In his late teens, Nossek was called up for military service in World War II and as the war reached its end, in 1945 he found himself on an army base in Colombo, Sri Lanka. A determining moment for the rest of his life was the day his attempt to gain admittance to the base amateur theatre company was rebuffed on the grounds that this was reserved to officers. Nossek and friend
Peter Coxhead set up a rival organization and on Friday, 13 April 1945
The Theatre Club was opened. The first production was of
Sutton Vane's
Outward Bound. It was well received, as were other plays, revues, concerts and musical evenings. There was a sufficient air of success to ensure that a number of these early members opted to continue working together when the war ended and they were demobbed and returned to England. There Nossek and Coxhead founded in the North London suburb of
Crouch End the
Mountview Theatre Club, an amateur repertory company, whose theatre opened officially in November 1947 with a production of
Oscar Wilde's
The Importance of Being Earnest. This was followed by a regular play each month until 1949, after which Coxhead bought the building outright from the leaseholders. Thereafter, for the next 25 years one new production after another was staged every two to three weeks. The club was later to become very successful as the
Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts, now located in custom-built premises in the South London suburb of
Peckham. For his part, Nossek went on in 1955 to pursue an independent professional acting career that endured for 56 years. ==Career==