



Another very funny man, who was prone to depression, Frankie Howard was a household name in the UK for many years. He first went on the stage in 1936, but suffered from stage fright all his life.
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Frankie Howerd was one of the great survivors of British comedy. Despite two notable falls in popularity, he always bounced back to the top of the comedy pile. At the time of his death he was probably as popular as he had ever been, even enjoying cult status with younger audiences. With a battery of 'oohs', 'aahs' and 'thrice nays' punctuating his peerless routine of risqué jokes and rambling stories, Howerd by and large successfully negotiated the tricky comedic path of appealing to fresh generations for over forty years.
Following pre-
His television debut followed in the three-
Howerd had also begun to branch out into the worlds of film and theatre, with appearances
in The Runaway Bus (d. Val Guest, 1953), Jumping for Joy (d. John Paddy Carstairs,
1955) and The Ladykillers (d. Alexander Mackendrick, 1955) for the cinema, and, for
the stage, well-
However, his crown had begun to slip by the late 1950s. Not only were appearances in such theatre productions alienating his old audience, but television producers were beginning to view him as difficult and his humour outdated. A disastrous move into sitcom with Frankly Howerd (BBC, 1959), written by Americans Reuben Ship and Phil Sharp, only served to confirm him as yesterday's man.
The next few years were the nadir of his career. Work on stage and, particularly, television became difficult to find, and it was not until 1962 that matters turned again in his favour.
On the strength of an appearance at the Evening Standard Theatre Awards in that year, Howerd was booked to appear at Peter Cook's new centre of satire, The Establishment Club. With a script by Johnny Speight, Ray Galton and Alan Simpson that mixed a few satirical barbs into his usual standard of material, Howerd proved a tremendous success.
His appearance at the club led to Ned Sherrin booking him for the popular satire
show, That Was The Week That Was (BBC, 1962-
A Last Word on the Election (BBC, tx. 18/10/1964) was satire in a similar vein, partly
written by Galton and Simpson. The two writers cemented Howerd's comeback with the
series Frankie Howerd (BBC, 1964-


Howerd's most successful television work was to be in situation comedy -
The following years witnessed a succession of similarly styled sitcoms, casting Howerd as a slave or underling in a variety of settings, with diminishing success. These included the direct retreads Further Up Pompeii (BBC, tx. 31/3/1975) and, with imagination at a premium, Further Up Pompeii (ITV, tx. 14/12/1991); Whoops Baghdad (BBC, 1973); and A Touch of the Casanovas (ITV, tx. 31/12/1975).
Then Churchill Said to Me (BBC) was particularly dire, with Howerd, for the most part, as a private assigned to an underground HQ in WWII London (he also appeared as a general). Produced in 1982, the series was not to not screened until March 1993 on cable channel UK Gold and April 2000 on terrestrial BBC television.
The rise of 'alternative' comedy in Britain in the late 1970s/early 1980s made Howerd's
humour once again seem outmoded, and he experienced a second, though less severe,
lull in his career. Good sense prevailed, however, when he was discovered anew by
young, particularly student, audiences ('Titter Ye Not' t-
During his career he had made a number of such 'concert' programmes. East of Howerd
(BBC, tx. 1/1/1966) and Frankie Howerd in Ulster (BBC, tx. 14/3/1975) showed him
entertaining British troops in Borneo and Northern Ireland respectively (he had been
entertaining British forces in far-
His final television work, Frankie's On... (ITV, 1992), was a series of such concerts (one was on HMS Ark Royal). Six episodes were planned, but only four were completed before he died from a heart attack. He was awarded an OBE in 1977.