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11:46am Wednesday 30th June 2010 in
From Grange Hill to EastEnders and Dancing on Ice, Todd Carty has had an interesting career. And now he’s happy to play Patsy in Spamalot, he tells Viv Hardwick.
"I’VE always carried a spare pair of coconuts around with me,” jokes Todd Carty about being cast in the role of Patsy for the massive UKtour of award-winning Monty Python musical Spamalot.
But the 46-year-old actor admits that it was a certain song which finally persuaded him to join the musical quest.
“Singing Always Look On The Bright Side Of Life on stage was one of the main reasons I took on the role,” says Carty.
“Everyone likes this song.”
He’s joining Oliver! star Jodie Prenger, who plays The Lady Of The Lake, and Marcus Brigstocke as King Arthur.
It’s unlikely that Prenger will be in the cast which opens at Newcastle’s Theatre Royal in July, Sunderland Empire in October and York Grand Opera in November, but Carty has signed up all the way to Milton Keynes in December… and may even do Christmas in Birmingham and tour next year.
The actor has proved he can cope with just about anything in entertainment having gone from child star to EastEnders favourite to the man who put the smile back into the world of competitive celebrity skating.
“I was the kind of dad who ended up clinging to the edge of the rink while my kids were learning how to skate and gazing enviously at the other dads who raced around in the middle. I wanted to be like them and saw Dancing On Ice as a way of learning. I couldn’t have been more wrong,” he says.
The moment Carty shot away into the off-stage area, leaving partner Susie Lipanova to complete the routine on her own, attracted a million and a half hits on Youtube and has gone down as most people’s favourite Dancing On Ice moment. The public responded by turning Carty into the John Sergeant of skating by voting him through for several more weeks.
“I never, ever expected the response, but then I never expected to get through in the first place,” laughs the actor, who agreed to re-create his “accident” on the Dancing On Ice tour last year.
“They started showing film of me, on the big screen, off the ice doing things like smoking a fag or reading a newspaper. But what happened hasn’t put me off taking up a challenge,” he adds.
In fact he and son James have also taken part in the factual TV series Dangerous Adventures For Boys, which brought the pair to North Yorkshire. The two took up the challenge of becoming train drivers on the North York Moors Railway. “James, who was 11, became the youngest person ever to have driven a steam train across the North York Moors,” says the proud dad. They made the epic 18- mile ride from Grosmont to Pickering in charge of a steam locomotive built in the 1830s.
While millions fondly remember Carty as tragic Mark Fowler from 13 years in BBC1’s EastEnders, with the leather-jacketed hero roaring off into the sunset in 2003, it’s actually his first starring role of Tucker Jenkins in BBC1’s children’s series Grange Hill which still haunts him.
“It’s the role I can’t seem to get away from. I’m hoping that I can finally lay him to rest if this flipping Grange Hill film ever gets made. I might even be able to direct it and have my son James appearing as the son of Tucker,” says the actor.
He admits that it was Tucker’s Luck, which ran from 1983-85, which allowed his character to return as a teenager and moved him on from being a child star to adult roles. Carty also appeared in the one-off special which marked 30 years of Grange Hill in 2008.
“I can’t really complain. It’s the best part I’ve ever had and everyone seems to like Tucker, even though he always seemed to be in trouble,” says Carty.
In spite of claiming that he prefers to stay out of the limelight with regard to his private life, he and partner Dina Clarkin, the actress and film producer, used the very public medium of Hello Magazine last year to announce that they were to marry. The couple, who have two children, also featured in OK! a few weeks later.
“Whether it was Tucker, EastEnders or playing PC Gabriel Kent in The Bill, I have nothing but happymemories.
I knew about the interest in me when I was in EastEnders, but all I used to do was go in, say my lines and then go home. I wasn’t like some of the others who didn’t make it home in one piece,” says Carty. “I have always known that public interest in you comes with the territory and I was supportive when my son told me he wanted to follow me into acting.”
Tucker’s Luck is obviously infectious.
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