Robin Stewart (9 October 1946 – 22 November 2015)[2] was an English actor, game show host and reporter who was best known for playing Mike Abbott, the son of Sid James' character Sid Abbott in the 1970s sitcom Bless This House.
Early life
editStewart was born Robin Guy Henry Steuer in Calcutta, British India to a Czechoslovakian father, Maximilian Steuer (1902-1978) and British mother, Dorothy Evelyn Beer (1906-1966).[citation needed]
Career
editStewart acted on television and in feature films in both the UK and Australia. Some of his British film roles include Tamahine, The Haunted House of Horror, Cromwell, Adventures of a Private Eye, and The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires as Leyland Van Helsing.[3]
He played the role of Mike Abbott in sit-com series Bless This House during its entire 1971–76 run; due to prior commitments he did not feature in the film version of the series. After being asked to go to New Zealand for a telethon and subsequently taken back to host his own show, Stewart ended up being asked to relocate where he became involved with such soaps as The Young Doctors as a villainous character trying to silence a blind patient who had overheard his criminal acts, and Sons and Daughters as the villainous doctor Ross Newman.[4]
Other roles in Australia included a lead role in sex comedy feature film Pacific Banana (1981), and an appearance in prison based soap opera Punishment. He was also one of the main characters in The Timeless Land, playing the role of John MacArthur. He played one of the supporting roles in the rock series Sweet and Sour for ABC; co-hosted Good Morning Sydney with Maureen Duval. Briefly he was the advertising executive for Rolling Stone magazine. He briefly co-produced weekly magazine program Midweek Live for DDQ TV in Toowoomba with presenter Craig Berkman in early 1990. For 18 months Stewart was the senior producer for FNQTV in Cairns.[citation needed]
Personal life
editAfter two brief earlier marriages (the second to magazine fashion editor, Fiona Partridge), he married Roberta "Bertie" Daler in 2012 and they had one daughter. Stewart suffered a stroke in 2003 and, having been a 60 cigarettes a day smoker, also developed emphysema.[5]
His death on 22 November 2015 was announced on his official website. He was 69 years old.[6]
Filmography
editFilm
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1961 | Greyfriars Bobby | Jodie Ross | Uncredited |
1962 | H.M.S. Defiant | Pardoe | |
1962 | Masters of Venus | Jim | |
1963 | Tamahine | Fiend | |
1965 | Be My Guest | Mathews | |
1969 | The Haunted House of Horror | Henry | |
1970 | Cromwell | Charles, Prince of Wales | |
1974 | The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires | Leyland Van Helsing | |
1976 | Sextet | Bernie | |
1977 | Adventures of a Private Eye | Scott | |
1981 | Pacific Banana | Paul | |
1983 | Get Crazy | Nada Band | |
1995 | The Blue Villa | Client |
Television
editYear | Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1960 | Deadline Midnight | Peter Czinski | Episode #1.12 |
1961 | Vice Versa | Tipping | Television film |
1968 | Dixon of Dock Green | Shoe-Shop Assistant | Episode: "A Quiet Sunday" |
1968 | The Very Merry Widow | Waiter | Episode: "Judgement in Paris" |
1969 | Softly, Softly | Indiopellus | Episode: "Persistence" |
1969 | Rembrandt | Titus | Television film |
1971–1976 | Bless This House | Mike Abbott | 65 episodes |
1972 | The Troubleshooters | Spence | Episode: "Whatever Became of the Year 2000?" |
1975 | Whodunnit? | Harry Cook | Episode: "Pop Goes the Weasel" |
1977 | Leap in the Dark | Ernst | Episode: "The Fetch" |
1980 | The Timeless Land | John Macarthur | 8 episodes |
1981 | The Young Doctors | Malcolm Fielding | Episode #1.1019 |
1982 | Oliver Twist | Voice | Television film |
1983 | A Christmas Carol | ||
1983 | Sherlock Holmes and the Sign of Four | ||
1983 | Sherlock Holmes and the Valley of Fear | ||
1983 | Sherlock Holmes and the Baskerville Curse | Jack Stapleton | |
1983 | Great Expectations | Voice | |
1983 | David Copperfield | ||
1984 | Five Mile Creek | Scale | Episode: "Tricks of the Trade" |
1984 | A Tale of Two Cities | Voice | Television film |
1984 | Sweet and Sour | Brian Kawolski | 4 episodes |
1984–1985 | Sons and Daughters | Ross Newman | 29 episodes |
1985 | Runaway Island | Gonzalez | 2 episodes |
1985 | Nicholas Nickleby | Voice | Television film |
2003 | Welcher & Welcher | Alf | 8 episodes |
References
edit- ^ "Robin Stewart". IMDb.
- ^ "The Official Robin Stewart Website | Home". 24 November 2015. Archived from the original on 24 November 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
- ^ "Robin Stewart". BFI. Archived from the original on 29 September 2018.
- ^ Website Sons and Daughters People Cast List
- ^ "Lost and found". Sydney Morning Herald. 8 December 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
- ^ "Robin Stewart, British actor, Died at 69 | History's Greatest". 25 November 2015.
External links
edit- Robin Stewart at IMDb
- Robin Stewart (Aveleyman)