Terence Beesley

Terence Beesley (7 September 1957 – 30 November 2017)[1] was an English actor and writer.

Terence Beesley
Born(1957-09-07)7 September 1957
London, England
Died30 November 2017(2017-11-30) (aged 60)
Somerset, England
OccupationActor, writer
Spouse(s)
Ashley Jensen (m. 2007)
Children1

Early life

He was born in London, to Irish parents, and trained at the City Lit in London in 1980 and then the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.

Career

Television

His television work included Cadfael, The Bill, Where the Heart Is, Heartbeat, Midsomer Murders, EastEnders (as Derek Branning[2] in 1996), Casualty, Down to Earth, Plotlands, She's Out and What Remains. He starred in Peter Kosminsky's 15, The Life and Death of Phillip Knight, and played General Bennigsen in the BBC adaptation of War and Peace.[3]

Theatre

His stage work included British theatre performances as the title role in Shakespeare's Richard III (1995) and as the Vicomte de Valmont in Les Liaisons Dangereuses (1994) for multi Barrymore award winner director Mark Clements and his own adaptation (with Colin Wakefield) of Nikolai Gogol's Diary of a Madman (as a one-man play) at the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester. Along with Jonathan Church and Jules Melvin, he was a founder of the Triptych Theatre Company. Their first production, Jack Shepherd's In Lambeth at the Lyric Studio, received much critical acclaim.

Personal life

He met Ashley Jensen in 1999 during a production at the Manchester Royal Exchange, and they married in California in 2007. He died at the family home in Somerset in November 2017; the news only became known in mid-December. Beesley was found unconscious in a car in his garage. An inquest in 2018 ruled that he took his own life.[4]

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1989The Phantom of the OperaJoseph Buquet
1990Strike It RichCroupier
1994DecadenceGiovanni
1999Human TrafficMoff's Father
2006The ListeningJohn Strobel
2014SharkproofArmen
2016London Has FallenFire Dept. Head

References

  1. Quinn, Michael (22 December 2017). "Obituary: Terence Beesley". the Stage. Retrieved 25 December 2017.
  2. Maya Oppenheim (19 December 2017). "Extras star Ashley Jensen 'devastated' after husband Terence Beesley's sudden death". The Independent. Retrieved 20 December 2017.
  3. "Ashley Jensen 'devastated' after husband Terence Beesley's sudden death". BBC News. 18 December 2017.
  4. "Ashley Jensen's husband took his own life". BBC News. 13 February 2018. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.