Background
Ronald Fraser was born in Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire, the son of an interior decorator and builder from Scotland.
Ronald Fraser was born in Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancashire, the son of an interior decorator and builder from Scotland.
He attended Ashton Grammar School. He was educated in Scotland and did national service as a lieutenant in the Seaforth Highlanders.
An unusual appearance and unique delivery made him a natural comedic actor. Fraser was a familiar figure in West End clubs during the sixties, and despite a long standing reputation as one of the hardest drinking of British actors he was still working in his last years. He was perhaps best known as Basil "Badger" Allenby-Johnson in the 1970s television series.
While serving in Benghazi in North Africa, he appeared in the comic play French Without Tears by Terence Rattigan.
He trained as an actor at RADA until 1953 and soon appeared at Glasgow"s Citizens" Theatre. He joined the Old Vic repertory company in 1954, making his first London appearance in The Good Sailor, a stage adaptation of Herman Melville"s novel, Billy Budd.
In the West End, he appeared in The Long and the Short and the Tall, The Ginger Manitoba, The Singular Manitoba, Androcles and the Lion, The Showing Up of Blanco Posnet, Purple Dust by Seán O"Casey, Entertaining Mr Sloane, Joseph Papp"s production of The Pirates of Penzance and High Society. He also played Falstaff in a production of The Merry Wives of Windsor at the Open Air Theatre, Regent"s Park.
His only Broadway show was the flop Louisiana Grosse Valise by Robert Dhéry, Gérard Calvi and Harold Rome.
He appeared in numerous television roles from 1954, and in nearly 50 films from 1957, mostly in comedies.