| This tiny funny man was on TV and
films for years some time ago. He has not worked now for over ten
years after having a stroke. The biography was taken from here
http://www.screenonline.org.uk/people/id/1039164/index.html
With his diminutive (5ft 1in)
stature, blond curly hair, childlike manner and penchant for
knockabout slapstick, Charlie Drake (born
Charles Springall in London on 19 June 1925) was, particularly in
the early years of his career, a popular comedian with children.
However, upon broadening his appeal and finding a wider and more
adult audience, he became one of the most popular entertainers on
British television in the late 1950s and 1960s.
Drake
appears to have made his television debut in an episode of The
Centre Show (BBC) on 7 July 1953, in the period when he was
an aspiring stand-up comic. In 1954, however, having failed to
progress in this venture, he teamed up with lanky 6ft 4in comedian
Jack Edwardes to form a double-act (they
had first met during war service).
Following their 1954 appearance in
the talent show Showcase (BBC), the distinctive-looking
pair refashioned their act to appeal more to children, adopting the
stage names 'Mick and Montmorency' (Drake
was the latter). As such they made appearances in the children's
magazine series Jigsaw (BBC, 1954-55), followed by
Mick and Montmorency (ITV, 1955-58), occasionally
billed under the title Jobstoppers.
Eager to break away from being seen
as purely a children's entertainer, Drake
had begun to appear as a solo act in guest spots on the BBC from
1956, and dissolved his partnership with
Edwardes shortly after their last ITV series.
Co-writing all his material (which
he did throughout his comedy career), he began to establish himself
as a comedy star appealing to all age groups with Laughter in
Store (BBC, tx. 3/1/1957), followed by such BBC series as
Drake's Progress (1957-58), Charlie Drake In...
(1958-60), and The Charlie Drake Show (1960-61).
This television fame led to four
disappointing attempts at film stardom between 1960 and 1967:
Sands of the Desert (d. John Paddy Carstairs, 1960),
Petticoat Pirates (d. David MacDonald, 1961), The
Cracksman (d. Peter Graham Scott, 1963) and Mr. Ten Per
Cent (d. Peter Graham Scott, 1967).
In 1963, he returned to
ITV, where he was to remain for the rest
of his comedy career, apart from the one BBC
series, The Charlie Drake Show (1967-68), from which a
compilation of sketches won him the Charles Chaplin Award for Best
Comedy at the 1968 Montreux Television Festival.
His ITV
series included The Charlie Drake Show (1963),
Who Is Sylvia? (1967) and Slapstick and Old Lace
(1971), but it was The Worker (1965-70), with Drake as
the proverbial little man who is unable to hold down a job, which
enjoyed the greatest popularity. With what proved to be his last
regular spot on television, in the variety show Bruce
Forsyth's Big Night (ITV, 1978), he reprised the Worker
format in a series of ten-minute sketches.
Although he was to make the
occasional comic guest appearance on television after 1978,
Drake largely concentrated on straight
drama, with Shakespeare and
Pinter on stage and well-received
performances on television as the unscrupulous moneylender Smallweed
in Bleak House (BBC, 1985), one of a party of Welshmen
on a wife-hunting mission in Filipina Dreamgirls (BBC,
tx. 15/9/1991) and, stretching credibility to its limits, as a crime
boss in an episode of the thriller series 99-1 (ITV,
1994-95).
Drake
suffered a serious stroke in 1995 and has not worked since, classing
himself as 'semi-retired'.
Charlie Drake passed away on December 24th 2006 aged 81.
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