John Herman Louis Burgess (2 February 1933 – 15 November 2010)[1] was an English actor, best known as David Crosbie in Channel 4's long-running soap opera, Brookside, between 1992 and 1998. He also appeared in EastEnders as Donna Ludlow's adoptive father, Gerald for a few episodes in 1988 and 1989.
Early life
Burgess was born John Herman Louis Bogush in Hampstead, north west London, the son of Edith Ferst and Bertram Bogush.[2][3] He had two younger siblings, Michael and Wendy. His paternal grandfather, Morris, who arrived in the UK from Poland at the turn of the 20th century, became a successful travelling jeweller. His maternal grandparents were Hungarian. Burgess was born Jewish but had no faith. He changed his name from Bogush to Burgess after becoming an actor, later explaining that "The principal of RADA tactfully suggested that a rather more English sounding name might be more suitable for the 'anyone for tennis' brand of plays then popular on the British repertory circuit."[3]
Burgess was educated at St. Paul's School in west London. Having completed his National Service in Germany, reaching the rank of officer, Burgess graduated from RADA in 1954, where Joan Collins had been a classmate.[1] He spent a few years cutting his teeth in repertory theatre, including a four-year stint at the Elizabethan Theatre Company. However, disillusioned with life as an actor, Burgess left the profession and set up a menswear company. He and his partner ran it successfully for a decade or so but, by 1969, unhappy with his conventional life, he emigrated to Canada, leaving his wife Lana and three children behind him. Following the successful completion of an English and drama degree at Queen's University in Ontario, Burgess returned to the UK.[1]
Upon coming back to the UK, Burgess had to start from scratch. He initially lived with his brother Michael and his wife in Watford, where he worked in a meat factory. Moving closer to central London, he lived in a Belsize Park bedsit and worked as a uniformed chauffeur.[3]
Under Trevor Nunn's stewardship, Burgess played Lodovico and The Duke of Venice in the much lauded 1989 production of Othello, which was made into a film.[5] For Nunn, he also performed the roles of Scroop in Henry IV, Parts I and II, Duke Frederick in As You Like It and Syringe and Sir John Friendly in The Relapse. Burgess was directed by Ron Daniels in The Lorenzaccio Story,[6] in which he played a goldsmith, The Women Pirates – Ann Bonney and Mary Read, in which he appeared as Forbes, and A Midsummer Night's Dream, in which he performed the role of Egeus. He also played Vesey in Bill Alexander's production of Money and Pistol for Daniels, and again appeared in Henry IV, Parts I and II. In 1978, Burgess played Vlok in David Edgar's play The Jail Diary of Albie Sachs at the Warehouse Theatre in London. The latter play concerned the treatment of the dissident white lawyer Albie Sachs by the apartheid regime in South Africa.[7]
Burgess appeared in an iconic 1983 British Airways advertisement, in which the Manhattan Skyline floats across the screen. In the early 1990s, he played the equivalent of the "Q" character in the James Bond films in one of a series of popular Barclaycard adverts in which Rowan Atkinson starred. The television role for which Burgess became best known was that of David Crosbie in Channel 4's long-running soap opera Brookside. He spent six years on the show, from 1992 to 1998, and received many plaudits for his performance.
He also appeared in the BBC 1 sitcom My Family in 2007, in the episode where the family all appear on The Weakest Link - he had also previously appeared in the My Family 2005 Christmas episode And I'll Cry if I Want To.
Burgess was a lifelong socialist and passionate about actors' rights, serving on the Equity council. He ran the successful campaign for his friend Harry Landis to become president of Equity. In 2002, he played an active role in preventing an "attempted coup" by a group of right wing actors who believed that "had been politicised by Labour members, to the disadvantage of ordinary performers." Burgess also gave his time to the Unity Theatre Trust, an organisation which took over the work of the left-wing Unity Theatre.[1]
Personal life, illness and death
Burgess was married four times. With his first wife, Lana Cyzer, whom he married in 1959, he had three sons, one of which is Andrew.[12] The marriage ended in divorce.
Burgess married Sylvia Findlay, who stayed on in Canada when he moved back to the UK. This marriage also ended in divorce.[1]
Burgess' third marriage was to actress Vivienne Martin, in 1976.
In September 1996, Burgess announced his fourth marriage, to Dorothy Macaulay, who worked in the hotel industry.[13] Their wedding was attended by members of the Brookside cast and covered by Hello! magazine.[14]
In later life Burgess was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and he died from the disease, aged 77, two and a half years after diagnosis, on 15 November 2010.[15]