Richard Lumsden

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Richard Lumsden
Born
Richard James Lumsden[1][2]

(1965-06-24) 24 June 1965 (age 56)[2]
Lancashire, England[2]
EducationLady Manners School
Alma materGuildford School of Acting
OccupationActor, writer, composer, musician
Years active1988–present
Spouse(s)
(m. 1995; sep. 2015)
[3]
Children2
Websiterichardlumsden.com

Richard James Lumsden (born 24 June 1965) is an English actor, writer, composer and musician. He played Nathan in Channel 4's drama Sugar Rush and on radio he plays Ray in Clare in the Community.

Career[]

Television[]

Lumsden's television work includes Colin in three series of Is it Legal?, Henry in Wonderful You (both for ITV); Foggy in two series of First of the Summer Wine, Charles in All About Me, Nutter in The Sharp End and Roger in The House That Jack Built, all for the BBC. He has appeared as Martin in series three of The Catherine Tate Show, and Arnold, an ex-boyfriend of Clare Bates in EastEnders. He also appeared as David Farmer on season 15 of Midsomer Murders, episode "The Sicilean Defense".

In December 2013, the television channel Sky Atlantic aired a new comedy series called Little Crackers. The second programme in the series was an autobiographical story written by Rebecca Front and her brother Jeremy. The story centres on the time Front witnessed a serious incident when her father, Charles, was nearly drowned in a lake. The role of Front's father was played by Lumsden. In 2015, he replaced James Bachman as Tony McDonald in the children's comedy-drama series Millie Inbetween.

Film[]

Lumsden appeared in the films Sense and Sensibility, The Avengers, Room To Rent, Silent Cry, Gospel of John, Attila The Hun, and Life of Riley.

In 2014, Lumsden starred in the independent British feature film Downhill, a comedy about four men attempting Alfred Wainwright's Coast to Coast Walk.

Theatre[]

He performed his own one–man musical play We Could Be Heroes at the Bridewell Theatre in 2004. His repertory theatre work at Stoke-on-Trent and Basingstoke included Master Harold & The Boys, the title role in Hamlet, As You Like It, King Lear, A Trip To Scarborough, Amadeus, Juno and the Paycock, Far From The Madding Crowd and Having A Ball. He played Roche in Rat in the Skull at Theater Exchange, Minneapolis, and John Thorpe in Northanger Abbey at Greenwich. At the Almeida Theatre, London, in February 2016 he was Cartwright (Telegin) in Chekhov's Uncle Vanya for director Robert Icke, providing on-stage musical accompaniment to the action on mouth-organ and guitar.[4]

Writing[]

His writing work includes a seven-hour drama Wonderful You for ITV (co-written with Chris Niel), in which he also starred, and three verse plays for BBC Radio 4: John Dodd Gets Taken for a Ride (which was nominated for the BBC's Imison award for new writing), A Good Place For Fishing which starred Anne Reid, and Man in the Moon which starred Tom Courtenay (The Guardian and Daily Telegraph's radio "Pick of the week"). Readings of his play Skeletons have taken place at Soho Theatre and The Venue. In January 2019 his first novel, The Six Loves of Billy Binns, was published by Tinder Press.[5]

Music[]

He has composed music for cinema, television and theatre, including the soundtrack to the 2009 film Morris: A Life with Bells On, a full musical score for Alice in Wonderland at the New Vic Theatre in Stoke, title music for BBC Breakfast and incidental music for his brother-in-law Greg Wise's BBC documentary about the life of Jack Good. He has released two albums with his band Henry Kissing Her – A Little of Who You Fancy (1996) & Pull (2006) – and also released a CD of piano music, Concert From The Eyrie (2001). In 2012, Lumsden and John Dipper released the album Sunshine Takes You: 11 songs for ukulele, fiddle, banjo, bass, percussion & keyboards.

Background[]

Lumsden attended Lady Manners School, situated in Bakewell in the Peak District, before he trained at the Guildford School of Acting, graduating in 1986. In 1995,[3] Lumsden married actress Sophie Thompson; they separated in 2015. They have two sons, Ernie James (born 1997) and Walter Eric (born 2000).[citation needed]

Filmography[]

Year Title Role Notes
1988–1989 First of the Summer Wine Foggy Dewhurst 13 episodes
1995–1998 Is It Legal? Colin Lotus 21 episodes
1995 Sense and Sensibility Robert Ferrars
1997 Chalk Ronald Langland Episode: "The New Student"
1998 The Avengers Boodle's Porter
2000 Room to Rent Sam
2002 Silent Cry Tim Cox
2003 The Gospel of John Baptist's Disciple #2
2004–2009 The Catherine Tate Show Martin / Bob Cratchit / Ray 6 episodes
2005–2006 Sugar Rush Nathan Daniels 20 episodes
2009 Morris: A Life with Bells On Plush Gurney
2010–2011 Summer in Transylvania Mike Farley 4 episodes
2011 Life of Riley Roger Weaver 11 episodes
2012 Sightseers Rambler
2012 City Slacker Simon
2013 By Any Means Raymond Nash 1 episode
2013 Midsomer Murders David Farmer Episode: "The Sicilian Defence"
2014 Heart of Lightness Ballested
2014 Downhill Gordon
2015–2018 Millie Inbetween Tony McDonald 29 episodes
2016 Father Brown Peter Blackstone Episode: "The Resurrectionists"
2017 Darkest Hour General Ismay
2020 Doctors Alex Dowling Episode: "Unspoken"[6]

References[]

  1. ^ "Researcha". Web.researcha.com. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Birth Registration Details" Ancestry.co.uk (Retrieved: 4 August 2009)
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "Marriage Registration Details" Ancestry.co.uk (Retrieved: 4 August 2009)
  4. ^ Clapp, Susannah (21 February 2016). "Chekhov rewired". The Observer. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  5. ^ Richard Lumsden - The Six Loves of Billy Binns - Headline Publishing Group.
  6. ^ Writer: Linda Thompson; Director: Niall Fraser; Producer: Simon J Curtis (21 March 2020). "Unspoken". Doctors. BBC. BBC One.

External links[]

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