- Born
- Died
- Birth nameDavid William Frederick Lodge
- Height6′ (1.83 m)
- David was the son of a naval seaman at Gillingham and worked to help keep his family during the depression of the 30';s from working as a milkman to being a butchers boy. He found his acting talent in RAF concerts and later in music halls and pantomimes then a film casting agent who'd seen him as a demon king in pantomime offered him £20 a day to work on the film Cockleshell Heroes. Since then he;s made well over 60 films and spent about 6 months on the BBC tv serial United as the football manager Jerry Barford, He's married to Lyn, a French woman and lives in Richmond- IMDb Mini Biography By: Tonyman 5
- SpouseMarilyn Garcia(1963 - 1996) (her death)
- Was a friend of Peter Sellers and appeared frequently in his films.
- Before becoming an actor he worked as a circus clown and a ringmaster.
- He met Peter Sellers in the last days of the war when they were both posted to Gloucester. He later recounted that he was poking life into an ancient stove when he heard Sellers arguing fiercely at the far end of the hut with an airman "considerably larger than himself". Lodge removed the red-hot poker from the fire, walked down the hut and told the airman to "leave off or come outside with me". It ended the argument and began a lifelong friendship. "Pete just looked at me with those lovely sad eyes of his", Lodge told Sellers's biographer Peter Evans, "and something just happened. I was a couple of years older than him, no more, but I became his big brother, father confessor, favourite uncle, the lot. Pete was the kind of a bloke who always needed somebody there. There always had to be somebody in his life he could telephone at three o'clock in the morning and know they'll be a friendly voice." Lodge later staunchly defended Sellers when Sellers' son Michael wrote a scathing memoir. Lodge was also best man at Sellers' wedding to Swedish actress Britt Ekland in 1964. He appeared in a number of Sellers' films; his appearances in After the Fox (1966) (After the Fox) and Hoffman (1970), were done as a favour to Sellers. (From Lodge's obituary, The Independent, Friday, 24 October 2003).
- For many years he lived as a bachelor with his parents and a budgerigar in Winchmore Hill, north London. However, in June 1963, while working in Yugoslavia on the Viking epic The Long Ships (1964) he surprised everyone. After a whirlwind 24-hour courtship, he proposed to a French journalist and ex-model, and they married soon afterwards.
- Roughhewn, mustachioed British character actor whose versatility was well admired in both military and comic roles.
- "This ugly mug of mine gets me the meaty parts".
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content