Saturday 6 September 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRO-ENGLISH " RAM JOHN HOLDER " IS AN ENGLISH ACTOR AND MUSICIAN, BEST KNOWN FOR PLAYING "PORKPIE" IN THE BRITISH TELEVISION SERIES DESMOND : GOES INTO " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                     BLACK                  SOCIAL               HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Ram John Holder (born 1934, Guyana) is a Guyanese actor and musician. He is best known for playing Augustus "Pork pie" Grant in the British television series Desmond's.

Career

"Ram" John Holder was actually christened "John Holder" by his parents, who were devout members of the USA-based Pilgrim Holiness Church. He grew up in Georgetown, Guyana, during the 1940's / 1950's. Influenced by the church and the musical talents of his parents, he became quite accomplished playing the guitar. During the early '50s the strict, straight-laced Church membership was scandalized when he broke away and changed his name to "Ram" John. Holder began his performing career as a folk singer in New York. In 1962 he came to London and worked with Pearl Connor's Negro Theatre Workshop initially as a musician, and later as an actor. His theatre career saw him perform on the major stages in London such as the Royal National Theatre, the Donmar Warehouse and Bristol Old Vic.
John Boorman cast him as the black preacher in the 1969 comedy film Leo the Last, about race relations, which was set in a Notting Hill slum in West London. Holder also sang the songs in the film. He again played a preacher in the Horace Ové-directed film Pressure in 1975, made a cameo performance in My Beautiful Laundrette (1985) as a poet, and appeared in the Sankofa Film and Video's debut feature The Passion of Remembrance in 1986.[1]
Holder played the role of Porkpie in the situation comedy Desmond's, which was written by Trix Worrell, and broadcast on Channel 4 from 1989 until 1994. He later had his own short-lived spin-off series Porkpie.
Holder has appeared in several television productions and joined the cast of EastEnders in late September 2006, playing Cedric Lucas. His last stage performance to date was as Slow Drag in the 2006 revival of August Wilson's Ma Rainey's Black Bottom at the Royal Exchange Theatre in Manchester.
Holder is a talented musician,[2] who has recorded a number of albums: Black London Blues (1969), Bootleg Blues (1971), You Simply Are... (1975)[3] and Ram Blues & Soul.[4] He has also released various singles and contributed to soundtracks for film and television, including three songs for the film adaptation of Take a Girl Like You.[5]
He has also appeared as "Flying Freddy Mersa" in episodes of the BBC Television children's programme The Story of Tracy Beaker. In May 2008 Holder appeared in an episode of the BBC drama The Invisibles. Holder will soon be seen in an ensemble part in Song for Marion, a feature film from Paul Andrew Williams, the director of London to Brighton, starringVanessa Redgrave and Terence Stamp. Ram John Holder is the cousin of the legendary jazz vocalist Frank Holder.































































































































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