
Raymond Mason
Department: Acting
Biography
During Raymond Mason’s 20 years of acting in the ITV soap opera Crossroads, he played five different roles. “I don’t think anyone ever noticed,” he said, “and I don’t put it down to versatility.” For trained actors in the days when there was just a handful of drama colleges and fewer vocational courses, the pool of talent was by definition smaller. Many performers found themselves appearing more than once in the same programmes. For Raymond, the roles that he played on British television over 40-odd years numbered more than 1,000, and he appeared in scores of commercials at home and overseas. One of the reasons for Raymond’s success was that he was comfortable in a supporting role and, crucially, adept at not stealing a scene. Through a combination of timing and practised self-effacement he allowed the main star, or joke, to shine. Modest about taking the credit, he effectively enabled the skit. In the late 1960s and 1970s, when comedy was spread across just three TV channels, Raymond appeared in Saturday-night programmes including The Morecambe & Wise Show — he described the double act as “a joy”, The Two Ronnies and alongside Frankie Howerd, Les Dawson and the like. In a 1979 episode of Fawlty Towers called The Kipper and the Corpse, his character attempts to retrieve his hat while Basil is trying to hide the body of a deceased guest. John Cleese later described him as “one of my favourite actors”. The middle child between an older and a younger sister, Raymond was born in 1924 in Great Bridge, Staffordshire, and brought up in Tettenhall near Wolverhampton. His exposure to light entertainment started at an early age as his father, George, who had fought in the First World War, played the piano and organ, wrote his own compositions and was a local bandleader. After shutting up the fish and chip shop in Wolverhampton that he owned with his wife, Elizabeth, George would stuff a keyboard glockenspiel into his bike’s front carrier and set off
Known For

Brannigan
1975

Piano Lessons
1976

The Loving Lesson
1971

Bartleby
1970

Loophole
1981

Smith and Jones: The Home-Made Xmas Video
1987

Hamlet
1980

Cries from a Watchtower
1979

John David
1982

A Photograph
1977

Kiss Me and Die
1974

Young Winston
1972

The Wild Duck
1971

Crown Court
1972

Fawlty Towers
1975

Rita Rudner
1990

Muck and Brass
1982

Wycliffe
1994

Terry and June
1979

The Good Life
1975

Enemy at the Door
1978

House of Cards
1990

The Darling Buds of May
1991

Budgie
1971

BBC Play of the Month
1965

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
1967

Nicholas Nickleby
1977

The Chief
1990

Hunters Walk
1973

Sense and Sensibility
1981

The Afternoon Play
2003

Theatre 625
1964

Churchill's People
1974

Mystery and Imagination
1966

Centre Play
1973

Holly
1972

The Legend of King Arthur
1979