Gavin Richards
After training at the Bristol Old Vic, Gavin Richards worked at the Liverpool Everyman and then with radical playwright John McGrath, in 7:84. Joining the Ken Campbell Roadshow in the early 70s he got performance experience working outdoors, in pubs and clubs. A lucrative German tour gave him and a group of colleagues the financial security to set up Belt and Braces Roadshow Company, formed with Eugene Geasley, Marcel Steiner and Jeni Barnett. Their leftist political and musical roadshows were taken to trade union meetings, working-menâs clubs, colleges and schools as well as traditional theatres and arts centres. Richards was Artistic Director, writer and performer for this collective inspired by the work of Alan Dosser at the Everyman and Ken Campbell and John McGrath of 7:84 Theatre Company. With 7:84 Richards had also directed Arden/DâArcyâs Ballygoimbeen Bequest and Adrian Mitchellâs Man Friday and worked with both Richard Eyre and Trevor Griffiths. Many B&B members had worked for one or more of those companies and over the course of its 12 years on the road some of its members went on to form other companies like Monstrous Regiment. John Fiske, B&Bâs musical director and Paul Kessel formed their own company in Sweden, still working today. B&B also collaborated on joint productions with both 7:84 and Roland Muldoonâs CAST. Others involved in the early years included Shane Connoughton, Sylvester McCoy, Vari Sylvestre, Andy Andrews, Gillian Hanna, David Bradford, Derek Thompson, Jim Carter and Colm Meaney. As well as writing original scripts with the company, Richards directed and adapted other political plays, most famously Dario Foâs Accidental Death of an Anarchist based on a translation by Gillian Hanna which ran in the West-End for two years after an extensive tour starring Alfred Molina. He also oversaw the Belt and Braces production of Steveâ Goochâs version of Brechtâs The Mother directed by Paul Hellyer which helped to launch the career of Maggie Steed. In the 80s and 90s Richards was a successful television and film actor (again working with Trevor Griffiths on Central TVâs Oi For England and with Paula Milne on the BBC series Driving Ambition). Assisted by Paula Milne and other ex members of B&B Richards produced A Night For A Nuclear Free Europe for the Labour Party at Wembley Arena in 1984 at the height of the minerâs strike. In the 90âs he also worked with Jack Shepherd on Comic Cuts, Griff Rhys Jones onThe Alchemist and Richard Sparks on The Crimson Lizard. His work on BBCâs âAllo âAllo and EastEnders is something he would rather forget. More recently, with Tamara Henry, he formed a theatre company in New Zealand called Theatre South whose youth production for the child soldierâs charity War Child won several awards. His recent book of poetry entitled 200 Weeks was published by Muswell Press in North London in 2015.

The Student Prince

Crystal Gazing

Driving Ambition

The Lock-In

Oi for England

The Triple Echo

The Locksmith
The Miners' Campaign Video Tapes: The Lie Machine

Titus Andronicus

Being Human

The Accidental Death of an Anarchist

Whoops Apocalypse

The Reporters

The Ken Campbell Roadshow

Savage Play

The Caucasian Chalk Circle

Kidnapped

The Bill

EastEnders

A Touch of Frost

Inspector Morse

Between the Lines

Mike and Angelo

Lovejoy

Hannay
Call Me Mister

Kidnapped

The BBC Television Shakespeare

Hi-de-Hi!

EastEnders

Hardwicke House

Minder

Time Riders

Pie in the Sky

'Allo 'Allo!

The Upper Hand

The Accidental Death of an Anarchist

The Accidental Death of an Anarchist

Driving Ambition
