by Laura Bray
There is a story a friend of mine relates about the time he worked in a theatre in London. On this particular occasion he was working with someone called Lowri.
“Lowri” said my friend thoughtfully, “Lowri Madoc. You aren’t by any chance related to Philip Madoc are you?”
“Oh my God!” said Lowri “You must be from Merthyr!”
“Why?” asked my friend
“Because only people from Merthyr ask if Philip Madoc is my father. The rest of the world asks if Ruth Madoc is my mother!”
Merthyr never forgets its own.
Philip Madoc, born Philip Jones, would have been 90 today – the 5th July 2024. He is probably best remembered now for his classic appearance as a U Boat Captain in “Dad’s Army”, with the much-quoted line to Pike (Ian Lavender) who was being cheeky and singing a variant of “Whistle while you work”:
“Your name vil also go on zee list. Vot is eet?”
Captain Mainwaring responded with the feeder line “Don’t tell ‘im, Pike.”
Madoc, immediate repeated: “Pike!” and wrote it down on his list.
There is special something about Philip Madoc playing a German, as he was fluent in German, having completed a degree in Classics and Modern Languages in Cardiff before moving to the University of Vienna to train as an interpreter. He eventually spoke seven languages including Welsh, English, Russian, German, Swedish, Albanian, Italian and he had a working knowledge of Huron Indian, Hindi and Mandarin. In fact, he was the first foreigner to win the Diploma of the Interpreters Institue in Vienna. However, Madoc tired of interpretation. According to Wikipedia, he said “I did dry-as-dust jobs like political interpreting. You get to despise politicians when you have to translate the rubbish they spout.”
And Dad’s Army was not his only German role; he played Germans several times, for instance in “Operation Crossbow”, “The Spy who Came in from the Cold”, “Manhunt”, “Hell Boats”, “Soft Beds Hard Battles” and “Operation Daybreak”.
Madoc was born in Twynyrodyn, went to Cyfarthfa Castle Grammar school and played for the local cricket and rugby teams as mentioned here, https://www.merthyr-history.com/?p=6854, where there is also a photo of him. After university and his stint in the Language Institute in Vienna, Madoc decided to follow his love of acting and secured a place in RADA. That launched him in the British Theatre and TV industry; he was, what we call in my house, with no disrespect intended, “a jobbing actor” i.e. one, whose face you may not know, or may only partially recognise, but one who has been in everything!
His first break was on stage with the Welsh Theatre Company playing Thomas Cromwell in a 1962 tour of “A Man for All Seasons” and from there he went onto the Royal Shakespeare Company, playing the roles of Iago, Othello and Dr Faust. His television debut was in the 1961 BBC Sunday Night play “Cross of Iron”. He came to internal recognition, however, playing Magua in “Last of the Mohicans” for which he learnt Huron Indian.
Over the next five decades, Madoc was cast as David Lloyd George, in the 1981 TV series; he played Russians, including Trotsky and Stalin; a Welsh speaking detective DCI Noel Bain in “A Mind to a Kill”; he had cameos in “The Good Life” with Richard Briers, and of course “Dad’s Army”. He appeared as King Lear, was cast in various villainous roles in “Doctor Who”, was seen in “The Avengers”, starred as Cadfael in the radio production. He worked with, among others, Judi Dench, Kenneth Branner, Emma Thompson, Fiona Shaw. He appeared in theatre in Stratford on Avon, the West End, and in regional theatres such as Theatre Clwyd in Mold; he did television, he did film, he did radio. He was a versatile, all round actor.
He was also a man of varied and unusual interests. In an interview for the Wolverhampton Express and Star on Thursday 3rd March 1977, he is cited as saying that he played a lot of squash and badminton, and had recently started studying hieroglyphics. From his obituary in the Guardian on 5th March 2012 we learn that he went walking in the Himalayas, camel-trekking in the Gobi Desert and motor-cycling in south-east Asia, and in an interview in the Liverpool Echo on 18th March 1988, he states that he often took holidays in, what was then, the Eastern Bloc countries. And yes, he was married to Ruth Madoc, who was Lowri’s mother, along with her brother Rhys.
Madoc died in 2012, from cancer, aged 77, having worked to the end, and Merthyr’s boy was laid to rest, far from his native land, in London.
Lovely Article. I only met Philip once, at the funeral of my Aunt Evelyn who died c. year 2000. Philip and I were were ‘nephews’ of my Aunt, albeit fairly distant relations. The funeral was at the crematorium above Merthyr on a fairly bleak, cold day. The abiding memory I have, is of Philip ‘performing’ a funeral reading. His voice was incredibly sonorous. No need for a microphone, his voice boomed deeply out and filled the whole hall. A lifetime of developing his acting voice I guess. Never will forget this.
In the early 60s, Bernard Jenkins our English teacher at Cyfarthfa would wax lyrical about the School’s production of the “Scottish Play” and the acting talent of the leading actor, Phillip Jones. For a number of years after the production the papier mache head of Macbeth could be found amongst the theatrical props at the back of the School’s stage.