Sydney Lotterby

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Forenames(s): Sydney
Family name: Lotterby
Awards/Honours: OBE (1995)
Work area/Craft/Role: Camera, Producer
Industry: TV
Company: BBC
Websites: Guardian obituary
Interview no: 276
Interview date(s): 4 March 1993
Interviewer(s): Alan Lawson, Norman Swallow
Production Media: audio
Duration (mins): 120

Lotterby was born in PaddingtonLondon, to Winifred (née Warren) and Sidney Lotterby, a shop fitter, and grew up in EdgwareMiddlesex. In 1941, on leaving Stag Lane school aged 14, he joined the BBC as a storekeeper in the electrical department at Broadcasting House, then worked in the sound control room at BBC Radio until his national service in the British Army from 1946 until 1948.After national service he returned to the BBC and became a cameraman and progressed to becoming technical manager. He joined the BBC's Entertainment Department in 1958 and in 1963, became a producer/director.Lotterby married Marcia Dos Santos in 1997.He died on 28 July 2020, at the age of 93.Television comedy series which he produced or directed included: As Time Goes ByMay to DecemberLast of the Summer WineYes, Minister and Yes, Prime MinisterEver Decreasing CirclesBrush StrokesOpen All HoursThe Old Boy NetworkButterfliesRipping YarnsPorridgeGoing StraightBroaden Your Mind, the final series of Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'EmThe Liver BirdsUp Pompeii! and Sykes and A....A sketch in At Last The 1948 Show in which four exactly alike men all called Sydney Lotterby ("The Four Sydney Lotterbies") was written by John Cleese, because he liked the name. The men were played by Cleese, Marty FeldmanTim Brooke-Taylor, and Graham Chapman. Cleese also gave the name to the character played by Robert Lindsay in Fierce Creatures (1997).

Lotterby won four BAFTA awards for comedy, including for Porridge (and also for a special in 1975), Going Straight (1978) and Yes Minister (1980). He was also nominated for 11 more. In 1994, Lotterby was appointed OBE.

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