First television appearances Beckinsale made his television debut in 1969 as a police officer in
Coronation Street, in which he had to arrest veteran character
Ena Sharples. He later had a small role in a 1970 episode of
A Family at War, playing a young soldier.
The Lovers After being recommended by several other actors for the part, Beckinsale landed his first starring role as Geoffrey in the sitcom
The Lovers (1970–71), opposite fellow newcomer
Paula Wilcox. The show put both leading performers in the eye of the public and a
film version was made in 1973 with both Beckinsale and Wilcox reprising their roles.
The Donati Conspiracy In 1973, slightly unusually, he had an important straight acting role in
The Donati Conspiracy, as Robert Sadler, an alleged terrorist sentenced to death for killing a security guard.
Porridge From 1974 to 1977, Beckinsale starred as prison inmate
Lennie Godber alongside
Ronnie Barker in the hit BBC sitcom
Porridge. Beckinsale expressed relief at landing the role, owing to his concern about being typecast as Geoffrey from
The Lovers. Barker had suggested actor
Paul Henry for the role of Godber, owing to Henry being from
Birmingham (as Godber was meant to be), but director
Sydney Lotterby chose Beckinsale instead. Beckinsale initially played Godber with a Birmingham accent, but this was eventually abandoned. Actor
Brian Glover, who played the character
Cyril Heslop on
Porridge, stated that Heslop's line "I read a book once; green it was" from the first episode, "
New Faces, Old Hands", was actually Beckinsale's idea.
Rising Damp While appearing in
Porridge on the BBC, Beckinsale simultaneously starred as naive medical student Alan Moore in the ITV sitcom
Rising Damp also from 1974 to 1977. Beckinsale was the only member of the cast not to have appeared in
The Banana Box, the play on which
Rising Damp was based. Writer
Eric Chappell stated: "Although not the oldest, he was the most experienced sitcom actor of the quartet, having already appeared in
The Lovers and
Porridge. This allowed him to be something of a calming influence on the show – a calming influence that was often needed." Beckinsale had previously worked with
Leonard Rossiter in the 1974
Johnny Speight drama ''If There Weren't Any Blacks You'd Have To Invent Them
. Because of a scheduling conflict with the musical I Love My Wife, in which he was starring, Beckinsale was unable to appear in the fourth series of Rising Damp''.
Going Straight In 1977,
Porridge was brought to an end with his character of Godber being released from his prison sentence in the final episode. He subsequently starred alongside Barker in
Going Straight (1978), a spin-off of
Porridge in which the two criminal characters are seen on the outside rebuilding their lives. Tentative plans for further episodes of the spin-off were shelved due to Beckinsale's death in 1979.
Bloomers Beckinsale starred in his final television comedy,
Bloomers, the five completed episodes of which eventually aired in September and October 1979 on
BBC 2. He played Stan, an out-of-work actor who takes a job as a partner at a flower shop. This was his first leading role in a sitcom.
Other work In between series one and two of
The Lovers Beckinsale starred in an ITV children's show titled ''
Elephant's Eggs in a Rhubarb Tree''. The show featured jokes, poetry, and music. He had the lead role of a young detective in the 1971
Armchair Theatre episode
Detective Waiting. Beckinsale appeared in the films
Rentadick (1972) and
Three for All (1975) and made appearances in several other television series such as the
Stephen Frears-directed
ITV Playhouse episode "Last Summer" in 1977. Throughout his TV series run, Beckinsale also did a 19-month run in the
West End play
Funny Peculiar, for which he was nominated for the
Laurence Olivier Award for "Actor of the Year in a New Play" and "Comedy Performance of the Year." He later did a six-month run in the London debut of the
Cy Coleman and
Michael Stewart musical
I Love My Wife. Shortly after his 30th birthday, Beckinsale was the subject of an episode of
This Is Your Life. Ronnie Barker and Fulton MacKay of
Porridge, Leonard Rossiter and Don Warrington of
Rising Damp, and Paula Wilcox of
The Lovers all gave tributes during the show. In 1977, he starred in a radio comedy series called
Albert and Me with Pat Coombs and John Comer. He also appeared in an advertisement for
Asda which aired in 1978 and early 1979. Beckinsale appeared in the
film version of Porridge released in 1979. It was to be his last and only completed work of the year. In October 1980, Frederick Muller Ltd. posthumously published a volume of Beckinsale's poetry entitled "With Love" (). ==Personal life==