- Frankie Howerd
Infobox actor
name = Frankie Howerd
imagesize =
caption = Frankie Howerd in a publicity still forSuperfrank!
birthname = Francis Alick Howard
birthdate = birth date|1917|3|6|df=y
location =York ,England , United Kingdom
deathdate = death date and age|1992|4|18|1917|3|6|df=y
deathplace =Fulham ,London ,England ,United Kingdom
height =
othername =
yearsactive = 1946–1992
spouse =
homepage =
notable role =Lurcio
inUp Pompeii!
academyawards =
emmyawards =
tonyawards =Frankie Howerd OBE (born Francis Alick Howard,
6 March 1917 –18 April 1992 ), was a distinctive Englishcomedian and comicactor whose career spannedsix decades.Biography
Howerd was born the son of a
soldier , Francis A. W. Howard inYork ,England , in 1917 (not 1922 as he later claimed). He was "lightly" educated atShooters Hill Grammar School (later to becomeEaglesfield School ) inEltham, London . His early hopes of becoming a serious actor were dashed when he failed anaudition forRADA . He got into entertaining during wartime service in the army. Despite suffering fromstage fright he continued to work after thewar , beginning his professional career in the summer of 1946 in atour ingshow called "For the Fun of It ".He soon started working in
radio , making his debut at the start of December 1946 on theBBC "Variety Bandbox " programme with a number of other ex-servicemen. His fame built steadily throughout the late 1940s and early 1950s (aided by material written byEric Sykes ,Galton and Simpson andJohnny Speight ). In 1954, he made his screen début oppositePetula Clark in "The Runaway Bus ", which had been written for his specific comic talents, but he never became a majorfilm presence. When he began experimenting with different formats and contexts, including stage farces, Shakespearean comedy roles, andtelevision sitcom s, he began to fall out offashion . After suffering a nervous breakdown at the start of the 1960s, he began to recover his old popularity, initially with a season atPeter Cook 's satiricalEstablishment Club inSoho inLondon . He was boosted further by success on "That Was The Week That Was " (TW3) in 1963 and on stage with "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum " (1963–1965), which led into regular television work. He was awarded an OBE in 1977.He was famous for his seemingly
off-the-cuff remarks to the audience, especially in the show "Up Pompeii! ", which was a direct follow-up from "Forum". His television work was characterised by addressing himself directly to thecamera and littering hismonologue s with verbaltic s: "Oooh, no missus", "Titter ye not", and so on. Another feature of hishumour was to feign innocence about his obvious andrisqué double entendre s while mockingly censuring the audience for finding them funny.Howerd's
face was a gift tocomedy but a testament totragedy . When areporter wrote that he had a face like "alandslide of sadness", Howerd got in touch with him to say how right that was.In 1978, Howerd was
cast in the big-budgetHollywood musical "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" playingMean Mr. Mustard , acting alongside musical and film talent such asPeter Frampton ,The Bee Gees ,George Burns ,Alice Cooper ,Aerosmith andSteve Martin . He was cast by producerRobert Stigwood as Howerd was on Stigwood'srecord label at the time. The film was a critical and commercial flop, although now it has achievedcult status. Since Howerd was not well known to American audiences, this may have been his biggest exposure in the U.S. After five years without a regular television show (though he had hosted a one-off UK version of "The Gong Show " forChannel 4 , which was critically panned and was not commissioned for a full series), Howerd returned to the TV screens in 1987 in the Channel 4 show "Superfrank! " scripted byMiles Tredinnick andVince Powell . In the last years of his career, Howerd developed a cult following with student audiences and performed a one man show at universities and in small theatrical venues, although some were offended by his inclusion of a small number ofracist joke s in his act. He was also a regular and popular guest on the late nightBBC Radio 1 programme "Into the Night ", hosted byNicky Campbell .Howerd often worked with
Sunny Rogers who was his accompanyingpianist from 1960 onwards. She appeared in his TV and livetheatre shows including his last major West End appearance—his one-man show—at theGarrick Theatre in 1990.Howerd suffered
respiratory problems at the beginning of April 1992 and died ofheart failure at home two weeks after leavinghospital inLondon . [TV programmeBBC Four on4 September 2007 "] . Two hours before Frankie died, he was speaking on the telephone to his TV producer about new ideas for his next show. Howerd died one day before fellow comedianBenny Hill . News of the two deaths broke almost simultaneously, and some newspapers ran a cannedobituary of Howerd in which he was quoted as regretting Hill's passing, saying "We were great, great friends."The
song "Sects Therapy " from the CD "Freudiana " (released 1990) featuredlead vocal s by Howerd.A BBC TV biography about Frankie Howerd—"Rather You Than Me"—has been produced and was broadcast by
BBC Four on 9 April 2008. The script was written by Peter Harness, after extensive interviews with Howerd's partner, Dennis Heymer. ComedianDavid Walliams was cast as Howerd. [ cite news | url= http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2007/dec/14/bbc.television?gusrc=rss&feed=media | title= Walliams to play Frankie Howerd | publisher=The Guardian | date=14 December 2007 | accessdate= 2007-12-16]David Benson is currently touring with his one man show "To Be Frank" [ [http://www.seabright.info/davidbenson.html#tbf David Benson - JAMES SEABRIGHT ] ] .Personal life
Throughout his career, Howerd hid his potentially career-destroying
homosexuality (which had been illegal in Britain until 1967) from both his audience and hismother . In 1955, Frankie metwaiter Dennis Heymer , who later became his manager. Dennis was with Frankie for more than thirty years, both as lighting operator, manager and partner, until Howerd died.Backstage , Howerd was notoriously bold in his advances, and was known for hispromiscuity . One of Howerd's former partners was comicactor Lee Young who created the TVsitcom "Whoops Baghdad ". Howerd's uncomfortable relationship with his sexuality—he once said toCilla Black , "I wish to God I wasn'tgay "—as well as his depressive mental state, led him to seek resolution through a series of different methods. Heymer would often drop Howerd off on Friday at hispsychiatrist , who would ply him with LSD over the weekend. [ cite web | url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6480117.stm | title= Frankie Howerd's forbidden love | work=BBC News | date=23 March 2007 | accessdate= 2007-12-16]Frankie Howerd lived for about the last 20 years of his life in
Wavering Down , ahouse in thevillage ofCross, Somerset by theMendip Hills .cite web
url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/4813788.stm|first = Stephen|last = Smith
publisher =BBC |date =March 17 2007
title = Titter ye not - it's Frankie's pad
accessdate= 2007-10-16]Howerd collapsed and died on the
morning of18 April 1992 . He was 75 years old.Dennis Heymer continues to live in the house, which is a
tourist attraction , and in the summer hosts concerts and opens regularly as a museum of Howerd's collection ofmemorabilia to raise fund for charities. Howerd's grave is at St. Gregory's church inWeare, Somerset .Howerd also lived at 27 Edwardes Square, Kensington London W8 6HH. The house bears a blue plaque erected by the Dead Comics Society.
Works
Television
*"
That Was The Week That Was " (1962)
*"East of Howerd " (1966)
*"Howerd's Hour " (1968)
*"Carry on Christmas" (1969)
*"The Frankie Howerd Show " (1969)
*"Up Pompeii! " (1970)
*"Whoops Baghdad "
*"The Frankie Howerd Show " (1976)
*"Howerd Confessions " (1976)
*"Up the Convicts " (1976)
*"Frankie Howerd Strikes Again " (1981)
*"Then Churchill Said to Me " (1982)
*"Superfrank! " (1987)
*"All Change " (1989)
*"Frankie Howerd on Campus " (1990)
*"Frankie's On... " (1992)elected filmography
*"
The Runaway Bus " (1954)
*"The Ladykillers " (1955)
*"Jumping For Joy " (1956)
*"A Touch of the Sun " (1956)
*"Further Up the Creek " (1958)
*"The Cool Mikado " (1962)
*"The Mouse on the Moon " (1963)
*"The Great St Trinian's Train Robbery " (1966)
*"Carry on Doctor " (1967)
*"Carry on Up the Jungle " (1969)
*"Up Pompeii! " (1971)
*"Up the Chastity Belt " (1971)
*"Up the Front " (1972)
*"The House in Nightmare Park " (1972)
*"Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band" (1978)elected bibliography
*"On the Way I Lost It" by Frankie Howerd (1976). ISBN 0-491-01807-X.
*"The Complete Frankie Howerd" by Robert Ross (2001). ISBN 1-903111-08-0.
*"Frankie Howerd: Stand-Up Comic" by Graham McCann (2004). ISBN 1-84115-310-9.References
External links
*imdb name|name=Frankie Howerd|id=0398110
* [http://www.frankiehowerd.com/ Frankie Howerd Tribute Site]
*dmoz|/Arts/People/H/Howerd,_Frankie/|Frankie Howerd
* [http://www.carryonline.com Carry On Line: Official Website of the Carry On films] Detailed information on the Carry Ons
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=23389 Photos of Howerd's grave]
* [http://www.fyne.co.uk/index.php?item=606 Gay Great] From Fyne Times MagazinePersondata
NAME=Howerd, Frankie
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Howard, Francis Alick (Birth name)
SHORT DESCRIPTION=British actor
DATE OF BIRTH=6 March 1917
PLACE OF BIRTH=York ,England , UK
DATE OF DEATH=19 April 1992
PLACE OF DEATH=London ,England , UK
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.