Saturday 23 April 2011

John Sullivan OBE


John Sullivan John Sullivan created TV hits Only Fools and Horses and Citizen Smith
John Sullivan, who wrote one of the best-loved British sitcoms, Only Fools and Horses, has died at the age of 64.
He had been in intensive care for six weeks at a hospital in Surrey, battling viral pneumonia.
He also wrote Citizen Smith, and his latest work Rock & Chips is due to be shown on BBC One on Thursday.
Sir David Jason, who played Del Boy Trotter in Only Fools and Horses, said he was "totally devastated" and would "miss him dreadfully as a friend".
He said: "We have lost our country's greatest comedy writer but he leaves us a great legacy, the gift of laughter. My thoughts at this time are with his lovely family."
BBC director general Mark Thompson said: "John had a unique gift for turning everyday life and characters we all know into unforgettable comedy."
The son of a plumber, he is survived by his wife Shirley and two sons, a daughter and two grandchildren.
Gareth Gwenlan, a producer of Only Fools and Horses, said Shirley was "obviously devastated" and had her family around her.
The Corporation's head of comedy Mark Freeland added: "No-one understood what made us laugh and cry better than John Sullivan.
'Heartfelt comedy' "He was the Dickens of our generation. Simply the best, most natural, most heartfelt comedy writer of our time."
Stephen Fry said he was "terribly saddened" by the news and described him on Twitter as "one of the great comedy writers of our time".
Only Fools and Horses - starring David Jason and Nicholas Lyndhurst as south London brothers Del and Rodney Trotter forever trying to make a quick fortune - was regularly voted Britain's favourite sitcom.
It ran for 10 years between 1981 and 1991, with several Christmas specials in the years that followed.
Only Fools and Horses Christmas special, 1983 Only Fools and Horses was regularly voted the greatest British sitcom
The 1996 special Time On Our Hands, which was billed as the final episode and saw Del Boy come good on his ambition to make himself and Rodney millionaires, was watched by more than 24 million people, a record for a sitcom in the UK.
The demand for follow-ups saw Sullivan eventually relent and return to the story of the Trotters from 2001 for occasional Christmas specials.
He also wrote a spin-off - The Green Green Grass, featuring Only Fools characters Boycie and Marlene - and a prequel, Rock & Chips, which documented Del Boy's early life.
John Sullivan, who was born in Balham, south London, in 1946, and always said his secret was that he wrote about what he knew, got his first job at the BBC as a scenery hand aged 16.
During his spare time he wrote sketches and got his first break when he submitted a script to well-known comedy producer Dennis Main Wilson, who loved it.
He was commissioned to write more episodes, given three months' paid leave, and ended up with Citizen Smith - a comedy starring Robert Lindsay as the young communist "Wolfie" Smith.
He once described Rodney from Only Fools and Horses as a "teeny bit me" because he was also a bit of a "naive dreamer" as a teenager.
And he said Del Boy was an amalgam of many characters he came across while working in the second-hand car trade in the 1970s.
He was appointed an OBE in 2005 for services to drama.

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