John Bird

2022 - 12 - 28

Post cover
Image courtesy of "RTE.ie"

British actor and comedian John Bird dies aged 86 (RTE.ie)

The Cynthia actor was best known most recently for his TV work on barrister series Chambers, BBC Two series Absolute Power with Stephen Fry and three episodes ...

Bremner said it was "striking" Bird had died on Christmas Eve "nine years, almost to the day" after Fortune, who died aged 74 on New Year’s Eve in 2013. "The reality was that he and his friend and collaborator John Fortune, together with Peter Cook, were pillars of the anti-establishment." The Cynthia actor was best known most recently for his TV work on barrister series Chambers, BBC Two series Absolute Power with Stephen Fry and three episodes of Jonathan Creek, as well as in one episode of One Foot in the Grave.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "The Guardian"

John Bird: actor and comedian dies aged 86 (The Guardian)

Collaborator Rory Bremner pays tribute to Bird, calling him 'one of our greatest satirists'

“Lord knows, satire has missed them this last decade and now that loss is permanent,” he said. On Wednesday, Bremner paid tribute to his former colleague, calling him “one of our greatest satirists”. A statement announcing Bird’s death said he had died “peacefully” at Pendean care home in West Sussex.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Sky News"

Satirist John Bird dies on Christmas Eve – Rory Bremner calls him ... (Sky News)

Rory Bremner, who was part of comedy trio Bremner, Bird and Fortune, hailed John Bird as "one of our greatest satirists".

And one of the last surviving pillars of the anti-establishment. One of the most modest of men and most brilliant of satirists. "Lord knows, satire has missed them this last decade and now that loss is permanent. He was never really happy with his own work - which was surprising," he said. "He was a very private man and quite a shy man. Rory Bremner, who was one member of the trio Bremner, Bird and Fortune, has paid tribute, calling him "one of the greatest satirists".

Post cover
Image courtesy of "hotpress.com"

John Bird, British actor and comedian has passed away aged 86 (hotpress.com)

'I used to watch from the wings and marvel at how the two friends made it look so effortless, so blissfully funny, their skill and enjoyment in the moment ...

And one of the last surviving pillars of the anti-establishment. One of the most modest of men and most brilliant of satirists. "The reality was that he and his friend and collaborator John Fortune, together with Peter Cook, were pillars of the anti-establishment."

Post cover
Image courtesy of "The Guardian"

John Bird obituary (The Guardian)

Satirist and actor whose pairing with John Fortune gave him a long career in popular entertainment.

And he was ideal casting as a university vice-chancellor in Andrew Davies’s series A Very Peculiar Practice (1986), wooing Japanese investment in line with the increased commercialism of higher education in the 80s following government cuts. Bird won two Bafta awards, the first as a performer in 1966, the second, shared with Fortune, in 1997, and was awarded an honorary degree at Nottingham University in 2002. A quiet and thoughtful man, he at first harboured serious ambitions as a theatre director at the Royal Court, home of new theatre writing, where he was an assistant, then associate, director between 1959 and 1963. Never one for the bright lights, Bird admitted to having had periods of drug and alcohol dependency, at one stage claiming that his problems had caused him to become paranoid and indeed suicidal. John was born in Bulwell, Nottingham, the son of Horace Bird, a chemist’s shopkeeper, and his wife, Dorothy (nee Haubitz). And again as Parr, now a knighted admiral of the fleet, he completely blindsided Fortune in suggesting that the large deck of an over-expensive aircraft carrier (“We can’t afford the aircraft and the carrier”) might be used to create swimming pools for the Olympic Games. The final Bremner, Bird and Fortune show was a four-part special in 2008 following the economic crash. Bird was again in his element as a blithely unconcerned investment banker, quizzed by an astonished Fortune on the turbulence in the financial markets as if nothing untoward had happened at all, business as usual, and so on. Bird as Parr, otherwise, could be manifest as a Eurosceptic MP (long before Brexit), and would cut through his own screen of evasive waffle and comic xenophobia to express what he called the innate British dislike of foreigners. While Bremner supplied the acidic vignettes of impersonation, Bird and Fortune perfected an improvisatory double act in which they alternated as interviewer and interviewee, the latter usually named [George Parr, an all-purpose grandee](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nYC0P_NBLZw) from politics, big business, the armed forces and public services; Bird later resurrected one of his African despots as George MParrbe, though without make-up, whose nation was, as far as its exact whereabouts was concerned, a state secret. [John Bird, who has died aged 86](https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/dec/28/john-bird-actor-and-comedian-dies-aged-86), was a central figure in this phenomenon, appearing on stage and television with a voice in various timbres of reasoning dismay, comic self-justification and utter incredulity. Once he had scored a resounding follow-up success with his sketches in Not So Much a Programme (1964-65), Bird’s path was set in popular entertainment.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Independent.ie"

Rory Bremner pays tribute to John Bird as 'one of the greatest satirists' (Independent.ie)

Comedian Rory Bremner has paid tribute to “one of the greatest satirists”, John Bird, who has died at the age of 86.

In 2007, Bird and Fortune revived their show in a special called The Last Laugh which was broadcast on ITV’s The South Bank Show. Bird, Bremner and Fortune also collaborated in BBC shows Now Something Else and The Rory Bremner Show and Channel 4 series Rory Bremner, Who Else? Bremner said it was “striking” Bird had died on Christmas Eve “nine years, almost to the day” after Fortune, who died aged 74 on New Year’s Eve in 2013.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "The Irish Sun"

John Bird dead: Bremner, Bird And Fortune star dies aged 86 as ... (The Irish Sun)

BELOVED comedian John Bird has died at the age of 86, it was announced today as tributes pour in from fellow stars.Bird's friend and comedy partner Ro.

"A wonderful gentleman, hugely talented, incredibly funny and with ALL the stories. x" "The reality was that he and his friend and collaborator John Fortune, together with Peter Cook, were pillars of the anti-establishment."

Post cover
Image courtesy of "thejournal.ie"

Actor and comedian John Bird dies aged 86 (thejournal.ie)

Bird came to the fore as a satirist during the TV comedy boom of the 1960s in England.

And one of the last surviving pillars of the anti-establishment. One of the most modest of men and most brilliant of satirists. Bird came to the fore as a satirist.

Post cover
Image courtesy of "Nova.ie"

John Bird Actor and Comedian Dies Aged 86 (Nova.ie)

The actor and comedian John Bird has died aged 86, his representatives have said. A statement announcing Bird's death said he had died “peacefully” at ...

And one of the last surviving pillars of the anti-establishment. One of the most modest of men and most brilliant of satirists. The star was well-known for his many TV appearances, including those opposite his long time collaborator John Fortune, and for the series Bremner, Bird and Fortune, which also featured Rory Bremner.

Explore the last week