A
TV Week Article on
the UK show from 16 April 1977.
FANS
of The Likely Lads are seeing
their comic hero James Bolam in
a totally different light — as
star of the ABC's latest
top-rating serial, When The
Boat Comes In. And, in the
grasping, ambitious union
leader, Jack Ford, they're
getting a far truer glimpse of
the real Bolam than they did
when he was the bumbling,
bachelor, bird-chasing Terry
Collier.
There's
an added piquancy in The
Boat, too. Bolam's opposite
female number, Susan Jameson,
who plays his true love Jessie,
is in life the only woman in the
turbulent actor's life. They
have a seven-month-old
daughter and live together in
Fulham, a South London suburb.
The
13-part BBC series —written
mainly by Callan scripter
James Mitchell — is already
proving as much of a ratings
winner in Australia as it did
earlier in Britain. The story
centres on the rise of Jack
Ford, who's just been discharged
from the army after witnessing
the horrors of World War I. It's
1919 and the politicians are
promising everyone a land fit
for heroes to live in. But Jack
is sceptical and his latent
cynicism needs very little to
develop into the characteristic
that dominates his every move.
Along the way he meets Jessie
Seaton, a young socialist-minded
teacher with a strong sense of
duty to the community. Through
her, he's introduced to the rest
of her family, a richly varied
yet remarkably believable clan.
Pervading all is the desperate
poverty and class oppression of
north-east England's Tyneside, a
condition Jack is determined to
leave by whatever means are at
his disposal.
Bolam,
himself, has fallen foul of the
strongly jingoistic Tynesiders
in his time. In 1975, during
filming of a full-length feature
film of The Likely Lads,
he verbally slammed the region
that had helped to make him
famous and which, incidentally,
is his birthplace. "I got
the last possible train up here
and I'll be getting the first
possible train back," he
said. I have no special
sentiment about coming back to
the north-east.-A job is a job
and when it's finished 141 be
glad to get back to my home in
Fulham." Predictably, the
remarks caused a storm of
criticism from the natives.
"He is being ungracious to
a part of the world that has
treated him with
affection," said one irate
councillor. "Bolam rose to
fame on his north-east image.
The Likely Lads are regarded up
here as a bit of Tyneside
folklore, and he has done very
well out of that." But
Bolam was unrepentant. In true
style he simply commented —
through an intermediary, of
course — that he didn't wish
to retract anything but didn't
wish to discuss it,
either."
But
that sums up James Bolam — 37
years old, a professional to the
core and a virtual recluse. He
never gives interviews and is
extremely jealous of the private
life he shares with Susan
Jameson and their daughter. His
extraordinary talent has granted
him superstar status but he has
shunned all its trappings. ,
His
undoubted talent and versatility
was recognised early. James
Mitchell — a prolific fiction
writer even before he received
widespread acclaim for the
Callan series — talks of Bolam
"ticking away like a time
bomb".
"Everyone
seems to work twice as
hard when they are with
him," Mitchell says. He
goes for perfection. If things
don't go right he gets upset.''
But
why the comic Bolam for the
tough role of Jack Ford —- a
man who is determined and
dangerous, but so very
attractive as well? "We
needed someone with an authentic
Geordie accent who could be a
devious charmer," says
Mitchell. 'There was only James,
it had to be him. He's no Robert
Redford, but the ladies love
him. The aggression or the
fantastic charm are there
whenever he wants to turn them
on. "He's also the
unobtainable to women—a man's
man." Dick Clement, who
created The Likely Lads with co-scripter
lan La Frenais, admires Bolam
— now a close friend — as a
serious actor first and foremost
but a puzzle, personally.
"Some actors love the
glamor of it all. He's not
interested," says
Clement. "He just
wants to be judged as an actor
and he's not concerned about the
public knowing what socks he
wears or what cereals he eats
for breakfast."
This
passionate desire for privacy
has naturally spilled over to
Susan Jameson. She, like Bolam,
came up through the tough ranks
of British repertory. She
trained at the Birmingham School
Of Speech And Drama, and had her
first professional appointment
in The Diary Of Ann Frank, in
Somerset. From there, she worked
around the country and appeared
on television numerous times in
series such as Z Cars, The Dick
Emery Show and Coronation
Street.
Bolam's
first stage appearance was at
London's distinguished Royal
Court Theatre and this began a
career that has since spanned
many stage appearances, both in
Britain and New York, and
numerous film performances
including A Kind Of Loving, Half
A Sixpence, Murder Most Foul, 0
Lucky Man and a film version of
In Celebration with Alan Bates.