| When I first made up this site, I tried to think of all the
Comedians that I had found funny over the years. Well of course you
cannot think of them all, and this is one man that has given me a
lot of laughter. His dry way of putting his stories over, and the
way that he just sat there and told stories, has made me laugh many
a time. The biography on Dave Allen comes from here
http://www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/838629/
Dave Allen (born David Tynan O'Mahoney
in Tallaght, Ireland on 6 July 1936) was one of the comedy mainstays
of BBC schedules throughout the 1970s and
'80s. Sitting cross-legged on a high stool, a drink in one hand and
a cigarette in the other, Allen held
forth on the absurdities of the human condition and the foibles of
life for over twenty years. Although he received his big break and
ended his television career with ITV, it
is the BBC shows, with their combination
of stand-up (while seated) and sketches, that remain etched in the
collective memory.
The ex-journalist and would-be comic made his television debut on
the talent show New Faces (BBC, 1959). It was
Australia, however, which gave him his first taste of television
fame. On tour in 1963, he was offered a television spot, the result
being the chat show Tonight with Dave Allen (Channel 9,
1963-64). He returned to Australia several times over the ensuing
years to appear in television comedy specials and series.
Returning to Britain in 1964, Allen
gradually became familiar to British viewers through appearances on
such programmes as ITV's The
Blackpool Show (tx. 24/7/1964), Val Parnell's Sunday
Night at the London Palladium (ITV, 1955-67; 1973-74) on 10
January 1965, and a semi-regular spot between 1965 and 1967 on
The Val Doonican Show (BBC, 1965-69). ITV
presented Allen with his own comedy/chat
series, Tonight with Dave Allen (ITV, 1967-69), for
which he won the Variety Club's ITV Personality of the Year 1967.
Following The Dave Allen Show (BBC, 1969), a
variety/comedy sketch series featuring guest stars and musical
interludes, the soon-to-be popular format of
Allen's solo stool routine interspersed with comedy sketches
(either location filmed or studio shot) appeared with Dave
Allen at Large (BBC, 1971-90), which became simply Dave
Allen from 1981.
The targets of his self-penned humour, namely sex and religion
(particularly Catholicism), would frequently bring both
Allen and the BBC
to the attention of society's moral guardians. His use of the f-word
on one programme even led to questions in Parliament.
The final BBC Dave Allen
series, in 1990, saw the sketches excised to concentrate on his solo
routine, a format retained when he moved to ITV
in 1993 for his final television series, Dave Allen
(1993). Allen had left the
BBC once before, signing for
Thames in 1983, but walked out during
production of his first show and was back at the
BBC within months.
Allen has also presented documentaries, including Dave
Allen in the Melting Pot (ITV, tx. 23/12/1969), looking at
life in New York; Dave Allen in Search of the Great English
Eccentric (ITV, tx. 8/10/1974), which was expanded into
Dave Allen & Friends (ITV, 1977); and Dave Allen
(ITV, 1978), a follow-up looking at eccentrics in America.
Allen made his well-received
television straight acting debut in Alan Bennett's
One Fine Day (ITV, tx. 17/2/1979), as an estate agent
going through a professional and domestic mid-life crisis (Allen
had made his stage debut at the Royal Court
in a 1972 adaptation of Edna O'Brien's
A Pagan Place).
In semi-retirement, he made the occasional chat show appearance,
and presented the six-part The Unique Dave Allen (BBC,
1998), in which he talked about his career in between extracts from
his past shows. He died in his sleep on 10 March 2005.

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