| Harry Seacombe was a wonderful funny entertainer, and I have
many happy memories of seeing him acting the clown, as he did
brilliantly in the 'Goon Show' or singing with his wonderful tenor
voice, as he did as 'Mr Bumble' in the film 'Oliver'. We have a CD
of his, with a lot of classical music on it. If he had not gone into
comedy, he would have been one of the best classical singers in the
world. The biography below comes from
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0781183/bio
Harry Secombe was one of Britain's best loved comic entertainers.
Born in Swansea, South Wales he began singing as a child in local
church choirs. His first job was as a clerk although he had
considered a career in opera. During World War Two he served in the
Army in North Africa and Italy. He met the comedian Spike Milligan
while on duty in the Western desert and their common bond was a
unique brand of humour. Secombe appeared in many troop concerts
where he was known for his trademark high pitched laugh and blowing
raspberries. After the war he appeared as a comic at London's famous
Windmill Theatre and in 1945 became one of the stalwarts of the
hugely successful radio series Educating Archie. His greatest
popularity began in 1951 with the birth of radio's Crazy People,
later to be renamed The Goon Show. One of the most famous radio
comedy programmes of all time it helped launch the careers of
Secombe, Spike Milligan, Peter Sellers and Michael Bentine.
Whilst the Goon Show was in its prime the comedy team made several
films associated with the series including Down Among the Z Men
(1952) and in 1955 Secombe had his own TV show, The Harry Secombe
Show. His other popular TV shows, often written by Marty Feldman and
Barry Cryer, included Secombe and Friends (1966) and Have a Harry
Christmas (1977). On stage he had a long running success with Leslie
Bricusse's Pickwick (1963) and he revived the show in the 1980s.
His most notable film work began with Davy (1957) in which he played
a music hall performer who auditions for an opera at Convent Garden.
It was meant as a star vehicle for him but was not a box office
success. International audiences became familiar with him when he
played Mr Bumble, the beadle in Oliver! (1968) and films such as The
Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins (1971) and Starstruck (1972).
Knighted in 1981 and much slimmed down after a serious attack of
peritonitis, he continued to appear in concerts and on television as
well as writing several volumes of autobiography. He toured
Australia and in 1983 became the host of Highway, a weekly TV
religious programme. This was Secombe toned down, far from his
rollicking past and with no jokes, but it gave him a chance to sing
seriously. The show ran for nearly ten years.
Ill health continually dogged the comedian in his final years and he
battled with cancer and a severe stroke. He continued to appear on
television, notably narrating D Day - The Official Story (1994) and
presenting Top Ten Comedy Records (2000).
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