Hammer’s most prolific actor was already a veteran of some 30 films before his first appearance for Hammer (Exclusive) in The Dark Road (1947). Michael Ripper went on to become one of Hammers favourite character actors, making thirty four films with the company, culminating with his performance as Arthur the railway porter in That’s Your Funeral (1971).
Born in Portsmouth, England on 27th January 1913 (five months before Peter Cushing), Michael was sixteen when he won a scholarship to a school for dramatic art. The theatre was in his blood (his father ran an amateur dramatics company) and six years later, having spent some time treading the boards he moved into films, getting his first credit in Twice Branded (1935), playing a young fellow in a theatre gallery. He later made countless films working as an actor, and assistant director, for a production company called George Smith Enterprises, who were based at Walton Studios.
During the war he worked at “The Gate” in Dublin playing roles such as Hamlet. He has been quoted as saying that “just before D-Day we got a letter saying that our country needed us. One of us wrote back asking if they really did need us, and they replied that they didn’t!”
After the war, he stayed in Ireland to make a film, returning to England on it’s completion. It was during this period that he first became involved with the St Trinian’s films, appearing in four.
In 1952 Michael had a throat operation which affected he speech – “I didn’t really sound like a human being, so all I could do was horror”. As a consequence, and having already appeared in four Hammer productions (The Dark Road – 1947, PC 49 and the Case of the Guardian Angel – 1949, A Case for PC 49 – 1951 and Blood Orange – 1953), Anthony Hinds gave him a starring role in A Man on the Beach 1955.
Of all the characters he played, Michael’s favourite was Longbarrow – the long-suffering assistant to Andre Morell’s Sir Basil Walden in “The Mummy’s Shroud – 1966.
After Hammer, Michael went on to appear as Mr Shepherd in Southern Television’s popular childrens series Worzel Gummidge and as Tom – Leonard’s Chauffeur in the BBC TV hit sitcom Butterflies.
Michael died on June 28th 2000 – he will be sadly missed by all true Hammer fans.
The Unsung Face of Horror
Credit – David Ryan, Highbrury & Islington Express, July 16th 1999
You may not know the name but the face should be familiar, David Ryan meets Michael Ripper who has appeared in more Hammer Horror films than Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing put together.
At the age of 86, Michael Ripper has just acquired a new passport so that he can fly to the United States for the launch of his biography next month. The chances are you won’t have heard of him, unless you’re an ardent fan, like those he’ll meet in Virginia, but his features should be recognisable to anyone with a soft spot for fake blood, crucifixes and horse-drawn carriages rattling though 1960s’ English woodland.
A familiar face, if hardly a household name, the veteran actor now remembers little of a prolific 45-year film career that saw him hob-nob with Olivier before slipping into the niche for which he is best loved today – that of Hammer Films’ resident bit-part player, appearing in more of their horror flicks than Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee put together.
For, as Hammer filmographer Mark A Miller points out, Ripper excelled in his portrayals of “memorable sword-brandishing patriots, sadistic, amoral nasties and wimpy, pitiable servants… If ever an actor proves the old adage that there are no small parts, only small actors, it is Michael Ripper.”
Portsmouth-born Ripper’s first starring roles after drama school were at the Gate Theatre, Dublin where a leading Irish actor of the day said his Hamlet had “the voice of the gods, dear boy”. Yet cruely, this promising stage career was to be cut short in 1952 when Ripper was struck down by a throat condition and was sent to see a specialist.
His wife Cecilia, a television costume designer who brought him to live in Islington in 1976, takes up the story: “He walked in, and the man said: `I know exactly what’s the matter with you. I read an article about it in The Lancet last week.’ He was put on a drug that made the thyroid gland stiff, but that touched the vocal cords and he lost his stage voice.”
Forced to utilise the microphone instead, Ripper’s next break was to work on a short film with one of Hammer’s leading lights, producer Tony Hinds. But before taking up the reins of bread-and-butter horror acting as coachmen, innkeepers, poachers and the like – he was cast by Laurence Olivier in the 1955 adaptation of Richard III.
“That’s his Favourite film part.” says Ripper’s biographer, Derek Pykett, in reference to his role as one of the Duke of Clarence’s murderers. “They had great difficulty trying to stuff John Gielgud’s stand-in into a vat of wine, so they had several days of retakes.”
But surprisingly, Ripper’s favourites from the Hammer series are not its better known chillers – such as The Revenge of Frankenstein (1958) and Scars of Dracula (1970) – but obscure pot-boilers The Mummy’s Shroud (1966) and The Pirates of Blood River (1962). He nurses a particular affection for the last of these because it co-starred his old friend Christopher Lee, who encouraged a standing ovation for Ripper at the Barbican’s Hammer retrospective last year. In one scene, Lee helped carry Ripper across the river because he was too short to walk across the bottom.
At their home near the Angel, the Rippers receive a steady trickle of mail from fans asking for autographs. “The funny thing is,” says Mrs Ripper, “there’s a home help in his early 20s who comes here and the first thing he said was; ‘I’ve been a big fan of yours for years. My whole family are.’”
Pykett, an actor based in Yorkshire, has shown a similar devotion in preparing the 224page biography Michael Ripper Unmasked, whose initial print run of 1,500 copies is aimed at the American market. “My personal view is that he is one of England’s finest character actors,” he opines.
“A lot of actors just play themselves all the time, whereas Michael could change his appearance for almost every film, just with his expressions. He’s very well loved, too. He played the lift man in three St Trinian’s films, mainly because the director Frank Launder liked him so much.”
Ripper himself rarely stays up to watch his 30-odd Hammer movies on TV, preferring to keep them on video. “They were very popular, both with the people who were in them and the audiences who came to see them,” he remembers. “Mind you, nowadays they’re old hat.”
Michael Ripper’s Full Filmography
Year Released | Film | Character | Production Company |
1937 | Busman's Holiday | Crook | George Smith Productions |
1937 | Strange Adventures of Mr Smith | Undetermined Role (uncredited) | George Smith Productions |
1938 | Darts are Trumps | Uncredited | George Smith Productions |
1938 | Easy Riches | Cuthbert | George Smith Productions |
1947 | Captain Boycott | Pat Nolan | J Arthur Rank Films |
1948 | Dark Road, The | Andy Anderson | Hammer Films |
1948 | Oliver Twist | Barney | J Arthur Rank Films |
1949 | Adventures of P.C. 49, The | Fingers | Hammer Films |
1950 | Let's Have a Murder | Film Studios Manchester | |
1950 | Your Witness | Sam Baxter | Coronado Productions |
1951 | A Case for PC 49 | George Steele | Hammer Films |
1951 | Lady Godiva Rides Again | Stage Manager | London Film Productions |
1951 | Old Mother Riley's Jungle Treasure | Jake | Renown Picture Corporation |
1952 | Appointment in London | Bomb Aimer | Mayflower/British Lion |
1952 | Secret People, The | Charlie | Ealing Studios |
1952 | Treasure Hunt | Removal Man (uncredited) | Romulus |
1953 | Alf's Baby | Mike | Adelphi Films Ltd |
1953 | Blood Orange | Eddie | Hammer Films |
1953 | Folly to Be Wise | Landlord | British Lion Film Corporation |
1953 | Story of Gilbert and Sullivan, The | Louis | London Film Productions |
1954 | Belles of St Trinnian's | Albert Fanning | London Film Productions (UK) |
1954 | Rainbow Jacket, The | Benny Lorder | Ealing Studios |
1954 | Sea Shall Not Have Them, The | Botterhill | Alliance Film Studio |
1954 | Tale of Three Women | Simkins | Danziger Productions Ltd. |
1955 | Constant Husband, The | Left Luggage Attendant | British Lion Film Corporation |
1955 | Intruder, The | Chauffeur | British Lion Film Corporation |
1955 | Secret Venture | Bill Rymer | Republic Picture Corporation (US) |
1955 | Wee Geordie | Reporter | Argonaut/British Lion |
1956 | 1984 | Outer Party Orator | Holiday Films |
1956 | Green Man, The | Waiter | British Lion Film Corporation |
1956 | Reach for the Sky | Warrant Officer West | Rank Organisation (UK |
1956 | Richard III | Forrest, 2nd Murderer | London Film Productions |
1956 | X the Unknown | Sergeant Grimsdyke | Hammer Films |
1956 | Yield to the Night | Roy | Allied Artists Pictures Corp |
1957 | Blue Murder at St. Trinian's | Liftman | British Lion Film Corporation |
1957 | Dangerous Youth | Pte Simpson | Warner Bros. |
1957 | Not Wanted on Voyage | Steward Macy | Byron Films |
1957 | Quatermass 2 | Ernie | Hammer Films |
1957 | Steel Bayonet, The | Pte. Middleditch | Hammer Films |
1957 | Woman in a Dressing Gown | Pawnbroker | Associated British-Pathe |
1958 | Further Up The Creek | Ticket Collector | Hammer Films |
1958 | Girls at Sea | Jumper | Associated British Pictures |
1958 | I Only Asked! | Azim | Hammer Films |
1958 | Revenge of Frankenstein, The | Kurt | Hammer Films |
1958 | Up the Creek | Decorator | Hammer Films |
1959 | Man Who Could Cheat Death | Morgue Attendant (uncredited) | Hammer Films |
1959 | Mummy, The | Poacher | Hammer Films |
1959 | Ugly Duckling, The | Fish | Hammer Films |
1960 | Bobbikins | Naval Petty Officer | 20th Century Fox (US) |
1960 | Brides of Dracula, The | Coachman | Hammer Films |
1960 | Dead Lucky | Peter Simpson | A.C.T. |
1960 | Jackpot | Lenny Lane | Grand National Pictures |
1960 | Not a Hope in Hell | Sid | Roger Proudlock Productions |
1960 | Sink the Bismarck! | Lookout on Suffolk (Uncredited) | Twentieth Century Fox |
1961 | A Matter of Who | Skipper | Forey |
1961 | Anatomist, The | Hare | British International Pictures |
1961 | Circle of Deception, A | Chauvel | 20th Century Fox (US) |
1961 | Curse of the Werewolf, The | Old Soak | Hammer Films |
1961 | Petticoat Pirates | Tug | ABP |
1961 | Pure Hell of St. Trinian's, The | Liftman | British Lion Film Corporation |
1962 | Amorous Mr. Prawn, The | Angus | Union Films |
1962 | Captain Clegg | Mipps | Hammer Films |
1962 | Out of the Fog | Tich | Eternal Films |
1962 | Phantom of the Opera, The | 1st Cabby | Hammer Films |
1962 | Pirates of Blood River, The | Mac | Hammer Films |
1962 | Prince and the Pauper, The | Townsman | Walt Disney (Television) |
1962 | Prize of Arms, A | Corporal Freeman | Byranston Pictures |
1963 | Punch and Judy Man, The | Waiter | A.B.P.C.(UK) |
1963 | Scarlet Blade, The | Pablo | Hammer Films |
1963 | Two Left Feet | Uncle Reg | British Lion Film Corp |
1963 | What a Crazy World | The Common Man | Associated British Pictures |
1964 | Curse of the Mummy's Tomb, The | Ahmed | Hammer Films |
1964 | Devil-Ship Pirates, The | Pepe | Hammer Films |
1965 | Seaside Swingers | Mr Pulman | Fitzroy-Maycroft |
1965 | Secret of Blood Island, The | Lt Tojoko | Hammer Films |
1965 | Spy Who Came In from the Cold, The | Lofthouse (uncredited) | Salem |
1966 | Deadly Bees, The | David Hawkins | Amicus Films |
1966 | Great St. Trinian's Train Robbery, The | Liftman | British Lion Film Corporation |
1966 | Plague of the Zombies, The | Sergeant Swift | Hammer Films |
1966 | Rasputin: The Mad Monk | Waggoner (voice) (uncredited) | Hammer Films |
1966 | Reptile, The | Tom Bailey | Hammer Films |
1966 | Where the Bullets Fly | Angel | Puck Films |
1967 | Mummy's Shroud, The | Longbarrow | Hammer Fiilms |
1967 | Torture Garden | Gordon Roberts | Amicus Fillms |
1968 | Dracula Has Risen from the Grave | Max | Hammer Films |
1968 | Inspector Clouseau | Frey | Mirisch Films |
1968 | Lost Continent, The | Sea Lawyer | Hammer Films |
1969 | Moon Zero Two | First Card Player | Hammer Films |
1969 | Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny and Girly | Attendant | Ronald J. Kahn Productions |
1970 | Girly | Zoo Attendant | Fitzroy Films |
1970 | Scars of Dracula | Landlord | Hammer Films |
1970 | Taste the Blood of Dracula | Cobb | Hammer Films |
1972 | That's Your Funeral | Arthur (Railway Porter) | Hammer Films |
1973 | Creeping Flesh, The | Carter | Tigon Films |
1973 | No Sex, Please - We're British | Warden | BHP Films |
1975 | Legend of the Werewolf | Sewerman | Tyburn Films |
1977 | Crossed Swords | Edith's Servant | Warner Bros. USA |
1978 | Sammy's Super T-Shirt | Gateman | Children's Film Foundation |
1979 | Le Petomane | Sergeant Major | Unknown |
1980 | Danger On Dartmoor | Cast Member | Childrens Film Foundation |
1985 | No Surrender | Tony Bonaparte | Channel Four Films |
1992 | Revenge of Billy the Kid | Old Pub Local | Montage Films |