Obituary: Gorden Kaye

Comic actor best known for his role as René in ’Allo, ’Allo

Gordon Kaye:   April 7th, 1941-January 23rd,  2017. Above,  with Francesca Gonshaw (left),  and Vicki Michelle, from the  British sitcom ’Allo ’Allo! Photograph: Howes/Express/Getty Images
Gordon Kaye: April 7th, 1941-January 23rd, 2017. Above, with Francesca Gonshaw (left), and Vicki Michelle, from the British sitcom ’Allo ’Allo! Photograph: Howes/Express/Getty Images

The comic actor Gorden Kaye, who has died aged 75, was best known for his long-running role as René Artois in the BBC series 'Allo 'Allo! .

Among the memories Kaye leaves us with is René's version of Serge Gainsbourg 's 1960s hit Je T'Aime ... Moi Non Plus . In a broom cupboard in a provincial cafe in Nazi-occupied France, René, the hapless, stereotypically randy French patron, is trying to get inside the blouse of one of his waitresses. They pant, pastiching Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin. "Je t'aime," breathes the Chigwell-born actor Vicki Michelle, as Yvette. "Say it in French," replies Huddersfield-born Kaye. "I love you," says Yvette. There's a sound of rummaging before Yvette coos: "I nevair even touched you." "It's the 'andle of the vacuum cleanair," replies René.

There, in a three-minute song, is distilled the comic essence of David Croft and Jeremy Lloyd 's sitcom 'Allo 'Allo!, which ran on television from 1982 until 1992. "We did 10 years and Hitler only did six," Kaye said. Each episode teemed with the tropes of the British sitcom of the 1970s and 1980s – double entendres, thwarted gropings to hysterical audience laughter, catchphrases and running gags.

Some critics thought 'Allo 'Allo! was sexist, racist, homophobic and, like Croft's earlier Dad's Army, trivialised war. It certainly plundered venerable national stereotypes. But, as Vicki Michelle once contended, it had a go at everybody equally. "The French were randy, the Germans were kinky and the English were stupid."

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Kaye was mystified when he was first sent the script. "There was a note attached from the writer, David Croft," he recalled. "It said 'Please find enclosed a pilot script for 'Allo 'Allo! in which I would like you to consider the role of René'." Kaye worried at first that he was being asked to play a comedy about a female impersonator and her backstage angst.

'Allo 'Allo! came about because Lloyd and Croft were looking for a new project after the end of their department-store sitcom Are You Being Served? Lloyd suggested a satire of recent French resistance dramas, particularly the BBC's Secret Army, in which Bernard Hepton played a cafe owner, Albert Foiret.

From this slim idea, Croft and Lloyd developed the comic situation in which Kaye’s cafe owner strove to hide two British airmen from the Germans, while remaining friendly with his new Nazi clientele. In spare moments, he had romantic intrigues with his waitresses Yvette Carte-Blanche and Mimi La Bonque, while deceiving his long-suffering wife Madame Edith, whom he weekly branded “you stupid woman”, for harbouring justified suspicions.

Two volumes of The War Diaries of René Artois (1988 and 1989) were published at the height of the show's success.

Gordon Fitzgerald Kaye was born in Huddersfield (a later mistake by a hospital led to his name being spelled "Gorden") and he was, according to his autobiography René and Me (1989) a "shy, gay and overweight boy" who found self-confidence and self-expression through acting, first at King James's grammar school, then at Huddersfield Technical College.

He first came to prominence as a TV actor as Elsie Tanner's nephew Bernard Butler in Coronation Street in 1969. He had already made his TV debut as a railway guard in the BBC's Yorkshire mill drama Champion House (1968) and played small roles in such films as The Party's Over (1965) starring Oliver Reed. During the 70s, he made appearances in the sitcoms Till Death Us Do Part, It Ain't Half Hot Mum, Are You Being Served? and Come Back Mrs Noah, as well as the drama series All Creatures Great and Small, and Shoestring.

In 1990, Kaye was injured when a piece of advertising hoarding smashed through his car windscreen. As Kaye recovered in hospital from brain surgery, a reporter and photographer from the Sunday Sport, posing as medical staff, interviewed and photographed him. In 1991, Kaye sued the paper. His failure to get redress was widely regarded at the time as a disgrace, highlighting the need for a privacy law.

Kaye returned to the sitcom for two more series: "I was persuaded by the writers, the producers and the rest of my family not to close the cafe." By the time of its 1992 finale, 'Allo 'Allo! had become a global success – sold to 56 countries and popular, amazingly enough, in France and Germany.

In 2007, Kaye returned as René Artois for a one-off television revival of 'Allo 'Allo! and for a stage show in Australia. He was never to escape his apron-wearing alter ego. But he didn't mind. "Honestly," he said years after the show finished, "there is no other character I would rather have played."

– Guardian syndication