Close friend of
David Niven. They served together in a Highland Regiment in
Malta in the 1930s and Trubshawe figures prominently in Niven's
autobiography, The Moon's A Balloon, where he is referred to simply as 'Trubshawe' -
his first name is not mentioned, even in the index. Niven states "He swiftly made a name
for himself in television and one of his earliest screen appearances
was in The Guns of Navarone - a lovely bonus for me." Niven does not
mention Trubshawe's earlier appearance in Around the World in 80 Days.
Trubshawe was Niven's best man on the occasion of his two marriages,
and also godfather to Niven's son David, Jr.