The actor also played Bert Fry on Radio 4’s The Archers for 25 years
Eric Allan, one of the earlier stars of Emmerdale, has passed away after over 25 years on screen. The veteran actor died at age 85, he played Frank Blakey back when the soap was known as Emmerdale Farm.
After leaving the show in 1974 after his character married Janie Harker in Emmerdale’s first ever wedding, Eric became a soap familiar after playing farmer, Bert Fry, on Radio 4’s The Archers for 25 years. He took over the role of Bert from Roger Hume, who had died the previous year.
The Mirror reports Eric reflected on his career in 2021, saying of Bert: “He’s the character the production team tend to turn to if the storylines are getting too depressing and a bit of light relief is called for.”
The star, who leaves behind wife, Susan, and their son and daughter, was also known for film, Bleak Moments and The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes series. His other notable TV roles included playing tabloid sports editor opposite David Warner in the BBC series Hold the Back Page in 1985.
Eric also starred as Les Fox, one of Bet Lynch’s boyfriends in Coronation Street in 1977 and also played guest roles in Z Cars, The New Avengers, Bergerac, The Bill and EastEnders. Born in 1940, Eric grew up in Yorkshire and Wolverhampton, but his family moved to Canada when he was 15.
The actor returned to the UK when he was 18 to study at famed drama school, RADA. He started out in the industry in Leicester and Nottingham theatres, before spending several years with the Royal Shakespeare Company.
There, Eric worked with director, Mike Leigh, and played the lead in his controversial first feature film, Bleak Moments. In the film, Eric played Peter, the repressed suitor of socially awkward Sylvia (Anne Raitt).
The film was notorious for its scenes of toe-curlingly awkward dating, but, still, audiences loved the characters: “When Anne Raitt says to Eric Allan, ‘I was thinking it would be great if you took your trousers off,’ Leigh recalled of one screening, “well, the audience let out the most almighty cheer.”
Eric also played the quarryman in Leigh’s television film Nuts in May (1976), and appeared in many of Leigh’s stage plays. Writing in his book Mike Leigh on Mike Leigh, the director shared: “Eric is an extremely nice man.”
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