Yvonne Gilan

Yvonne Gilan
Born Yvonne Janette Gilan
(1931-10-12) 12 October 1931
London, England
Nationality British
Occupation Actress, writer, vocal coach
Years active 1961-1994
Spouse(s) Michael Gill (m. 1951–1978)
Website http://www.yvonnegilan.co.uk/

Yvonne Gilan (born 12 October 1931) is an English actress who is best remembered for her portrayal of Mme. Peignoir in Fawlty Towers. She was married to the television director Michael Gill and is the mother of the journalist A. A. Gill.

Early Work

In 1964 she wrote a short fantasy film, The Peaches, starring Juliet Harmer, with a small cameo role for her son, Adrian as a bespectacled chess player. The film became the British choice for the Cannes Film Festival, and won several international awards.

Her comic skills were displayed earlier in Alan Bennett's comedy series On the Margin (1966). Gilan's acting career has also included roles in Z-Cars (1967) as Vera Cowley, Dixon of Dock Green (1969), Crossroads (1976) as Eileen Blythe, a few episodes of Dr. Finlay's Casebook (1963–69) in several roles and The House of Elliot as Ruth Bannister. Her film credits include Agatha (1979) as Mrs. Braithwaite, Chariots of Fire (1981) as Mrs. Liddell, and Empire of the Sun (1987) as Mrs. Lockwood.

Fawlty Towers (1975)

Gilan's Fawlty Towers appearance in "The Wedding Party", first transmitted on BBC television on 3 October 1975, was as a French antiques dealer who seemed to have a soft spot for hotel owner Basil Fawlty. He, in turn, indulged her a little, while fending off her hints at a nocturnal encounter while she was under the influence of alcohol ("a little tipsy", as she put it). Her character had an unusual take on his character: "Are you a romantic, Mr. Fawlty..? Well, I think you are. I think beneath that English exterior throbs a passion that would make Lord Byron look like a tobacconist." After announcing that, due to the summer heat, she would sleep "au naturel tonight", subsequently she teased Fawlty that he had left his cassette player in her room as an excuse to gain entry during the night.

In May 2009 G.O.L.D. screened Fawlty Towers: Re-Opened, a show that brought the original Fawlty Towers cast back together for the first time since Torquay's most notorious hotel closed. In the show, Gilan was interviewed and suggested that her French accent sounded more like a Hungarian accent to her now.

Later career

Since 1980 she has worked as a motivational speaker at the Oxford Said Business School, helping leaders improve their presentation and communication skills,[1] and lectures at the Imperial College, London. She has been awarded Fellowships from both the London Business School and the Saïd Business School.

In 2003 Gilan was consulted on picking the right voice for 118 118 directory enquiry service,[2]

Personal life

At Edinburgh University Gilan met Michael Gill, later to have career as a television director and producer; they married in 1951 and had two sons, Adrian and Nicholas, but their marriage was dissolved in 1978.[3] Adrian is now known as A. A. Gill, the British newspaper columnist and writer. Her younger son Nicholas (Nick), a talented chef, unaccountably disappeared in 1998, and has not been heard from since. "He was an incredibly successful Michelin-starred chef, but he had reached rock bottom".[4] In his autobiography, A. A. Gill described Gilan's appearance and characteristics as he recalled them from childhood:

Physical, gamine, a thick shock of short black hair with a heavy fringe. Freckles, dark complexion. A witty, interested, boyish face, but provocative, mocking, with an exhibitionist smile that is not altogether humorous ... Her smile can wither or zap like Dan Dare's ray gun.[5]

Gilan kept the letters that Adrian wrote to her from his boarding school, St. Christopher School, Letchworth, in Hertfordshire, and returned them to him half a century later.[5]

References

  1. "Meet Our Trainers". Retrieved 17 July 2011.
  2. "The Welsh accent". BBC. 21 February 2003. Retrieved 24 May 2009.
  3. Levy, Paul (24 October 2005). "Michael Gill (obituary)". The Independent. Retrieved 23 May 2009.
  4. Rumbelow, Helen (14 March 2005). "Missing persons charity faces closure". The Times. London. Retrieved 20 November 2016. (subscription required)
  5. 1 2 Gill, A.A. (25 October 2015). "Drunks' dreams are never a pretty, relaxed place… I knew all about hallucination". The Sunday Times Magazine. Retrieved 20 November 2016. (subscription required)

External links

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