Barry Cryer
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== Shows == | == Shows == | ||
- | [[Crosswits]] | + | [[Crosswits]] |
[[Cryer's Crackers]] | [[Cryer's Crackers]] | ||
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+ | [[The Gong Show]] (judge) | ||
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+ | [[Great Wall of Comedy]] (team captain) | ||
[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]] (occasional chairman in 1972, regular panellist thereafter) | [[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]] (occasional chairman in 1972, regular panellist thereafter) | ||
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[[Music Match]] | [[Music Match]] | ||
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+ | [[Small Talk]] (script associate, series 1) | ||
[[Those Wonderful TV Times]] | [[Those Wonderful TV Times]] | ||
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== Biography == | == Biography == | ||
- | Leeds-born comedian and writer who | + | Leeds-born comedian and writer who flunked university and went into the theatre. After assisting magician David Nixon at a pantomime, he was introduced to the London scene and auditioned at its famous Windmill Theatre telling jokes before the strippers came on. He auditioned at 10.30am and was hired and on stage two hours later. |
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+ | He went on to write scripts and gags for virtually every major British comedian from the 1960s onwards, including [[Kenny Everett]], [[Les Dawson]], The Two Ronnies, Morecambe and Wise, and Frankie Howerd. | ||
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+ | He died in 2022, aged 86. | ||
== Trivia == | == Trivia == | ||
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+ | He made up for his initial academic failure by being awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Arts by Leeds Metropolitan University in 2013. | ||
In Finland he had a No.1 record, ''Purple People Eater'', for three weeks in 1958. | In Finland he had a No.1 record, ''Purple People Eater'', for three weeks in 1958. | ||
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+ | Persuaded fellow Windmill artist [[Bruce Forsyth]] to keep working in comedy, after the chinned wonder decided he'd got as far as he could and was considering opening up a tobacconists. When Cryer bumped into Forsyth a year later, just before his first ''Sunday Night at the London Palladium'', he asked what ever happened about opening the tobacco shop. "Postponed" came the reply. | ||
== Web links== | == Web links== | ||
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[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0190540/ IMDb entry] | [http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0190540/ IMDb entry] | ||
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+ | [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-34041501 BBC obituary] | ||
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+ | == See also == | ||
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+ | [[Weaver's Week 2022-02-06#Barry Cryer|Weaver's Week obituary]] | ||
[[Category:People|Cryer, Barry]] | [[Category:People|Cryer, Barry]] |
Current revision as of 20:44, 22 April 2023
Contents |
Shows
The Gong Show (judge)
Great Wall of Comedy (team captain)
I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue (occasional chairman in 1972, regular panellist thereafter)
Small Talk (script associate, series 1)
Biography
Leeds-born comedian and writer who flunked university and went into the theatre. After assisting magician David Nixon at a pantomime, he was introduced to the London scene and auditioned at its famous Windmill Theatre telling jokes before the strippers came on. He auditioned at 10.30am and was hired and on stage two hours later.
He went on to write scripts and gags for virtually every major British comedian from the 1960s onwards, including Kenny Everett, Les Dawson, The Two Ronnies, Morecambe and Wise, and Frankie Howerd.
He died in 2022, aged 86.
Trivia
He made up for his initial academic failure by being awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Arts by Leeds Metropolitan University in 2013.
In Finland he had a No.1 record, Purple People Eater, for three weeks in 1958.
Persuaded fellow Windmill artist Bruce Forsyth to keep working in comedy, after the chinned wonder decided he'd got as far as he could and was considering opening up a tobacconists. When Cryer bumped into Forsyth a year later, just before his first Sunday Night at the London Palladium, he asked what ever happened about opening the tobacco shop. "Postponed" came the reply.