  • Willow (1988) – Fin Raziel
  • A Fish Called Wanda (1988) – Mrs. Coady
  • War Requiem (1989) – Mother
  • The Fool (1990) – The Dowager
  • The House of Bernarda Alba (1991) – Maria Josefa
  • Blue Ice (1992) – Old Woman
  • The Steal (1995) – Mrs. Fawkes
  • Crime and Punishment (2002) – Alyonna Ivanovna, old pawnbroker (final film role; released posthumously)

References

  1. ^ "Actress". Bafta. Retrieved 15 February 2025.
  2. ^ a b Dennis Barker, "Hayes, Patricia Lawlor (1909–1998)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004 available online. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Entertainment | Star Patricia Hayes dies at 88". BBC News. 20 September 1998.
  4. ^ "Patricia Hayes". Desert Island Discs. BBC Radio 4.
  5. ^ "Olivier Winners 1978". Olivier Awards. Retrieved 15 February 2025.
  6. ^ Brennan, Patricia (19 April 1987). "EASTER, CARNEGIE HALL AND HUMOR". Washington Post. Retrieved 14 November 2024.
  7. ^ "Like Mother, Like Son". Reading Evening Post. 17 January 1989. p. 2.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ Paul, Louis (2007). Tales from the Cult Film Trenches: Interviews with 36 Actors from Horror, Science Fiction and Exploitation Cinema. McFarland. ISBN 978-0786429943.
  9. ^ Monumental inscription.