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Encyclopedia > David Kossoff

David Kossoff (November 24, 1919 - March 23, 2005) was a British actor. Following the death of his son Paul, a rock musician, he became an anti-drug campaigner. November 24 is the 328th day (329th on leap years) of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ... 1919 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar). ... March 23 is the 82nd day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (83rd in Leap years). ... 2005 is a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar and is the current year. ... Paul Kossoff (September 14, 1950 - March 19, 1976) was a British rock guitarist. ... Rock and roll (also spelled Rock n Roll, especially in its first decade), also called rock, is a form of popular music, usually featuring vocals (often with vocal harmony), electric guitars and a strong back beat; other instruments, such as the saxophone, are common in some styles. ...


Kossoff was born in London to Russian-Jewish immigrant parents, and started working in light entertainment on British television in the years following World War II. His best known television role was the hen-pecked husband Alf Larkins in The Larkins first broadcast in 1958, and his role as a Jewish furniture maker in A Little Big Business. Film credits included A Kid for Two Farthings (1955), his role as Morry in The Bespoke Overcoat (1956), Freud's father in Freud (1962) with Larry Parks and Mouse on the Moon (1963) with Bernard Cribbins. St. ... The word Jew (Hebrew: יהודי) is used in a wide number of ways, but generally refers to a follower of the Jewish faith, a child of a Jewish mother, or someone of Jewish descent with a connection to Jewish culture or ethnicity and often a combination of these attributes. ... British television broadcasting has a range of different broadcasters, broadcasting multiple channels over a variety of distribution media. ... World War II was a truly global conflict with many facets: immense human suffering, fierce indoctrinations, and the use of new, extremely devastating weapons like the atom bomb. ... Larry Parks (December 13, 1914 - April 13, 1975) was an American actor who was blacklisted by the Hollywood movie studio bosses during the era of McCarthyism. ... Bernard Cribbins (born December 29, 1928) is a British character actor and musical comedian. ...


He was also well known for his story telling skills, particularly with regard to reinterpreting the Bible. His most famous book, also a television series, is The Book of Witnesses (1971) in which he turned the Gospels into a series of lively monologues.


Following the death in 1976 of Paul, guitarist with the band Free, Kossoff established the Paul Kossoff Foundation which aimed to present the realities of drug addiction to children. Kossoff spent the remainder of his life campaigning against drugs. His one-man stage performance about the death of his son, and its effect on the family, which he toured in the late 1970s and early 1980s, was both poignant and heartbreaking. He died in 2005 of liver cancer at age 86. Free was a R&B-style rock band which formed in London in 1968 best known for their popular song All Right Now. Lead singer Paul Rodgers, went on to become lead singer of the rock band Bad Company, while lead guitarist Paul Kossoff, a much revered blues/rock guitarist... Drug addiction, or dependency is the compulsive use of drugs, to the point where the user has no effective choice but to continue use. ... Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC, also called hepatoma) is a primary malignancy (cancer) of the liver. ...


His brother Alan was a radio broadcaster under the name of Alan Keith.


See also

Jews first arrived in Britain with William the Conqueror in 1066, but were expelled in 1290 following increasing persecution. ...

External Links

  • IMDB Record for David Kossoff

  Results from FactBites:
 
Telegraph | News | David Kossoff (930 words)
David Kossoff, who died yesterday aged 85, was a versatile actor best known for his role as Alf Larkin in the television series The Larkins, and a charming exponent of Jewish humour, manners and aspirations.
Kossoff also became a firm campaigner for charities, particularly warning of the dangers of drugs, after the death in 1976, from heroin addiction, of his son Paul, who had been the guitarist with the rock band Free.
Kossoff's show The Late Great Paul visited a number of schools, giving an insight into the perils of drugs; he had earlier planned to give the proceeds from a year of one-man shows to charity in thanks for his son's recovery from a serious heart attack in 1975.
Reel Streets: David Kossoff (282 words)
David Kossoff, who died yesterday, 24/03/2005, aged 85, was a versatile actor best known for his role as Alf Larkin in the television series The Larkins, and a charming exponent of Jewish humour, manners and aspirations.
Kossoff's gentle, lugubrious delivery would be laced with irony and self-deprecating humour which was never without a wry kind of dignity; on radio and television he told Bible stories with a particular warmth.
The son of Russian parents, David Kossoff was born on November 24 1919 in London, and trained at art and architecture schools, including the Northern Polytechnic.
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