Caldicott_and_Charters

Charters and Caldicott

Charters and Caldicott

Fictional characters


Charters and Caldicott started out as two supporting characters in the 1938 Alfred Hitchcock film The Lady Vanishes. The pair of cricket-obsessed characters were played by Naunton Wayne and Basil Radford. The characters were created by Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat. The duo became very popular and were used as recurring characters in subsequent films and in BBC Radio productions. Charters and Caldicott have also been played by other actors, and they eventually had their own BBC television series.

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Radford and Wayne's appearances

In their first appearance, in the 1938 Alfred Hitchcock film The Lady Vanishes, Charters and Caldicott are single minded cricket enthusiasts, whose only initial concern is to get back to England to see the last days of a Test match. They proved so popular with audiences that they returned in the Gilliat-and-Launder film Night Train to Munich (1940). They also appeared in two BBC radio serials, Crook's Tour (1941, also made into a film later that year) and Secret Mission 609 (1942).

In Crook's Tour, their names are shown entered in a hotel register as Hawtrey Charters and Sinclair Caldicott. Their last screen billing as Charters and Caldicott was in Millions Like Us (1943). They were intended to reappear in I See a Dark Stranger (1946, Launder), but Launder and Gilliat refused to give them the larger roles in the film that Radford and Wayne demanded, as befitting the high-profile actors they had then become. As a result, the actors opted out of the film and two similar but differently named characters were substituted.[1] This falling out, however, left Radford and Wayne contractually disallowed from portraying the characters under the names "Charters" and "Caldicott".[2]

Despite this, Wayne and Radford continued in the same vein, playing similar double acts in several more movies, such as Dead of Night (1945, sequence directed by Charles Crichton), A Girl in a Million (1946, Francis Searle) and Passport to Pimlico (1949, Henry Cornelius). The cricket-mad Bright and Early in It's Not Cricket (1949, Alfred Roome), are particularly similar to Charters and Caldicott.

In the first draft of Graham Greene’s screenplay for The Third Man, two Charters and Caldicott type characters called Carter and Tombs were originally intended to be in the film.[3] Carter and Tombs were to be played by Radford and Wayne but by the final draft they had been condensed into one character, Crabbit, played by Wilfred Hyde-White in the final movie.[4]

In Jonathan Coe's novel Expo 58, a pair of Foreign Office employees called Radford and Wayne appear, in a nod to Charters and Caldicott.[5]

Film appearances

Following are the rest of Radford and Wayne's film appearances together. Most of these movies arguably utilised Charters and Caldicott's characteristics and certainly capitalised on the popularity of the actors' partnership. The characters' names are listed with Radford's role first.

Stage appearances

Due to the success of The Lady Vanishes, Radford and Wayne soon appeared on the London stage in the play Giving the Bride Away by Margot Neville (pseudonym for Margot Goyder and Anne Neville Joske in collaboration with Gerald Kirby). The play opened on 1 December 1939 and ran for 57 performances.[6]

Radio appearances

As with their film appearances, Radford and Wayne appeared in various guises on radio. They were still essentially Charters and Caldicott, but with their characters renamed for rights reasons. Self-contained eight-part radio series, made roughly annually, were very popular on BBC radio at the time and they starred in the following:

  • As "Woolcott and Spencer" in Double Bedlam (1946) and Traveller's Joy (1947)
  • As "Berkeley and Bulstrode" in Crime Gentleman, Please (1948)
  • As "Hargreaves and Hunter" in Having a Wonderful Crime (1949)
  • As "Fanshaw and Fothergill" in That's My Baby (1950)
  • As "Straker and Gregg", a continuation of their roles in the film Passport to Pimlico, in May I Have The Treasure (1951) and Rogue's Gallery (1952)

In mid-production on Rogue's Gallery, Radford died suddenly of a heart attack at age 55, leaving Wayne to complete the adventure on his own.

Other portrayals

Hammer films' 1979 remake of The Lady Vanishes, cast Arthur Lowe as Charters and Ian Carmichael as Caldicott.

In 1985 they were the main characters in a BBC television series Charters and Caldicott, set in the modern day, with Michael Aldridge playing Caldicott and Robin Bailey as Charters.

The BBC's 2013 telemovie of The Lady Vanishes, was based on Ethel Lina White's novel The Wheel Spins rather than a remake of Hitchcock's film, and Charters and Caldicott are absent.

See also


References

  1. "Frank Launder".
  2. French, Philip (12 August 2006). "The Third Man". The Guardian.
  3. J.P. Wearing, The London Stage 1930-1939: A Calendar of Productions, Performers and Personnel, 2nd edition (Lanham, Maryland : Rowman & Littlefield, 2014 ISBN 978-0-8108-9303-0), p. 772.

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