Born:
October 21, 1926
in
Liverpool
Best Known For:
Rising Damp, The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin and the Cinzano adverts with Joan Collins.
Early-life:
Born on 21 October 1926 in Liverpool. He lived above a barber shop owned by his father, and attended The Liverpool Collegiate Grammar School for boys. Rossiter had wanted to carry on his studies by doing modern foreign languages at Liverpool University, but he couldn't afford to go: in 1942 his father, who was a volunteer during the war, was killed in an air raid, so he was left to look after his mother. He was forced to grow up faster than his peers and he spent six years working as an insurance clerk in the claims and accidents department of the Commercial Union Insurance Company. He was a dedicated sportsman: he was a fan of Everton Football Club and he also played squash, tennis and football regularly. At 27 his girlfriend challenged him to do better than everyone at her amateur dramatics group - he had shown a lack of enthusiasm for their talents - and he never looked back. The latecomer showed a remarkable prowess in a number of productions and decided to abandon his mundane nine to five lifestyle to pursue an acting career.
Career:
After shining in stage performances during the 1950s, Rossiter was handed the opportunity to shine on-screen in A Kind of Loving (1962). His comedic timing and dedication to the craft was equally at home on TV with a number of guest appearances on shows such as Z Cars, The Avengers and Steptoe and Son. During this time he continued to work in theatre, memorably starring as Adolf Hitler in 1969 play The Resistible Rise Arturo Ui. It was the 1970s that saw the hardworking star emerge from being a well respected actor within the industry to become a household name. Star turns in Rising Damp and The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin proved he was sitcom master; at the end of the decade he appeared in a number of much-loved adverts for Cinzano with Joan Collins. Rossiter played Collins's bumbling partner who amusingly always wrecks her splendorous attire by emptying copious amounts of the drink all over her. In the 1980s Rossiter continued to star on TV in shows such as Tripper's Day, but his life would tragically be cut short 16 days before his 58th birthday as he had a heart attack backstage at the Lyric Theatre in London during a performance of Loot.
Quote:
"It's not that I can't tolerate fools, I can, providing that I don't have to put up with them for too long."
Trivia:
In 1964 Rossiter married Gillian Raine, who was also an actress, and he was with her until the day he died. Prior to marrying Raine, he wed Josephine Tewson in 1959, but it ended in divorce two years later.