الاثنين، 16 مارس 2020

Roy Hudd

Roy Hudd

Roy Hudd, OBE (16 May 1936 – 15 March 2020)[1] was an English comedian, actor, presenter, radio host, author and authority on the history of music hall entertainment
Early life
Hudd was born in Croydon on 16 May 1936.[1][2] His father was a carpenter and he attended Tavistock Secondary Modern School in Croydon and Croydon Secondary Technical School. He then worked as a messenger for an advertising agency, a window dresser and a commercial artist working under Harry Beck.[3]

He made his professional debut as a comedian on 27 October 1957 at the Streatham Hill Theatre, at a show in aid of the Sir Philip Game Boys' Club of which he was a former member.[4] Initially he worked with a friend from Croydon, Eddy Kay who had also been a member of the boys club, the two billing themselves as "the peculiar pair".[5] In 1958 they joined as Redcoats at Butlin's Clacton working alongside Cliff Richard and Dave Allen.[6]

Radio
Although Hudd and Kay had made a brief appearance as 'discoveries' on the BBC's In Town Tonight in 1958,[7] Hudd made his solo debut on radio in 1959 on Workers' Playtime. He remains best known for the BBC Radio 2 satirical series The News Huddlines, which ran from 1975 to 2001.[8] His other radio credits include playing Max Quordlepleen, the host at The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, in the original radio series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1978),[9] Crowned Hudds (1994–95),[10] The Newly Discovered Casebook of Sherlock Holmes (1999–2000)[11] and Like They've Never Been Gone (1999–2002).[12]

Television
Hudd broke into television in the mid-1960s in sketch series such as The Illustrated Weekly Hudd and The Roy Hudd Show. His acting roles include the Dennis Potter series Lipstick on Your Collar, for which he received critical praise, and Karaoke.[13] In the mid 1990s, he appeared in two series of Common As Muck, a drama about a group of refuse collectors, alongside Edward Woodward.[14] In 2000, Hudd appeared as neighbour Mr. Smedley in one episode of One Foot in the Grave.[15] From 2002 to 2003, he appeared as the undertaker Archie Shuttleworth in the ITV soap opera Coronation Street[8] and subsequently returned for guest appearances until the character's death in December 2018. He also starred in the ITV drama 'The Quest', alongside Sir David Jason and Hywel Bennett, from 2002–2004. In 2007 he appeared in episodes of New Tricks, Casualty (and again in July 2019) and The Last Detective. In 2010 he appeared in BBC dramas Missing and Ashes to Ashes.[16]

In 2012, he appeared in an episode of the BBC drama Call the Midwife. In 2014 he appeared in episodes of Midsomer Murders, Law & Order: UK and Holby City.[16] In December 2015, Hudd played Bud Flanagan in the BBC drama We're Doomed! The Dad's Army Story, about the creation of the titular long-running sitcom.[17] In 2016 he appeared in an episode of Benidorm.[18] In 2017, he appeared in the ITV series Broadchurch.[16]

Stage appearances
Hudd appeared in many pantomime and variety performances. In 1977, he starred as Fagin in the West End revival of Lionel Bart's musical Oliver! at the Albery Theatre and in 1982 he played Bud Flanagan in Underneath the Arches at the Prince of Wales Theatre, for which he won a Society of West End Theatre Award. In 2000, he starred in a musical version of Hard Times at the Theatre Royal Haymarket.[19] In 2008 he played the part of the Wizard in a production of The Wizard of Oz at London's Royal Festival Hall.[20] In 2019 he toured the UK in a production of Oscar Wilde's play A Woman of No Importance alongside Liza Goddard and Isla Blair.[21]

Music hall
Hudd wrote several books on music hall, re-recorded music hall records, and appeared in the music hall revival show The Good Old Days. He was seen by broadcasters as an authority on the subject and is the longstanding President of the British Music Hall Society.[22] His CD, Mirth, Magic and Melodrama consists of a collection of classic monologues from the music hall days, including The Pig and The Lion and Albert, first recorded by Stanley Holloway. For Celebrity Mastermind, broadcast in January 2014, Hudd answered questions on the specialist subject of music hall comedian Dan Leno.[6]

He was an authority on the comedian Max Miller and was known for his impersonation of Miller. He appeared as his hero in the Big Finish Productions Doctor Who audio play Pier Pressure in 2006. He was President of the Max Miller Appreciation Society.[23]

Charity work
Hudd had a long association with the Bristol Hospital Broadcasting Service, where he was considered an honorary member. In 1994 he officially opened their current studios in the Bristol Royal Infirmary. He was also a past King Rat of the show business charity the Grand Order of Water Rats.[24]

In addition to this, he was the first Honorary President of Sandwell Hospital Radio in West Bromwich for a period of ten years, visiting the studios, members and patients whenever he was appearing in the West Midlands
Honours
Hudd was awarded an OBE in the 2004 New Year Honours List.[28] In 1983 (1982 season), he was awarded the Society of West End Theatre Award as Best Actor in a Musical for his role in Underneath the Arches, as Bud Flanagan.[29]

On 29 November 2010 Hudd was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Letters by the University of Westminster; he studied commercial art there when it was the Regent Street Polytechnic.[30]

Bibliography
Hudd wrote numerous books from 1971 onwards:[31]

Joke Book (Mini-ha-ha Books) by Roy Hudd (Paperback – 28 May 1971)
Music Hall (Picturefile) by Roy Hudd (Paperback – 4 November 1976)
The News Huddlines by Roy Hudd and Illustrated (Paperback – 1 January 1980)
Beautiful Dreamer: A musical melodrama based on the life and songs of Stephen Collins Foster by Roy Hudd (Unknown Binding – 1981)
Underneath the Arches by Patrick, Glanville, Brian, Hudd, Roy Garland (Paperback – 1982)
Underneath the Arches: Musical in Two Acts by Patrick Garland, Brian Glanville, and Roy Hudd (Paperback – 1984)
That's Entertainment: Vol.1 by Roy Hudd, etc. (Paperback – 1 December 1992)
Roy Hudd's Book of Music-hall, Variety and Showbiz Anecdotes by Roy Hudd (Hardcover – October 1993)
Roy Hudd's Huddline Annual by Roy Hudd and Tony Hare (Hardcover – October 1994)
I Say, I Say, I Say: Johnners' Choice of Jokes to Keep You Laughing by Brian Johnston and Roy Hudd (Paperback – 4 September 1995)
The Pantomime Book by Paul Harris and Roy Hudd (Paperback – August 1996)
Look Back with Laughter. Volume Three by Mike Craig, Dame Thora Hird, and Roy Hudd (Paperback – 1998)
Roy Hudd's Cavalcade of Variety Acts: A Who Was Who of Light Entertainment, 1945–60 by Roy Hudd and Philip Hindin (Paperback – 18 November 1998)
Roy Hudd's Book of Music-hall, Variety and Showbiz Anecdotes by Roy Hudd (Paperback – 30 October 1998)
The Pantomime Book: The Only Known Collection of Pantomime Jokes and Sketches in Captivity by Paul Harris and Roy Hudd (Paperback – 31 October 2001)
Twice Nightly by Roy Hudd (Hardcover – October 2007)
The Pantomime Book by Roy Hudd and Paul Harris (Paperback – 15 September 2008)
A Fart in a Colander: The Autobiography by Roy Hudd (Hardcover – 1 October 2009)

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