Peter Butterworth(1915-1979)
- Actor
- Writer
Peter Butterworth's promising career in the British Navy Fleet Air Arm ended when the
plane which he was flying was shot down by the Germans in WW II
and he was placed in a POW camp. There he became close friends with
Talbot Rothwell (later a writer on the "Carry On" series, on which Butterworth
often worked) and the two began writing and performing sketches for
camp shows to entertain the prisoners (and to cover up the noise of
other prisoners digging escape tunnels). Never having performed in public he was petrified but gamely sang a duet with Talbot. This sparked his enthusiasm to enter show business after the war and Talbot helped and encouraged him
and he soon became a familiar
character actor in both films and television. He specialized in playing
gentle, well-meaning but somewhat eccentric characters (which, by most
accounts, is what he was in real life). He was married to impressionist
Janet Brown, who he met while doing a Summer show at Scarborough and their son, Tyler Butterworth, also became an actor. Butterworth died
suddenly in 1979, as he was waiting in the wings to go onstage in a
pantomime show.