Larry Lamb
For the newspaper editor, see Larry Lamb (newspaper editor). Lawrence Douglas Lamb (born 1 October 1947) is an English actor, producer, and radio presenter. Born in Edmonton, London, he is best known for playing Archie Mitchell in the BBC soap opera EastEnders from 2008 to 2009, with a brief return in 2010.[1] Lamb's television career also includes the role of Mick Shipman in The Bill and Darren Clark in the 1980s soap opera Triangle.[2] In film, he appeared as a reporter in Superman (1978) and Superman II (1980).[1] Additionally, Lamb has worked as a radio presenter, including on LBC, and is the father of actor and presenter George Lamb. As of 2025, he continues to appear in theatre and television projects.[3]Early life
Family background
Sir Larry Lamb was born Albert Lamb on 15 July 1929 in the mining village of Fitzwilliam, West Riding of Yorkshire (now West Yorkshire), to a coal miner's family.[4][5] His family background was working-class and socialist, reflecting the industrial realities of northern England during the interwar period.[6] Dissatisfied with his given name, he adopted the nickname "Larry" as a child, inspired by the character Larry the Lamb from the BBC radio series Children's Hour.[4] No details on siblings are widely documented in available sources.Education and early career aspirations
Lamb attended Rastrick Grammar School in Brighouse, West Yorkshire.[5] He left school at age 16 in 1945, forgoing further education to enter the workforce amid post-war economic constraints.[5][7] Aspiring to a career in journalism from a young age, Lamb initially struggled to secure a reporting position and instead took a clerical job at Brighouse Town Hall, where he became active in trade unionism as a left-wing organizer and branch secretary for the National and Local Government Officers' Association (Nalgo).[4][8] This experience led to his first journalistic role on the Nalgo union paper, followed by a position as a cub reporter at the local Brighouse Echo in 1949.[4]Professional career
Early career
Lamb began his journalism career after leaving grammar school at age 16 and working at Brighouse Town Hall, where he became a left-wing trade unionist.[4] He started as a cub reporter at the local Brighouse Echo, then progressed to daily papers in north-east England, including the Newcastle Journal.[4] Moving to London, he worked as a sub-editor at the Evening Standard and Daily Mail. In 1958, he joined the Daily Mirror as a feature writer and later industrial correspondent.[4] By 1968, he had become the northern editor of the Daily Mail in Manchester.[4]Editorship of The Sun
In 1969, Rupert Murdoch appointed Lamb as editor of The Sun, then a struggling broadsheet with a circulation of around 650,000 copies.[4] Lamb relaunched it as a tabloid, emphasizing celebrity gossip, sports, sensationalism, and reader-friendly features like weather, TV listings, horoscopes, and human-interest stories. He introduced the controversial Page 3 pin-up feature in 1970, featuring topless models, and serialized sex manuals, which helped define modern British tabloid journalism.[4] Under his leadership, circulation doubled within six months and reached over 4 million by 1978, surpassing the Daily Mirror to become the UK's best-selling daily newspaper.[4] Lamb left The Sun in 1972 to edit the Sydney Daily Telegraph in Australia but returned in 1975, serving as editor until 1981 and as editorial director in between.[4] During this period, the paper shifted to support the Conservative Party, notably backing Margaret Thatcher, exerting significant political influence.[4] He was knighted in 1980 for services to journalism.[8]Later roles
In 1982, Lamb served as editor-in-chief of The Australian for nine months.[4] He then edited the Daily Express from 1983 to 1986, though these later roles were less impactful than his work at The Sun.[4][8]Personal life
Lamb was married to Joan Mary Lamb (later Lady Lamb). The couple had two sons, Richard and Nicholas, and a daughter, Jacqueline. In 1992, while in Australia, Lamb suffered a heart attack. He died at his home in Martyr Worthy, near Winchester, Hampshire, on 18 May 2000, at the age of 70, after a long illness.[4][8]Later career and retirement
Recent projects
In 2024, Lamb reprised his role as Mick Shipman in the highly anticipated Christmas special finale of the BBC comedy series Gavin & Stacey, which aired on December 25 and drew 12.3 million viewers on its debut night, marking a significant return to the character he originated in 2007. This appearance reunited him with co-stars James Corden and Ruth Jones, concluding the show's storyline after a 14-year hiatus since the 2010 special. Lamb made several guest appearances in television dramas during 2023, including portraying Dennis Lawson in the Channel 5 series The Inheritance, a family thriller centered on a contested will and hidden secrets. He also appeared as Rhys Holden in the thriller Curfew (2024), a Paramount+ limited series exploring a dystopian lockdown scenario. Additionally, Lamb featured in the travelogue Alison & Larry: Billericay to Barry (2023), co-presenting with Alison Steadman on a road trip across the UK, blending humor and cultural insights.[9] In 2025, Lamb took on a prominent role in Art Detectives, a six-episode crime drama series that premiered on U&Drama on October 30 (UK premiere; earlier on Acorn TV in the US), focusing on art thefts, forgeries, and murders investigated by a specialist detective unit.[10] He played Ron Palmer, the estranged father of lead detective Mick Palmer (Stephen Moyer) and a cunning master art forger whose expertise aids in unraveling cases involving antiques and high-stakes gallery heists.[10] A first-look trailer released in October 2025 highlighted Lamb's character through tense father-son dynamics and quirky investigative sequences set against London's art world.[10] Lamb has also engaged in podcast appearances and smaller cameos through mid-2025, including a guest spot on Rob Brydon's Brydon & podcast in December 2024, where he discussed his career and the Gavin & Stacey finale. In October 2025, he appeared on The SuperPower Podcast, sharing insights on personal resilience and acting challenges.[11] Further cameos include his role as Terry Dobson in the drama The Feud (2025).[12]Retirement and post-acting activities
In July 2025, Larry Lamb announced his retirement from major acting roles at the age of 77, citing the physical and emotional demands of the profession as he advanced in years, with his portrayal of Mick Shipman in the Gavin & Stacey Christmas special serving as his final significant performance.[13][14] He expressed openness to occasional small stage appearances to maintain visibility but emphasized a desire to step back from larger commitments.[14] Following the announcement, Lamb engaged in reflective interviews in August 2025, where he discussed preparations for his eventual death and considerations of his legacy, underscoring a shift toward cherishing time with family amid his four children and grandchildren.[15][16] Despite the retirement, Lamb remained active in creative pursuits, resuming poetry writing after a hiatus of over 40 years, as featured in an August 2025 BBC report, and continued promoting his debut novel All Wrapped Up, published in April 2025.[17] He shared war-themed poems at events like the Hereford festival and described poetry as a deeply personal outlet during travels to Normandy.[18][19] In September and October 2025 interviews, Lamb affirmed he had no intention of slowing down, prioritizing travel, family bonding, and avoiding idleness, which his son George described as potentially "terrible" for his well-being.[20][21][22] As of November 2025, his 2025 role in The Feud gained renewed attention, topping Netflix UK charts after streaming debut on November 9.[23]Awards and honors
Acting accolades
Lamb's portrayal of the villainous Archie Mitchell in the BBC soap opera EastEnders earned him significant recognition in the British television awards circuit, highlighting his ability to embody complex antagonistic characters. In 2009, he received a nomination for Villain of the Year at the British Soap Awards for his role as Archie Mitchell.[24] That same year, Lamb won the Best Bad Boy award at the Inside Soap Awards, where his performance was praised for capturing Archie's manipulative and charismatic nature.[25] The following year, Lamb secured a win for Villain of the Year at the 2010 British Soap Awards, with the category recognizing his contribution to the storyline surrounding Archie's dramatic exit from the series.[26] This accolade underscored the impact of his tenure on EastEnders, which spanned from 2008 to 2009 and involved pivotal plot developments.[27]| Year | Award | Category | Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | British Soap Awards | Villain of the Year | EastEnders (Archie Mitchell) | Nominated[24] |
| 2009 | Inside Soap Awards | Best Bad Boy | EastEnders (Archie Mitchell) | Won[25] |
| 2010 | British Soap Awards | Villain of the Year | EastEnders (Archie Mitchell) | Won[24][26] |