Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Ronald Forfar was a versatile actor who enjoyed a long theatrical career and also appeared many times on TV
Ronald Forfar was a versatile actor who enjoyed a long theatrical career and also appeared many times on TV
Ronald Forfar was a versatile actor who enjoyed a long theatrical career and also appeared many times on TV

Ronald Forfar obituary

This article is more than 3 years old

My friend Ronald Forfar, who has died aged 81, became famous for playing Freddie Boswell in Bread, the BBC sitcom about a working-class family in Liverpool that had 20 million viewers at its peak. An accomplished, versatile actor, he enjoyed a long theatrical career.

Ron was born in Liverpool, the third of four sons of Albert, a merchant mariner, and his wife, Elizabeth (nee Richardson). He would give a bluff account of his early years, which were financially and emotionally difficult.

Educated at Liverpool Collegiate school, Ron spent seven years in the Royal Navy before training at Rada from 1965 to 1967. He played a tragedian in the premier of Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead in Edinburgh in 1966 and for 20 years worked extensively in theatres around the country, including the Bristol Old Vic, the Royal Exchange theatre in Manchester, the Traverse theatre in Edinburgh, Birmingham Rep and the Royal Shakespeare Company. The plays in which he appeared were mainly of a classical nature or “serious” modern drama, such as Yuri Lyubimov’s famous and painful production of Crime and Punishment at the Lyric in Hammersmith.

A year with the BBC Radio Theatre was followed by a successful television career, including parts in The Sweeney, Tutti Frutti, ChuckleVision, The New Avengers and Alan Bleasdale’s The Muscle Market (1981). His television work culminated in Carla Lane’s Bread.

Ronald Forfar, far right, as Freddie Boswell in Carla Lane’s sitcom Bread. Photograph: Allstar/BBC

Ron wrote many unperformed plays and film scripts. One piece, One is One, was produced at the Riverside Studios in London when Peter Gill was director there. Over the past ten years Ron was engaged in writing a series of novels about life in the theatre. About the first of these, A Wilderness of Monkeys, self-published in 2014, the actor Richard Griffiths commented: “There are passages that are pure Hazlitt.” Anton Gill wrote that it contained “one of the best sex scenes I’ve ever read”.

From 1996 to 2009 Ron lived in Normandy, where he renovated a dilapidated country cottage near Alençon. He then moved to Paris before returning to live in Rochester, Kent.

To the end Ron was a charismatic and commanding presence, amusing, sharp and cultured company, a warm friend and a kindly neighbour.

Always looking to the future, his final years were spent in thinking about where else he might live, in writing and in engaging with local people. He would discuss politics, books, plays, opera and many other musical genres with his friends.

He is survived by his brother Gordon.

Most viewed

Most viewed