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Michael Robbins
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Michael Robbins : ウィキペディア英語版
Michael Robbins

Michael Anthony Robbins (14 November 1930 – 11 December 1992) was an English actor and comedian best known for his on-going role as Arthur Rudge in the TV sitcom and film versions of ''On the Buses'' (1969–72).
==Career==
Born in London, Robbins was a bank clerk who became an actor after appearing in amateur dramatic performances in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, where he and his family lived at the time. Robbins made his television debut as the cockney soldier in ''Roll-on Bloomin' Death''. Primarily a comedy actor, he is best remembered for the role of Arthur Rudge, the persistently sarcastic husband of Olive (Anna Karen), in the popular sitcom ''On the Buses'' (1969–73). Robbins and Karen provided the secondary comic storyline to Reg Varney's comedy capers at the bus depot. Robbins also appeared in the series film spin-offs, ''On the Buses'', ''Mutiny on the Buses'', and ''Holiday on the Buses''. His other comedy credits include non-recurring roles in ''Man About the House'', ''The Good Life'', ''One Foot in the Grave'', ''The New Statesman'', ''George and Mildred'', ''Hi-de-Hi!'' and ''You Rang, M'Lord?''. He appeared as a rather humorously portrayed police sergeant in the TV adaptation of ''Brendon Chase''.
As well as these comic roles, he assumed various straight roles in some of the major British television shows of the 1960s and 1970s: including ''Minder'', ''The Sweeney'', ''Z-Cars'','' Return of the Saint'', ''Murder Most English'', ''The Avengers'', ''Dixon of Dock Green'' and the 1982 ''Doctor Who'' story ''The Visitation''.
Robbins's film credits included ''The Whisperers'', ''Up The Junction'', ''The Looking Glass War'', ''Zeppelin'' and Blake Edwards' films ''The Pink Panther Strikes Again'' and ''Victor/Victoria'.
Robbins was an indefatigable worker for charity. He was active in the Grand Order of Water Rats (being elected 'Rat of the Year' in 1978) and the Catholic Stage Guild; and received a Papal Award for his services in 1987. In one of his last television appearances, in ''A Little Bit of Heaven'' Robbins recalled his childhood visits to Norfolk and spoke of his faith and love of the Shrine of Our Lady at Walsingham.
In the mid-1970s he also directed a film: ''How Are You?''.

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