Frank Kelly facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Frank Kelly
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Born |
Francis Kelly
28 December 1938 |
Died | 28 February 2016 Dublin, Ireland
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(aged 77)
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1968–2015 |
Notable work
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Father Ted (1995–1998)
Evelyn (2002) Yu Ming is Ainm Dom (2003) |
Spouse(s) |
Bairbre Meldon
(m. 1964) |
Children | 7 |
Parent(s) | Charles E. Kelly (father) |
Francis Kelly (28 December 1938 – 28 February 2016) was an Irish actor, singer and writer, whose career covered television, radio, theatre, music, screenwriting and film. He is best remembered for playing Father Jack Hackett in the Channel 4 sitcom Father Ted.
Contents
Early life and career
Kelly was born, in 1938, in Blackrock, south County Dublin, where he lived most of his life. His parents were Kathleen and Charles E. Kelly, cartoonist and founder of the satirical magazine Dublin Opinion. He was educated at Blackrock College and went on to study law at University College Dublin and tried journalism, working for years as a subeditor at Irish newspapers, before moving on to acting. He worked at Dublin's Eblana Theatre with Cecil Sheridan and as a feed to Jack Cruise. Other work included pantomime and reviews.
Kelly's first film role, which was uncredited, was as a prison officer in The Italian Job (1969), escorting Charlie Croker (Michael Caine) out of prison in the film's opening sequence.
He starred in the popular RTÉ children's programme Wanderly Wagon alongside Eugene Lambert and Nora O'Mahoney from 1968 to 1982, playing a number of different characters and writing many of the scripts. It was Kelly's work on Hall's Pictorial Weekly (1970–1982) that established him as one of Ireland's most recognisable faces. He memorably portrayed councillor Parnell Mooney, a send-up of a backward local authority figure in rural Ireland. In 1974, Kelly won a Jacob's Award for his work on the series.
In the early 1980s, he was featured in the RTÉ television programme for those learning Irish Anois is Aris. At the end of the programme he spoke into a telephone, gradually introducing Irish phrases. In 1988, he appeared in the Irish thriller film Taffin.
Father Ted
Kelly was best known outside Ireland for playing Father Jack Hackett in the comedy series Father Ted, which aired in the United Kingdom from April 1995 to May 1998. .....
For his role in Father Ted, he wore contact lenses (to show Father Jack's cataract). People would not eat lunch with him during filming if he was in his Father Jack make-up because the false flaky skin he was wearing would fall off into the food.
Interviewing Kelly in 1997 for The Irish Times, Deirdre Falvey said of him: "In person he could not be further from Father Jack. Urbane, articulate, thoughtful, fit (he swims and hikes), charming company, full of stories, and quite serious, though his conversation is punctuated by the occasional burst of laughter—he is reputably a great slagger with colleagues, and is very well liked."
Later career
From 1999 to 2001, Kelly starred in Glenroe as Maurice and played Henry Doyle (father of Pierce Brosnan's Desmond Doyle) in Evelyn (2002). He appeared in the film Rat in 2000, as a priest called Father Pickle in the TV series Lexx (2001), and also in a short film, Yu Ming Is Ainm Dom, in 2003. That same year, he had a major role as John Smith, leader of the Labour Party, in the UK Television drama The Deal.
In 2007, he acted in the TG4 political drama Running Mate, about an election campaign. He also appeared in the TG4 series Paddywhackery.
On 29 September 2010, it was announced that Kelly had joined ITV1 soap Emmerdale, playing the role of Dermot, Declan Macey's father. Kelly left the soap after five months of filming because he missed his family in Ireland.
A regular stage actor, Kelly toured extensively in the United States and Canada. He provided voice-overs and in his television advertising work, appeared with "Mr Tayto" in an advertising campaign for Tayto crisps.
In 2014, he appeared as judge Justice Cannon in Mrs. Brown's Boys D'Movie.
In September 2015, Kelly published an autobiography called The Next Gig. His reminiscences include those of acting colleagues including Pierce Brosnan and Michael Caine.
Radio comedy
Many of his radio sketches originated from his weekday RTÉ radio show The Glen Abbey Show in the 1970s until the 1990s. Kelly played the part of a culchie, "Gobnait O'Lúnasa", the sketches typically started with the sound of him putting coins in an old freckle coin box, and when the phone rang and was answered, his words were, "Hello! Guess who? Is that you Nuala?" Kelly acted the part of an English BBC reporter interviewing rural inhabitants about local customs, such as watching bacon being sliced, or "ha-hooing" (shouting a rebel yell) competitions. The village was called Ballykilferret and described by the BBC man as being in "the Republic of Eer-ah" (a mispronunciation of Éire).
Music career
In 1982, Kelly released a single, "Christmas Countdown", a comedy monologue based on the Christmas song "The Twelve Days of Christmas" and credited to the pseudonymic Gobnait O’Lúnasa. It reached number eight in the Irish Singles Chart in 1982, and peaked at number 26 in the UK Singles Chart and number 15 in Australia in 1984. He performed the single live on Top of the Pops on 5 January of that year. The single was the opening track on the later album Comedy Countdown.
In 2000 he released Comedy Countdown, an album featuring some of his sketches taken from The Glen Abbey Show. Tracks included the "Ayatollah Ceili Band" (a pun on The Tulla Céilí Band), "Magnum Farce", "Incoming Call", "Festive Spirit", "Hymn of Praise", "Call of the Wild", "Festive Note" and "Siege Mentality".
Death
Kelly died on 28 February 2016, after suffering a heart attack. He revealed he had Parkinson's disease in October 2015, and was recovering from bowel cancer. He had previously survived skin cancer.
His death came exactly 18 years after the death of his Father Ted co-star Dermot Morgan. Speaking at Kelly's funeral, Michael D. Higgins, the President of Ireland, said, "He will forever be remembered for his roles in the theatre and will be recalled with great affection and fondness for his roles on television, including in Wanderly Wagon, Glenroe and the much-loved Hall's Pictorial Weekly."
Kelly and Bairbre, his wife of 51 years who was a drama teacher, had five daughters and two sons.
Filmography
Film
Title | Year | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The Italian Job | 1969 | Prison officer | Uncredited |
Taffin | 1988 | Liam | |
Rock-a-Doodle | 1991 | Grand Duke's Owls | Animated film; Voice |
Hear My Song | 1991 | Taxi Driver #2 | |
War of the Buttons | 1994 | Gorilla's Dad | |
Soft Sand, Blue Sea | 1998 | Inspector Fitzgerald | |
Rat | 2000 | Uncle Matt | |
Evelyn | 2002 | Henry Doyle | |
The Boys from County Clare | 2003 | The Chairman | Alternatively titled The Great Ceili War |
Cowboys & Angels | 2003 | Jerry | |
Turning Green | 2005 | Father O'Hara | |
Waiting For Dublin | 2007 | Thaddius | |
Mrs. Brown's Boys D'Movie | 2014 | Justice Cannon |
Television
Title | Year | Role | Notes |
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Wanderly Wagon | 1968 | Doctor Astro | (a recurring villain) |
Hall's Pictorial Weekly | 1970 | Various characters | |
Second City Firsts | 1975 | Surveyor | Season 4, Episode 2 - "Swallows" |
Teems of Times | 1978 | Giggles Devoy | Season 1 - 4 episodes |
The Irish R.M. | 1984 | Bat Callaghan | Season 2, Episode 2 - "The Dispensary Doctor" |
Remington Steele | 1984 | Willard Skeggs | Season 3, Episode 6 - "Steele Your Heart Away" |
Screen Two | 1994 | Hotel priest | Season 10, Episode 5 - "O Mary This London" |
Father Ted | 1995–1998 | Father Jack Hackett | 3 seasons - 25 episodes |
Miracle at Midnight | 1998 | Stranger | Television film |
Aristocrats | 1999 | George Selwyn | Miniseries - 2 episodes |
Glenroe | 1997–1999 | Maurice Nolan | Season 14 & Season 17 - 5 episodes |
Revolver | 2001 | Various characters | Season 1 |
Lexx | 2001 | Father Pickle | Season 4, Episode 6 - "The Rock" |
The Deal | 2003 | John Smith | Television film |
Malice Aforethought | 2005 | Mr. Gunnell | Television film |
The Running Mate | 2007 | Pauly O'Sullivan | Miniseries - 4 episodes |
Paddywhackery | 2007 | Eddie Grant/Freddy Grant | Season 1 - 6 episodes |
Val Falvey TD | 2009 | Willy Nilly | Season 1, Episode 6 - "Dis Dat Dese Dose" |
Emmerdale | 2010–2011 | Dermot Macey | 43 episodes |
Short film
Title | Year | Role | Notes |
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35 Aside | 1996 | Nasty teacher | |
Fishing the Sloe-Black River | 1996 | The priest | |
Yu Ming Is Ainm Dom | 2003 | Paddy | |
The Unusual Inventions of Henry Cavendish | 2005 | Mr. Thomas Palmerston | |
A Day Out with Gwyn | 2005 | Gwyn Senior | |
Music Memories | 2012 | (Unnamed role) | |
Tea with the Dead | 2014 | Frank Finnegan (voice) | |
69 and Dead | 2015 | Eamon |
Books
- 2015, The Next Gig, Dublin: Currach Press, ISBN: 978-1782-18840-7