Background
Fortune was born John Wood in Bristol in 1939.
Fortune was born John Wood in Bristol in 1939.
He was educated at Bristol Cathedral School and King"s College, Cambridge, where he was to meet and form a lasting friendship with John Bird.
Fortune and Bird also worked together on the television show A Series of Birds in 1967, and Fortune and Bron wrote and performed a series of sketches for television in Where Was Spring? in 1969. In 1971, with John Wells, he published the comic novel A Melon for Ecstasy, about a man who consummates his love affair with a tree. He appeared with Peter Sellers in a Barclays Bank television commercial in 1980, shortly before Sellers"s death.
Along with writing several series for the British Broadcasting Corporation, in 1982 Fortune appeared in an episode of the British Broadcasting Corporation sitcom Yes Minister, as an army officer who brings the minister"s attention to British-made weapons getting into the hands of terrorists.
In 1999, he starred with Warren Mitchell and Ken Campbell in ""Art"" at Wyndham"s Theatre in London"s West End. He also appeared in the films Take A Girl Like You (1970), in which he shared a television debate with John Bird, Kenny Everett"s horror spoof Bloodbath at the House of Death (1983), England, My England (1995), Maybe Baby (2000), and Saving Grace (2000), and had a guest part in the sitcom Joking Apart.
Fortune"s other work with John Bird included their series of satirical sketches The Long Johns, in which one interviewed the other in the guise of a senior figure such as a politician, businessman or government consultant. In one episode, they were two of the very first to predict the financial crisis of 2007–2010 during an episode of The South Bank Show broadcast on 14 October 2007.
In Fortune"s latter years, he featured in the award-winning Radio 4 sitcom Editor Reardon"s Week, in which he played the head of a literary agency.
Fortune died on 31 December 2013, aged 74.
His early career included contributions to Peter Cook"s Establishment Club team in 1962, and as a regular member of the cast of the British Broadcasting Corporation-television satire show Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life, both alongside Eleanor Bron and John Bird.