NEVER WALK ALONE (REMEMBERING MICHAEL ANGELIS)
Some actors are lucky to strike a chord with a great director or equally great writer. And so it was with the Liverpudlian actor Michael Angelis whose collaborations with Alan Bleasdale produced some of the finest works ever created for British television. Some audiences will remember him as the rabbit mad brother Lucien in Carla Lane and Myra Taylor's sitcom 'The Liver Birds' or know him as the narrator who took over from Ringo Starr on 'Thomas the Tank Engine'. However his iconic role was surely as Chrissie Todd, the beating heart of Alan Bleasdale's 'The Boys from the Black Stuff' and it is that part that he should really be remembered for. Few actors before or since have essayed the disintegration of an unemployed man in quite the same way as Angelis managed in Bleasdale's searing indictment of the abandonment of the British working class. With his droll Scouse accent, Angelis was adept at squeezing comedy out of most scenes. However 'The Bo