Neil Baldwin (Keele University)

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Neil Baldwin
Born 1946
Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, England
Residence Westlands
Nationality British
Other names Nello
Alma mater Honorary graduate of Keele University
Occupation <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Television BBC biographical film Marvellous (2014)
Parent(s) Harry and Mary Baldwin

Neil Baldwin (born 1946)[1] is an honorary graduate of Keele University[2][3] from Westlands in Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, England.[2] He is a registered clown[3][4] and also worked for Stoke City Football Club, for whom he once played briefly in a friendly match. He is the subject of an award-winning BBC television drama, Marvellous, which was broadcast in 2014.

Personal life

Born to Harry and Mary Baldwin in 1946,[5] he was diagnosed with a learning disability as a child and required speech therapy. Baldwin left school at age 16 to join Sir Robert Fossett's Circus, the oldest circus in England, for whom he performed as "Nello the Clown" for three seasons.[6] He lived with his mother until a few years before she died in 2003.[6] He is known to be friends with the Archbishop of Canterbury and footballers Gary Lineker and is also known to have spent time with Prince Edward.[7]

Keele University

Since 1960, unasked and unpaid, Baldwin has visited Keele University, where his mother worked as a cleaner, to greet new students.[1]

A testimonial football match, on 12 March 2000, featured his own team (the Neil Baldwin Football Club, formed in 1967,[8] whose president was Kevin Keegan) against an all-star side of former Football League players including Lou Macari, Asa Hartford and Gordon Cowans.[9]

He was granted honorary life membership of Keele University Students' Union in 1968.[3] The proposal received unanimous support.[3] His fiftieth year there was marked with a two-day celebration, including a service of thanksgiving presided over by the Bishop of Lichfield, Keele alumnus Jonathan Gledhill, and a further testimonial match.[3] He was also awarded honorary alumni-hood.[10]

In 2013 Baldwin received the honorary degree of Master of the University from Keele University, which said that he

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has been adopted by the student body over the last 50 years as something of a mascot for Keele... He has watched, supported and kept in touch with successive cohorts of Keele students building an impressive network of alumni contacts both national and internationally. He serves the students offering advice and support to students, remaining steadfastly proud and loyal to Keele. In doing so, he has openly defended Keele and voiced his concerns about any issue that has or would affect Keele to his numerous contacts within parliament, the various leaders of Christian denomination churches, volunteer organisations and business leaders across the country, of whom he regularly visits.[11]

Stoke City

In the 1990s Baldwin was appointed as Stoke City Football Club kit-man by then manager Lou Macari[2][3][12][13] who has described him as "the best signing I ever made", as his humour was so good for team morale.[14] In 1993, Macari played him as a substitute for Stoke City, against Aston Villa, in the final five minutes of a testimonial match for Gordon Cowans.[15][16] Macari later wrote seven pages about Baldwin in his 2009 autobiography, Football, My Life,[3] and said that he is a "man without an angle and there aren’t many of them in football".[17]

In May 2015 Baldwin was awarded "Supporter of the year" by Stoke City FC.

Marvellous TV film

Baldwin is the subject of and also appeared as himself in Marvellous, an acclaimed biographical film in which he is played by Toby Jones who was praised by The Guardian for his "lovely, very human, performance".[18] It was first broadcast on BBC Two and BBC Two HD on 25 September 2014.[12][19][20][21][22][23]

Reviewing the programme for the Stoke Sentinel, John Woodhouse said:[24]

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It says everything for Neil that Marvellous was ever made. For in times when TV is seduced by vacuity and celebrity, it doesn't sound that promising a pitch. A drama, set in Newcastle [under-Lyme], about a man saddled with the tag of "learning difficulties" who reveals himself to be so much more? Good luck with that one. And yet here it is – primetime BBC2.

Awards

The film received the 2015 BAFTA for "best single drama", and Gemma Jones received the "best supporting actress" award for her portrayal of Baldwin's mother.[25] Toby Jones was nominated for the British Academy Television Award for Best Actor for his performance.[26]

Baldwin collected the drama award, during the ceremony at the Theatre Royal on Drury Lane, and made an acceptance speech.

Marvellous book

Baldwin's autobiography, Marvellous: Neil Baldwin – My Story, written with the help of Keele University alumni Malcolm Clarke and Francis Beckett, was published in hardback by John Blake in August 2015.[5][27]

Other honours

On 21 May 2015 Baldwin was presented with the Freedom of Stoke-on-Trent.[28] and on 26 November 2015 was awarded the freedom of Newcastle-under-Lyme.[29]

In October 2015, he featured in an episode of the BBC television programme Songs of Praise.[30]

References

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External links