Arnold Ridley

{{short description|English playwright and actor (1896–1984)}}

{{Use British English|date=August 2011}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2025}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Arnold Ridley

| image = File:Arnold Ridley 1921.jpg

| caption = Ridley in 1921

| honorific_suffix = OBE

| birth_name = William Arnold Ridley

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1896|01|7|df=yes}}

| birth_place = Walcot, Bath, Somerset, England.{{cite web |url=https://www.freebmd.org.uk/cgi/information.pl?scan=1&r=95249518:4282&d=bmd_1632301591 |title=Birth Index entry |author= |work=FreeBMD |publisher=Office for National Statistics |access-date=6 October 2021 |quote=Register of Births: Jan-Feb-Mar 1896. Surname: Ridley. Given Name: William Arnold. District: Bath. Volume: 5c. Page: 543.}}

| death_date = {{Death date and age|1984|03|12|1896|01|07|df=yes}}

| death_place = Northwood, London Borough of Hillingdon, England.

{{cite web |url=https://www.freebmd.org.uk/cgi/information.pl?cite=VK8HMkO0mcr65qzruKiPPQ&scan=1 |title=Death Index entry |author= |work=FreeBMD |publisher=Office for National Statistics |access-date=6 October 2021 |quote=Register of Deaths: 1984. Surname: Ridley. Given Name: William Arnold. DoB: 07 Ja 1896. District: Hillingdon. Registered: 06.84. Volume: 13. Page: 0934.}}

| years_active = 1918–1984

| nationality = British

| occupation = Actor, playwright

| alma_mater = University of Bristol

| spouse = Hilda Kathleen Mary Cooke
(m. 1926–1939),
{{marriage|Isola Strong
|1939}},
{{marriage|Althea Parker
|1945}}

| resting_place = Bath Abbey Cemetery, Widcombe, Somerset, England

| children = 1

| relatives = Daisy Ridley (great-niece)

| module = {{Infobox military person

| embed = yes

| allegiance = {{Flag|United Kingdom}}

| branch = {{army|United Kingdom}}

| servicenumber = 103363

| serviceyears = {{Plainlist|

  • 1915–1917
  • 1939–1940
  • 1940–1944}}

| unit = Somerset Light Infantry
Caterham Home Guard

| rank = Captain

| battles = First World War

Second World War

| awards =

}}

William Arnold Ridley (7 January 1896 – 12 March 1984){{Cite ODNB|id=53977|title=Ridley, (William) Arnold (1896–1984)}} was an English playwright and actor, known early in his career for writing the 1925 play The Ghost Train and later in life for the British television sitcom Dad's Army (1968–77), in which he played the elderly, bumbling Private Godfrey. He also appeared in such Dad's Army spin-offs as the feature film version and the stage production.

Early life

William Arnold Ridley was born in Walcot, Bath, Somerset, England, the son of Rosa Caroline (née Morrish, 1870–1956) and William Robert Ridley (1871–1931).{{cite web|title=Lance Corporal William Arnold Ridley|url=https://livesofthefirstworldwar.org/lifestory/3740819|website=Lives of the First World War|publisher=Imperial War Museum|access-date=1 March 2016}} His father was a gymnastics instructor and ran a boot and shoe shop. He attended the Clarendon School and the Bath City Secondary School where he was a keen sportsman. A graduate of the University of Bristol,{{cite news |last1=Connolly |first1=Nancy |last2=Linham |first2=Laura |url=https://www.somersetlive.co.uk/news/somerset-news/dads-armys-private-godfrey-played-1671093 |title=Dad's Army's Private Godfrey – played by Bath actor Arnold Ridley – to appear on special set of stamps |date=13 June 2018 |website=SomersetLive |access-date=23 September 2024}} he studied in their Education Department, and played Hamlet in a student production. Ridley undertook teaching practice at an Elementary School in Bristol.{{cite book|year=2009|author=Ridley, Nicholas |isbn=978-1-906132-98-9|title=Godfrey's Ghost From Father to Son|publisher=Mogzilla Life}}

Military service

Ridley was a student teacher and had made his theatrical debut in Prunella at the Theatre Royal, Bristol when he volunteered for service with the British Army on the outbreak of the First World War in August 1914. He was initially rejected because of a hammer toe.[https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/2461831/Dads-Army-stars-First-World-War-heroics.html Dad's Army star's First World War heroics], The Daily Telegraph, 26 July 2008 In December 1915, he enlisted as a private with the Somerset Light Infantry, British Army. He saw active service in the war, sustaining several wounds in close-quarter battle. His left hand was left virtually useless by wounds sustained on the Somme;"Godfrey's secret war horror" p13 of Sunday Telegraph (Issue 2,459- dated 27 July 2008) his legs were riddled with shrapnel; he received a bayonet wound in the groin; and the lasting impacts of a blow to the head from a German soldier's rifle butt left him prone to blackouts after the war.[http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01kblth Excusing Private Godfrey], BBC Radio 4, 6 July 2012. He was medically discharged from the army with the rank of lance corporal in May 1917.Ridley's WW1 medal index card at The National Archive, Kew Surrey. Document code: [https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D4864395 WO 372/17/728]. He received the Silver War Badge having been honourably discharged from the army due to wounds received in the war,{{cite news |last1=Bates |first1=Stephen |title=Silver war badge recipients revealed online |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/nov/10/men-wore-silver-war-badge |access-date=18 August 2023 |work=The Guardian |date=10 November 2011 |quote=Among those receiving such badges were Arnold Ridley, the actor who went on to play the decrepit Private Godfrey in Dad's Army in the 60s and 70s, who was badly wounded on the Somme in 1916. It must have been an irony for Ridley that in one episode of the TV show his character was accused of cowardice, only to have been shown to be a hero during the previous conflict. In reality, as a 20-year-old private, he had received shrapnel and bayonet wounds which disabled his arm and a fractured skull after being hit by a German rifle butt, ending his military service.}} and was awarded the British War Medal and the Victory Medal for his service.

Ridley rejoined the army in 1939 following the outbreak of the Second World War. He was commissioned into the General List on 7 October 1939 as a second lieutenant.{{London Gazette |issue=34732 |date=10 November 1939 |page=7633 |supp=y }} He served with the British Expeditionary Force in France during the "Phoney War", employed as a "Conducting Officer" tasked with supervising journalists who were visiting the front line. In May 1940,[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-35491036 The real-life wars of Dad's Army actor Arnold Ridley.] Bethan Bell, BBC News, 5 February 2016. Retrieved 5 February 2016. Ridley returned to Britain on the overcrowded destroyer HMS Vimiera, which was the last British ship to escape from the harbour during the Battle of Boulogne.{{cite web |url=http://www.cambridgeairforce.org.nz/DadsArmy_Arnolds_Wars.html |title=Arnold Ridley's REAL WARS |last1=Homewood |first1=Dave |date=2008 |website=www.cambridgeairforce.org.nz |publisher=Wings Over New Zealand |access-date=4 May 2014}} Shortly afterwards, he was discharged from the Armed Forces on health grounds. He relinquished his commission as a captain on 1 June 1940.{{London Gazette |issue=34861 |date=28 May 1940 |page=3268 |supp=y }} He subsequently joined the Home Guard, in his home town of Caterham, and ENSA, with which he toured the country. He described his wartime experiences on Desert Island Discs in 1973.[http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p009n8fn Interview with Roy Plomley on Desert Island Discs, 1973] "Desert Island Discs", BBC radio, 1973, retrieved 8 February 2016[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-35491036 The real-life wars of Arnold Ridley], BBC News website, retrieved 8 February 2016

Acting career

After his medical discharge from the army in 1916, Ridley commenced a career as a professional actor. In 1918 he joined the company of the Birmingham Repertory Theatre, staying for two years and playing 40 parts before moving on to Plymouth, where he took a break from the stage when his war injuries began to trouble him.

After being stranded for an evening at Mangotsfield railway station, near Bristol, Ridley was inspired to write the play The Ghost Train (1925), a tale of passengers stranded at a haunted railway station in Cornwall, with one of the characters being an incognito British Government agent trying to catch Bolshevik revolutionaries active in Great Britain. The play became a hit, with 665 consecutive performances in London's West End, and numerous revivals. The first credited film version was a German-British silent film, The Ghost Train, in 1927. The Ghost Train was also filmed in 1931, with Jack Hulbert, and again in 1941, when it starred Arthur Askey. A novelisation of The Ghost Train was published by The Readers Library Publishing Company, in 1927. Ridley also wrote more than 30 other plays, including The Wrecker (1924), Keepers of Youth (1929), The Flying Fool (1929) and Recipe for Murder (1932).Obituary, The Times, 14 March 1984Amnon Kabatchnik Blood on the Stage, 1975–2000: Milestone Plays of Crime 2012 -. – Page 554 "A dastardly blackmailer is shot and poisoned simultaneously in Arnold Ridley's Recipe for Murder (1932)."

During his time in military service in the Second World War he adapted the Agatha Christie novel Peril at End House into a West End play that premiered in 1940. Ridley's post-war play, Beggar My Neighbour, was first performed in 1951[http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsR/ridley-arnold.html "Plays by Arnold Ridley"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170830121635/http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsR/ridley-arnold.html |date=30 August 2017 }}, Doollee website and adapted for the Ealing Comedy film Meet Mr. Lucifer (1953).

Ridley worked regularly as an actor, including an appearance in the British comedy Crooks in Cloisters (1964). He also played Doughy Hood, the village baker, in the radio soap opera The Archers and the Rev. Guy Atkins in the ATV soap Crossroads from the programme's inception in 1964 until 1968. However, he became a household name only after he was cast as Private Godfrey, the gentle platoon medic in the television comedy series Dad's Army (1968–1977). He continued to appear into his eighties, and was appointed an OBE in the 1982 Queen's New Year Honours List, for services to the theatre.

He was the subject of This Is Your Life[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxpGME3OYw8, Arnold Ridley, This Is Your Life], Thames Television, 1976 in 1976 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at London's Marylebone Station.

Personal life

Ridley was married three times. His first marriage lasted from January 1926 to 1939, and was followed by a short marriage to Isola Strong, an actress (It's Hard to Be Good), at Kensington in 1939,Nicolas Ridley Godfrey's Ghost, Mogzilla, 2009 pp.191–93 before his final marriage to actress Althea Parker (1911–2001) on 3 October 1945;Nicolas Ridley Godfrey's Ghost, Mogzilla, 2009 p.194 they had one son, Nicolas (b. 1947).Nicolas Ridley Godfrey's Ghost, Mogzilla, 2009 p.1 He was a Freemason, and belonged to the Savage Club Lodge in London.See reference on the Lodge's [http://www.savageclublodge.com official website].Report of actor's son, Nicolas Ridley, [http://www.actonw3.com/default.asp?section=info&page=congodfreysghost001.htm discussing] his father.Report in UGLE magazine [http://www.mqmagazine.co.uk/issue-11/p-20.php MQ]. The actress Daisy Ridley is his great-niece.

A keen rugby player in his youth, he was President of Bath Rugby from 1950 to 1952.{{Cite web|url=https://www.bathrugbyheritage.org/content/heritage-topics/people/administrators/bath-president-1950-1952-william-arnold-ridley-obe|title=Ridley William Arnold OBE MM}}

Death

Ridley died in hospital in Northwood in 1984 at the age of 88 after falling at his residence in Denville Hall, a home for retired actors.The Times, death announcement, 13 March 1984 His body was cremated at the Golders Green Crematorium and an urn holding his ashes was buried in his parents' grave at Bath Abbey Cemetery. His collection of theatrical memorabilia was left to the University of Bristol and has been made available online.{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/bristol/somerset/7173762.stm|title=Dad's Army star's archive online|date=11 September 2018|work=BBC News}}{{cite web|url=http://www.bris.ac.uk/theatrecollection/ridley.html|title=Arnold Ridley Archive – Theatre Collection – University of Bristol|first=University of|last=Bristol|website=www.bris.ac.uk}}

Works

=Plays=

  • The Ghost Train (1923)
  • The Wrecker (with Bernard Merivale, 1924)
  • Old Leeds (1928)
  • The Flying Fool (with Bernard Merivale, 1929)
  • Keepers of Youth (1929) (filmed in 1931)
  • Third Time Lucky (1932)
  • Half a Crown (1934)
  • Recipe for Murder (1936)
  • Peril at End House (1945, from Agatha Christie novel)
  • Easy Money (1948)
  • East of Ludgate Hill (1950)
  • Murder Happens (1951)
  • The Return (1953)
  • Mrs Tredruthan's Son (1953)
  • Beggar My Neighbour (1953)
  • Geranium (1954)
  • Tabitha (1956) (written with Mary Cathcart Borer){{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5g2PBAAAQBAJ&q=tabitha+arnold+ridley+london+stage+1950-1959&pg=PA419|title=The London Stage 1950–1959: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel|first=J. P.|last=Wearing|date=16 September 2014|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=9780810893085|via=Google Books}}
  • You, My Guests (1956)
  • Bellamy (1960)
  • Hercule Poirot Strikes (1967, from Agatha Christie novel)from WorldCat

=Film adaptations (original author)=

=Screenwriter=

Filmography

=Films=

class="wikitable"

! Year !! Title !! Role !! Notes

1949The Interrupted JourneyMr SaundersUncredited
1951Green Grow the RushesTom Cuffley
1952Stolen FaceDr Russell
1963Wings of MysteryMr BellChildren's Film Foundation
1964Crooks in CloistersNewsagent
1966A Man for All SeasonsInnkeeperUncredited
1971Dad's ArmyPrivate Godfrey
1973Carry On GirlsAlderman Pratt
1975The Amorous MilkmanCinema Attendant

=Television=

class="wikitable"

! Year !! Title !! Role !! Notes

1959CharlesworthBank Clerk
1964–1968CrossroadsRev. Guy Atkins
1965The Human JungleMr SwinnertonEpisode: "Heartbeats in a Tin Box"
rowspan="5" | 1967

| The Avengers

Elderly Gentleman at lakeEpisode: Never, Never Say Die
Z-CarsGardenerEpisode: I Never Meant to Drop Him: Part 1
Coronation StreetHerbert Whittle
Mrs Thursday

|Director

|

Beggar My Neighbour

|Man

|2 episodes

1968–1977Dad's ArmyPrivate Godfrey80 episodes, (final appearance)
rowspan="4" |1968

|Theatre 625

|Tunicliffe

|

The War of Darkie Pilbeam

|Hospital patient

|

The Very Merry Widow

|Sir Frederick Snayle, QC

|

The Caesars

|Nigrinus

|

rowspan="3" |1969

|The Contenders

|Walrus

|

Out of the Unknown

|Munnings

|

Special Branch

|Mr. Turner

|

rowspan="3" |1970

|As Good Cooks Go

|Mr. Charmers

|

The Doctors

|Percy

|

W. Somerset Maugham

|London Club Waiter

|

rowspan="2" |1971

|Crossroads

|Guy Atkins

|

The Flaxton Boys

|Mr. Mooney

|

1972The Persuaders!Uncle RodneyEpisode: The Ozerov Inheritance
1973

|Thriller

|1st Old Man

|

1975

|Hogg's Back

|Old Man

|

References

{{reflist}}