| 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.
Below is the biography from
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0398110/bio
Francis Alick Howerd, who grew up to become popular British
comedian Frankie Howerd, was born in 1917 and first set foot on
stage at age 4. A Sunday school teacher as a teen, his father, who
died in 1934, had been an Army man for most of his life.
Not long after Frankie was invited to audition for RADA.
His audition was poor and from then on he knew his calling was not
as an actor, but as a comedian. At 19 he put together revues for
music halls that included monologues, impressions, jokes and comic
songs. This was not easy since he suffered from major stage fright,
a life-long debilitation.
Following war service, Frankie refocused on his career with radio
and theatre appearances. In the 1950s he finally earned his own TV
variety shows, but his burgeoning reputation coupled with a lack of
self-confidence led the painfully shy man to suffer severe emotional
conflicts with this newly found success. This would culminate into a
severe nervous breakdown in the early 1960s.
Prone to deep depression and melancholia, Frankie somehow
managed to regroup and earned high praise for both his musical
comedy performance in the London production of "A Funny Thing
Happened on the Way to the Forum" (in the Zero Mostel role) and his
work on the popular satire series
"That Was the Week
That Was" (1962). Though never a strong film performer, he
managed to find work in such films as
The Ladykillers
(1955), Further Up
the Creek (1958),
The Great St. Trinian's Train Robbery (1966), some 'Carry On'
appearances, and the lead role in
The House in
Nightmare Park (1973).
Frankie was awarded the OBE in 1977. In that same year his
autobiography was published, "On My Way I Lost It." In early April
of 1992, he went to the hospital with respiratory problems and died
of heart failure on April 19th. He was buried at St. Gregory's
Church in Weare, Somerset.
I vividly remember Frankie from 'Up Pompeii' and several 'Carry
On' films, and he always made me laugh.
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