Jack Morris RosenthalCBE (8 September 1931 – 29 May 2004) was an English playwright. He wrote 129 early episodes of the ITV soap opera Coronation Street and over 150 screenplays, including original television plays, feature films, and adaptations.
Early life
Jack Morris Rosenthal was born in a Jewish family on 8 September 1931, in Cheetham, Manchester.[1] He was the younger of two sons to father Sam, a raincoat factory worker, and mother Leah (née Miller) Rosenthal.[1][2] His parents were married in 1927 in Manchester, and were children of Russian Jewish immigrants.[1]
Rosenthal attended the Manchester Jews School in Derby Street, Cheetham. During the Second World War, he was evacuated to Blackpool, Lancashire with an inhospitable family who censored his letters and confiscated his food parcels.[3] His family subsequently moved to Colne, Lancashire, and Rosenthal attended Colne Grammar School.[1] In 1953, after studying English Literature at Sheffield University, he carried out his national service in the Royal Navy as a Russian translator.[4]
Career
Rosenthal worked briefly in advertising before joining Granada Television in 1956.[1][4] He earned his first television credit with Granada in 1961, assigned as a writer of episode 31 of what would become Britain's longest-running soap opera, Coronation Street. Rosenthal became a regular writer for the series and, in addition, began writing for other series.[5] During the 1960s, he contributed material for various television comedy shows, including the satirical That Was The Week That Was.[6] At Granada Television, he wrote a Coronation Street spin-off series for the character Leonard Swindley, played by Arthur Lowe, called Pardon the Expression. Rosenthal also created two comedy series, The Dustbinmen and The Lovers, the latter starring Richard Beckinsale and Paula Wilcox. In 1976, he wrote a drama for ITV, Ready When You Are, Mr McGill, which was remade in 2003.[7][8]
On 23 February 1964, Rosenthal married model Catherine Ward in Blackpool, Lancashire; two years later, the marriage ended in divorce.[1] Rosenthal met actress Maureen Lipman in 1969 in a pub in Manchester while Rosenthal was writing for Coronation Street.[15][16] He married Lipman on 18 February 1973 in Marylebone, London;[17] they had two children, writers Amy and Adam Rosenthal,[15] and lived in a large house in Muswell Hill, north London.[1]
Rosenthal was a lifelong Manchester United fan, listing his recreations in Who's Who as "checking Manchester United's score, minute by minute, on teletext".[3]
Rosenthal's autobiography, By Jack Rosenthal, was published posthumously, and a four-part adaptation by his daughter, titled Jack Rosenthal's Last Act was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in July 2006, starring Maureen Lipman as herself and Stephen Mangan as Rosenthal.
As part of the regeneration of the First Street district in Manchester, a street was named after him, Jack Rosenthal Street, unveiled by his widow in May 2015, next to HOME, a centre of contemporary art, theatre and film.[21][22]