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  • Benny Hill

    Benny was in TV even as early as the 1950s...
    his risque shows and sketches always popular with everyone...
    that is until we entered the politically correct world we live in now
    and poor old Benny fell out of fashion.....

    But you cant hold a good man down and Benny is now famous and loved around the world
    despite the endless sneering of Ben Elton and the alternative crowd

  • #2
    Re: Benny Hill

    Ben Elton and his talentless chums of the early 80s 'alternative comedy' movement were extremely fortunate to be able to make a living. Most of the acts were nothing more than shambling on stage and screeching 'Maggie Thatcher' or, in Jo Brand's case, 'I love chocolate, I hate men'. Lazy beyond belief. And to think of all the old-school comics who were thrown on the scrapheap after spending decades working the clubs and honing their craft. Still makes my blood boil.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Benny Hill

      Benny was hilarious but of a different era
      Ejector seat?...your jokin!

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Benny Hill

        Originally posted by teepee View Post
        Ben Elton and his talentless chums of the early 80s 'alternative comedy' movement were extremely fortunate to be able to make a living. Most of the acts were nothing more than shambling on stage and screeching 'Maggie Thatcher' or, in Jo Brand's case, 'I love chocolate, I hate men'. Lazy beyond belief. And to think of all the old-school comics who were thrown on the scrapheap after spending decades working the clubs and honing their craft. Still makes my blood boil.
        It's just a case of things moving on, & younger people being more interested in comedians they could related to better, being 2 generations behind by the end of the 1980s.
        The Trickster On The Roof

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Benny Hill

          He was trying to be the Charlie Chaplin of his generation but couldn't quite do it - he was overweight and got a load of sub-Page Three women chasing him.
          I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
          There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
          I'm having so much fun
          My lucky number's one
          Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Benny Hill

            Mind you, I liked his 1971 Christmas hit - I always thought he was a one hit wonder but he had a few minor hits in the 1960s as well.

            Benny Hill and Frankie Howerd were great friends so the tragedy that they both passed away in 1992 within days of each other - while bizarrely, Hill payed tribute to Howerd just before he passed on, and it came two days after Hill himseld died.
            I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
            There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
            I'm having so much fun
            My lucky number's one
            Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Benny Hill

              Originally posted by tex View Post
              Benny was hilarious but of a different era
              I thought that Mr Bean was supposed to be a replacement for Hill in a way that they were mostly acts who hardly spoke and were famous for visual comedy, as well as the fact that they were both contracted to Thames TV for their comedy shows.
              I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
              There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
              I'm having so much fun
              My lucky number's one
              Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Benny Hill

                Originally posted by teepee View Post
                Ben Elton and his talentless chums of the early 80s 'alternative comedy' movement were extremely fortunate to be able to make a living. Most of the acts were nothing more than shambling on stage and screeching 'Maggie Thatcher' or, in Jo Brand's case, 'I love chocolate, I hate men'. Lazy beyond belief. And to think of all the old-school comics who were thrown on the scrapheap after spending decades working the clubs and honing their craft. Still makes my blood boil.
                There were plenty of terrible old-school comics making a living telling lazy mother-in-law jokes and doing racist impressions too. Some of them are still at it.

                The good ones were able to reinvent themselves and are still doing just fine. Tarby, Les Dennis, Jimmy Cricket, Barry Cryer, Jethro, Tom O'Connor... all still working as much or as little as they like. Frank Carson, Bernard Manning, and Bruce Forsyth worked until as close to they they died as their health allowed. Benny Hill died the day his new contract arrived from Central TV, having just turned down offers from two other ITV franchises.

                Sure, we don't see them on TV much any more, but television comedy has always represented the most fashionable cross-section of what's happening everywhere else... whether that was comedy clubs, working men's clubs, cruise ships, or even radio or (nowadays) podcasts.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Benny Hill

                  why does nt someone go into the shows of Benny... the Two Rons..... Dick Emery etc
                  and make vid clips of their sketches.... say 3 or 4 mins each ... maybe date them by year ...

                  seperate the tv gold from the dross

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Benny Hill

                    Originally posted by numpty View Post
                    There were plenty of terrible old-school comics making a living telling lazy mother-in-law jokes and doing racist impressions too. Some of them are still at it.

                    The good ones were able to reinvent themselves and are still doing just fine. Tarby, Les Dennis, Jimmy Cricket, Barry Cryer, Jethro, Tom O'Connor... all still working as much or as little as they like. Frank Carson, Bernard Manning, and Bruce Forsyth worked until as close to they they died as their health allowed. Benny Hill died the day his new contract arrived from Central TV, having just turned down offers from two other ITV franchises.

                    Sure, we don't see them on TV much any more, but television comedy has always represented the most fashionable cross-section of what's happening everywhere else... whether that was comedy clubs, working men's clubs, cruise ships, or even radio or (nowadays) podcasts.
                    They tried to make Freddie Starr a Benny Hill replacement when he got a Central TV contract - all I saw of him was a couple of Bank Holiday specials on ITV which I suppose might have been a blessing in disguise in hindsight.

                    But yes, those who are still around such as the ones you mentioned are either retired or doing cruises or the theatre. I liked Bobby Davro, Russ Abbot, Cannon and Ball (well, someone had to stick up for them), and to a degree, Brian Conley. If you ever travel around the country to see them in pantomime, it's as if they have never gone away, although the irony is that these pantos that are aimed at children who weren't even born when they appeared regularly on the TV.
                    I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
                    There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
                    I'm having so much fun
                    My lucky number's one
                    Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Benny Hill

                      Freddie Starr was just too contrary for TV , he was getting into arguments and disputes with studio bosses
                      so he went back to the club scene where he was comfortable and in his element.
                      but those guys from the 60s and 70s..... Eric and Earnie..... Les Dawson..... Cannon and Ball..... Benny Hill.... Dick Emery
                      were loved by the British public in a way that Ben Elton...Alexie Sayle and those policitally correct cretins never will be

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Benny Hill

                        Originally posted by silverbirch View Post
                        Freddie Starr was just too contrary for TV , he was getting into arguments and disputes with studio bosses
                        so he went back to the club scene where he was comfortable and in his element.
                        but those guys from the 60s and 70s..... Eric and Earnie..... Les Dawson..... Cannon and Ball..... Benny Hill.... Dick Emery
                        were loved by the British public in a way that Ben Elton...Alexie Sayle and those policitally correct cretins never will be
                        Not to mention eating hamsters.

                        Mainstream comedians are indeed more family orientated - they are more likely to be seen on pre-watershed BBC 1 and ITV while Ben Elton and the others were on Channel 4 after the watershed. I think that political correctness has got something to do with the fact that mainstream acts are not seen as often as they used to be - I mentioned this on another thread. Even the Dolly Dealers on Play Your Cards Right have been seen in some ways as being sexist.
                        I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
                        There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
                        I'm having so much fun
                        My lucky number's one
                        Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Benny Hill

                          Cannon & Ball and Little & Large were both pushed as the "New Morcombe & Wise" but didn't have the level of talent to do it. Les Dennis & Dustin Gee were a little better but Dustin died too soon. Fortunately Les Dennis managed to be a decent foil to Russ Abbott who was a bit quirkier than most of the "non-alternative" comedians in the 1980s.

                          As mentioned above, most of the alternative comedians tended to be better on post watershed shows than anything family friendly.

                          The Goodies seemed to be in an odd middle ground between Monty Python light & the smarter of the end of the pier comedians, often using the chestnut of "double speed film with no dialogue" to good effect.
                          The Trickster On The Roof

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Benny Hill

                            Despite being a very BBC double act in the 1980s, replacing Morecambe and Wise in that respect, Little and Large won Opportunity Knocks (Hughie Green version of course) and had a series with Thames in around 1976 (as old TV listings would tell us), and then they did a Mutual Exchange with Eric and Ernie and swapped channels - don't forget that Cannon and Ball never did series for the BBC - apart from the odd guest appearance on Jim Davidson's Generation Game. Tommy and Bobby were with LWT Eric and Ernie were with Thames. And then Morecambe passed away.

                            I never thought of Les Dennis ever being part of a double act - I certainly didn't think (or was too young to think) of entertainers like Lennie Bennett or even Bob Monkhouse as being part of their respective double acts - with Jerry Stevens and Denis Goodwin as their showbusiness partners. Family members such as Mike and Bernie Winters don't count there. Also, the Two Ronnies were not a double act in the same ilk as Morecambe and Wise - can anyone imagine Eric appearing solo in a sitcom like Ronnie Barker did?

                            Regarding the gap between mainstream and alternative, I regard Hale and Pace to almost be on the borderline between the two - the fact that they were on network ITV but after the watershed in the Spitting Image slot were alternative but in a mainstream way. Fair enough, they started on Saturday Night Channel 4 in around 1986, but I think that they made the move to ITV due to being popular in that "cheer up it's Monday tomorrow" slot. It's like saying that Private Eye is an adult magazine, but it isn't quite. ,
                            I've everything I need to keep me satisfied
                            There's nothing you can do to make me change my mind
                            I'm having so much fun
                            My lucky number's one
                            Ah! Oh! Ah! Oh!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Benny Hill

                              I think Canon and Ball did have what it takes, they were given a big tv series with
                              ITV and it kind of flopped... not because of them ... just dont think they
                              had the writers and nerves prob got to them.... but think they are still doing well in the
                              theatres even today

                              Hale and Pace were big on TV then suddenly vanished... never knew why !

                              Comment

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