Mike Pratt
An image from Goodbye Gemini, one of the productions that also features Mike Pratt.
Mike Pratt

Mike Pratt

June 7, 1931 — London, England, UK

Mike Pratt was a British actor, musician, songwriter and screenwriter. He commenced his career in showbusiness during the skiffle boom of the 1950s, playing and writing music alongside friends Tommy Steele and Lionel Bart. Bart and Pratt received the 1957 Ivor Novello Award for Best Song Musically and Lyrically for Steele's hit Little White Bull, and Pratt won his second Ivor Novello for a Handful of Songs, which he co-wrote with Steele. Despite several big screen and theatre credits including a stint with the RSC, Pratt was (and remains) best known for his role as Jeff Randall in the late 1960s ITC detective series Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) alongside Kenneth Cope and Annette Andre. Mike Pratt died from lung cancer in July 1976, aged 45. His son is Guy Pratt, a session bass guitarist best known for his live performances with Pink Floyd (since 1987) and offshoot solo projects with David Gilmour and Nick Mason.

Sitting Target

Sitting Target

1972

Swallows and Amazons

Swallows and Amazons

1974

The Party's Over

The Party's Over

1965

Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased)

Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased)

1969

This Is My Street

This Is My Street

1964

Goodbye Gemini

Goodbye Gemini

1970

Assassin

Assassin

1973

The Gentleman Caller

1967