Doris Hare

{{Short description|Welsh actress (1905–2000)}}

{{more citations needed|date=May 2019}}

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

{{Use British English|date=September 2015}}

{{Infobox person

| honorific_suffix = MBE

| image = Doris_Hare.jpg

| caption =

| birth_name = Doris Breamer Hare

| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=y|1905|03|01}}

| birth_place = Bargoed, Wales

| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|2000|05|30|1905|03|01}}

| death_place = Northwood, London, England

| othername =

| occupation = {{hlist|Actress|comedian|singer|dancer}}

| yearsactive = 1908–1995

| spouse = {{marriage|John Roberts|1941|1973|end=divorced}}

| children = 2

}}

Doris Breamer Hare (1 March 1905 – 30 May 2000) was a Welsh{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01p96bb|title=Welsh Greats, Series 6, Doris Hare|publisher=BBC|access-date=17 February 2024}} actress, comedian, singer, and dancer best known for portraying Ethel Butler in the British sitcom On the Buses and its film spin-offs, after replacing the original actress Cicely Courtneidge.{{cite book|author=Harris M. Lentz|title=Obituaries in the Performing Arts|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PZ8HAQAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=McFarland & Company|isbn=978-0-7864-1024-8|page=100}}

Early life

Hare was born in Bargoed, Glamorgan. Her parents had a portable theatre in South Wales and it seemed inevitable that she would become a part of it, making her debut at the age of three in Queen's Evidence and appearing in juvenile troupes all over Britain as a child, before going solo as 'Little Doris Hare', appearing in music hall, variety, cabaret, revues and pantomimes. One of five, her brother, Bertie Hare and her sisters, Betty Hare and Winifred Breamer, were also actors and performers.

Career

In 1930, the actress toured in The Show's the Thing, taking the part previously performed by Gracie Fields. In 1932, she appeared in the West End in Noël Coward's show Words and Music, alongside John Mills. In 1936, she made her Broadway debut in Night Must Fall. During World War II, she joined Evelyn Laye to put on a revue for the troops and compered Shipmates Ashore on the BBC Forces Programme for the Merchant Navy. She was subsequently appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 1946 Birthday Honours "for services to the Merchant Navy".{{London Gazette|issue=37617|date=18 June 1946|supp=y|pages=3133}}

In 1958, she created the role of Grannie Tooke in the original production of Sandy Wilson's musical version of Valmouth at the Lyric Hammersmith, which transferred to the West End. She also performed on the recording of this production made by Pye Records in 1959, where she duetted with Cleo Laine, who was standing in for Bertice Reading. In 1982, the musical was revived at the Chichester Festival Theatre and Hare, Bertice Reading, Fenella Fielding and Marcia Ashton all reprised the roles they had played in the original production.

In 1963, she joined the Royal Shakespeare Company and in 1965 she joined the National Theatre Company at the Old Vic. She acted in plays by Shakespeare, Shaw, Pinero, and Pinter.

She was offered the role of Ena Sharples in the serial Coronation Street in 1960, but she turned it down and it was given to Violet Carson. Hare did however play a smaller role in the series in 1968–69 as Alice Pickens, who was due to marry Albert Tatlock, but the wedding never took place.

That same year Hare came to national attention in the role of Ethel Butler in On the Buses, taking over the part from Cicely Courtneidge in the second series of the ITV comedy. The series ran until 1973 and spawned three spin-off films On the Buses (1971), Mutiny on the Buses (1972) and Holiday on the Buses (1973) in which Hare reprised her small-screen role. The cast also performed a stage version of the series in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, in 1988.

In 1974, Hare spent a year in the West End farce No Sex Please, We're British and made her final stage appearance, aged 87, at the London Palladium alongside Sir John Mills in a tribute show to Evelyn Laye.

Hare received a Variety Club of Great Britain Special Award for her contributions to showbusiness in 1982.

Death

Hare died in 30 May 2000, aged 95, at Denville Hall, in Northwood, London.

Filmography

class="wikitable"
Year

! Title

! Role

! Notes

1935Night MailUncredited
1935Jubilee WindowUncredited
1935Opening Night
1938Luck of the NavyMrs. Maybridge
1939DiscoveriesBella Brown
1939She Couldn't Say NoAmelia Reeves
1948It's Hard to Be GoodMinor RoleUncredited
1948Here Come the HuggettsMrs. Fisher
1949The History of Mr. PollyMay Pant
1950Dance HallBlonde
1953Thought to KillAgnes
1954Double ExposureWPC
1955Tiger by the TailNurse Brady, hospital property clerk
1955No SmokingCustomer
1957Strangers' MeetingNellie
1958Another Time, Another PlaceMrs. Bunker
1960The League of GentlemenMolly Weaver
1964A Place to GoLil Flint
1964Esther WatersMrs. Randall1 episode
1969–1973On the Busesrowspan="4"|Mabel "Mum" Butler67 episodes
1971On the Buses
1972Mutiny on the Buses
1973Holiday on the Buses
1975Confessions of a Pop Performerrowspan="3"|Mrs. Lea
1976Confessions of a Driving Instructor
1977Confessions from a Holiday Camp
1980Why Didn't They Ask Evans?Rose PrattTV movie
1986Never the Twain
1990Nuns on the RunSister Mary of the Sacred Heart
1994Second BestMrs. Hawkins(final film role)

References

{{Reflist}}