Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Jimmy Edwards - (re-Up)
From an LP on the Spark label released in 1973. Jimmy edwards sings bawdy pub songs and plays his trombone accompanied by Ken Mackintosh and his band. Also on the record is special guest Joe "Mr. Piano" Henderson.
"Jimmy Edwards was a British radio and television comedy actor, best known as Pa Glum in Take It From Here and as the headmaster 'Professor' James Edwards in Whack-O.
Born James Keith O'Neill in Barnes, London, Edwards served in the Royal Air Force during World War II, winning the Distinguished Flying Cross. His Dakota was shot down at Arnhem in 1944, resulting in plastic surgery — he disguised it with the huge handlebar moustache that later became his trademark.
A feature of London theatre in the immediate post-War years, having previously performed in the Cambridge Footlights review, Edwards gained wider exposure as a radio performer, appearing in the long-running Take It From Here, where he developed the Glums alongside June Whitfield.
Graduatating to television, his appeared in shows such as the panel game Does the Team Think?, The Seven Faces of Jim, as well as guest slots in Make Room for Daddy and Sykes. Edwards also worked with Eric Sykes when he acted in the Sykes-penned short films The Plank (1967) (alongside Tommy Cooper) and Rhubarb (1969) (which also featured Harry Secombe).
He published his autobiography, Six of the Best, in 1984, as a follow up to the earlier Take it From Me. Amongst his outside interests were brass bands and the handlebar Club, in which all the members had such moustaches. During the 1970s he also came out as a homosexual."
Discover more about Jimmy Edwards HERE.
I've got an autographed photo of him, that he sent me some years ago. Thought the Plank was a very amusing film and such a simple idea.
ReplyDeleteThanks Gail's Man- sounds like a treasure to me. We have a few autographed photos including Ivor Cutler and Roy Hudd.
ReplyDeleteThe Plank is a great film and the other one which is on the same video we have - Moving Day? Not sure if Jimmy is in that one but lots of cameos by minor stars of the comedy scene back then.
Is it possible to post the track list? There's song on there...just after he says 'do something mercurial'. I'm sure it's a theme tune to something, been looking for a version of it for a while and would appreciate knowing it's name.
ReplyDelete