Gordon McDougall
McDougall as amateur inventor Les Whittaker in Number 96
Born
Gordon Sholto McDougall

(1916-02-07)7 February 1916
Glasgow, Scotland
Died18 May 1991(1991-05-18) (aged 75)
OccupationActor
Years activeStage/radio 1936– , screen 1969-1987
SpouseMargaret Mackie

Gordon Sholto McDougall (born 7 February 1916 – 18 May 1991) was a Scottish Australian actor. He trained at the Glasgow Athenaeum (now known as The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland). After immigrating to Australia, he worked in numerous theatre productions as both an actor and director, but became best known in TV soap opera Number 96, firstly as amateur inventor Les Whittaker, who was a comedy character opposite Sheila Kennelly and subsequently albeit less successfully as his aristocratic brother Andrew Whittaker, Lord McCraddenow.[1]

Career

Theatre and radio

McDougall started acting professionally in 1936 working in various facets of the entertainment industry, including radio and stage. He emigrated to Australia and started his career on stage over all-in a long career he appeared in more than 50 theatre productions.

These theatre roles included Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman, Cat Among the Pigeons, Habeas Corpus, musicals 1776 and Promises, Promises. He played in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night and Much Ado About Nothing for the Nimrod Theatre.[2]

Television

In 1969 McDougall appeared in the ABC adaptation of Hesba Fay Brinsmead's Pastures of the Blue Crane.

In the late 1960s early 1970s he had guest roles in Crawford Productions police procedurals Homicide and Division 4 and a regular role in 1972 comedy series A Nice Day at the Office which ran for seven episodes.

McDougall found his widest audience through his role of amateur inventor Les Whittaker, husband to brassy barmaid Norma (Sheila Kennelly), in hit soap opera Number 96. Comedy characters Les and Norma joined the series early in its 1972–77 run and became very popular. Along with most of the show's regular cast, McDougall reprised his role in the 1974 film version of the series.

After a fall in ratings in 1975 Les was killed off in a dramatic revamp of the series: the famous bomb storyline. It had been decided that Les's constant crazy inventions were becoming too silly, and that his death would open up the character of Norma to new romances and other storylines. The Number 96 producers soon realised that killing Les was a mistake, and McDougall was returned to the series in late 1976 as Les's long-lost brother, the aristocratic Lord Andrew McCraddenow. The new character did not work as well as Les had, and six months later both Andrew and Norma were written out of the series during another cast revamp.

He appeared in a small role in the film The Fourth Wish starring John Meillon and thriller The Killing of Angel Street.

After Number 96 McDougall acted in Australian television films and had guest roles in such drama series as Chopper Squad, Prisoner, A Country Practice, and sitcom Mother and Son.

Filmography (selected)

Film

Title Year Role Type
Ned Kelly1970Tarleton (uncredited)Feature film
Chaser1973TV movie
Is There Anybody There?1976CooksonTV movie
The Fourth Wish1976PolicemanFilm
Ride a Wild Pony (aka Born to Run)1977Horace WeaverTV movie
Number 961974Les WhittakerTV movie
The Killing of Angel Street1981Sir Arthur WadhamFeature film

Television

Title Year Role Type
Pastures of the Blue Crane1969TV miniseries
Riptide1969Sgt. Paul StranesTV series, 1 episode
Homicide1966-70Max Baker / Rev. Horton / Senior Detective Vince ReillyTV series
The Rovers1970Ben AshdownTV series
The Long Arm1970StubbyTV series
Mrs. Finnegan1970Supt JohnsonTV series
Division 41969-71Bruce Clarke / Suttle / Bill JenkinsTV series
The Group1971James McGregorTV series, 1 episode
A Nice Day at the Office1972Claude FogartyTV series, 7 episodes
Number 961972-77Les Whittaker / Andrew Whittaker (aka Lord McCradonow)TV series, 133 wpisodes
Rush1976Doctor NewtonTV series
Solo One1976Jack NortonTV series
The Emigrants1976Hostel ManagerTV miniseries
Murcheson Creek1976TV pilot
Chopper Squad1978JoeTV series
Golden Soak1979PetersenTV miniseries
The Magical World of Disney1979Horace WeverTV series, 2 episodes
Love Thy Neighbour in Australia1979VicarTV series, 1 episode
The Best of Friends1982DoctorTV series, 1 episode
Prisoner1982Dr. BraithwaiteTV series, 1 episode
Mother and Son1983LionelTV series, 1 episode
Winners1985ConfessorTV series
A Country Practice1983 / 1986Mr. Bradshaw / Shaun Barnes Snr.TV series
Relative Merits1987TV miniseries

Personal life and death

McDougall retired from acting in 1987.

He was married to Margaret Mackie and died in Sydney, Australia on 18 May 1991, aged 75.

References

  1. Giles, Nigel. Number 96: Australia's Most Notorious Address. Melbourne Books.
  2. Atterton, Margot. (Ed.) The Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Australian Showbiz, Sunshine Books, 1984. ISBN 0-86777-057-0 p 143
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