Geoffrey Palmer

Geoffrey Dyson Palmer, OBE (4 June 1927 - 5 November 2020) was an English actor known for his roles in British television sitcoms playing Jimmy Anderson in The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin (1976–79), Ben Parkinson in Butterflies (1978–1983) and Lionel Hardcastle in As Time Goes By (1992–2005). His film appearances include A Fish Called Wanda (1988), The Madness of King George (1994), Mrs. Brown (1997), and Tomorrow Never Dies (1997).

Geoffrey Dyson Palmer was born on 4 June 1927 in North Finchley, Middlesex. He was the son of Frederick Charles Palmer, who was a chartered surveyor, and Norah Gwendolen (née Robins). He attended Highgate School from September 1939 to December 1945. He served as a corporal instructor in small arms and field training in the Royal Marines during his national service from 1946 to 1948, following which he briefly worked as an unpaid trainee assistant stage manager.

Palmer's early television appearances included multiple roles in episodes of The Army Game (Granada Television), two episodes of The Baron and as a property agent in Cathy Come Home (1966). After a major break in John Osborne's West of Suez at the Royal Court with Ralph Richardson, he acted in major productions at the Royal Court and for the National Theatre Company and was directed by Laurence Olivier in J. B. Priestley's Eden End. Palmer found the play so dull, however, that he was deterred from a stage career.

Two BBC sitcom roles brought him attention in the 1970s: the hapless brother-in-law of Reggie Perrin in The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin (1976–79), and the phlegmatic dentist Ben Parkinson in Butterflies (1978–1983).

In 1978, Palmer appeared as organized crimelord Simon Sinclair in London Weekend Television's hard-hitting police drama The Professionals, the episode entitled "Where the Jungle Ends".

Palmer played Doctor Price in the Fawlty Towers episode "The Kipper and the Corpse" (1979), determined to have breakfast amidst the confusion caused by the death of a guest and Fawlty's inept way of handling the emergency. In 1986, Palmer appeared as Donald Fairchild in the first series of an ITV sitcom, Executive Stress, alongside Penelope Keith. He later left, and was replaced by Peter Bowles.

Palmer later starred opposite Judi Dench for over a decade in another BBC sitcom, As Time Goes By (1992–2005). In 1997, he also appeared with Dench in the James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies, in which he portrayed Admiral Roebuck to Dench's M, and Mrs Brown, playing Sir Henry Ponsonby to Dench's Queen Victoria.

Palmer married Sally Green in 1963. They had a daughter, Harriet, and a son, Charles, a television director. Palmer was a longtime resident of Lee Common in the Chiltern Hills, Buckinghamshire, and enjoyed fly fishing in his spare time. At the time of his death, he resided in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire.

Palmer died peacefully at his home on 5 November 2020, aged 93

Paddington

7.1

Tomorrow Never Dies

6.4

Peter Pan

7.1

A Fish Called Wanda

7.2

The Pink Panther 2

5.7

Anna and the King

6.8

Fawlty Towers

8.3

Doctor Who

7.9

Agatha Christie's Poirot

8.1

Blackadder

8.0

W.E.

6.4

The Madness of King George

6.8

Clockwise

6.2

Doctor Who: Voyage of the Damned

7.6

Mrs Brown

6.8

A Zed & Two Noughts

7.0

The Avengers

7.7

Inspector Morse

7.8

The Saint

7.3

O Lucky Man!

6.9

Ashes to Ashes

7.7

The Hollow Crown

7.3

Alice Through the Looking Glass

5.1

The Honorary Consul

5.6

The Professionals

7.4

Lost Christmas

6.8

As Time Goes By

7.6

The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin

8.0

To Olivia

6.9

Rat

6.1

The One Show

4.6

Natural World

7.1

Cathy Come Home

7.0

The Sweeney

7.7

The Goodies

7.5

Butterflies

7.1

Bergerac

6.6

Absolute Power

7.5

Hawks

5.8

Piccadilly Jim

6.3

He Knew He Was Right

7.8

Inside Rooms: 26 Bathrooms, London & Oxfordshire

6.1

Ring of Spies

6.9

Colditz

7.3

The Kenny Everett Television Show

7.0

Run For Your Wife

4.2

Stiff Upper Lips

6.1

Whoops Apocalypse

7.2

Van der Valk

5.8

Edward the Seventh

6.9

Margaret Thatcher: The Long Walk to Finchley

6.8

A Question of Attribution

6.6

A Prize of Arms

6.6

The Outsider

5.6

Play for Today

6.1

Dalgliesh

6.9

Doctor Who and the Silurians

7.3

The Young Visiters

5.1

Stalag Luft

6.8

Out of the Unknown

6.8

Hot Metal

5.8

Bert & Dickie

6.2

The Insurance Man

6.2

The BBC Television Shakespeare

5.2

Grumpy Old Men

7.2

Crown Court

5.4

Fawlty Towers: Re-Opened

8.0

Doomwatch

6.0

Mystery and Imagination

5.5

The Human Jungle

8.2

Gideon's Way

6.8

The Wednesday Play

4.5

The Battle of Billy's Pond

6.7

Executive Stress

5.7

Angels

3.7

No Hiding Place

3.7

The Alan Titchmarsh Show

3.7

Best Of Enemies

8.3

Fairly Secret Army

5.0

An Audience with...

5.3

Bill Brand

6.3

The Man In Room 17

5.3

Stig of the Dump

6.3

Doctor Who: The Mutants

8.0

A Midsummer Night's Dream

5.0

Absurd Person Singular

8.0

The Army Game

5.0

The Expert

9.5

The Legacy of Reginald Perrin

8.0

Christabel

5.5

The Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag

8.0

Pope John Paul II: 1920 - 2005

7.0

Queen Victoria's Last Love: Abdul Karim

10.0

Goodbye

10.0

The Savages

6.0

Softly, Softly

5.0

The Revenue Men

1.0

Oxbridge Blues

5.0

The Troubleshooters

5.0

The 1940's House

6.0

Walrus: Two Tonne Tusker

0.0

Reckless: The Sequel

0.0

Season's Greetings

0.0

Smack and Thistle

0.0

Mr. Kershaw's Dream System

0.0

Safe at Work?

0.0

Mr. Men & Little Miss: The Christmas Letter

0.0

The High Game

0.0

Loyalties

0.0

The Houseboy

0.0

No Place Like Earth

0.0

A Story to Frighten the Children

0.0

Only Make Believe

0.0

Michael Regan

0.0

The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin

0.0

Mr. Men and Little Miss

0.0

The Last Song

0.0

The Joe Baker Show

0.0

Bulldog Breed

0.0

Chateau Monty

0.0

Look at the State We're In!

0.0

Dickens

0.0