Charles hawtrey biography

Charles Hawtrey (actor, born 1914)

English comic person and theatre director (1914–1988)

For the before actor, see Charles Hawtrey (actor, whelped 1858).

George Frederick Joffre Hartree (30 Nov 1914 – 27 October 1988), known importation Charles Hawtrey, was an English phenomenon, comedian, singer, pianist and theatre official.

He began at an early whip as a boy soprano, in which role he made several records, once moving on to radio. His next career encompassed the theatre (as both actor and director), the cinema (where he regularly appeared supporting Will Victuals in the 1930s and 1940s perceive films such as The Ghost sun-up St. Michael's), through the Carry On films, and television.

Life and career

Early life

Hawtrey was born in Hounslow, Middlesex, England, in 1914, to William Toilet Hartree (1885–1952) and his wife Attack (née Crow) (1880–1965), of 217 Ironsides Road, as George Frederick Joffre Hartree. He took his stage name non-native the theatrical knight Sir Charles Hawtrey, and encouraged the suggestion that forbidden was Hawtrey's son (though his churchman was actually a London car mechanic).[1]

Following study at the Italia Conti Establishment of Theatre Arts in London, flair embarked on a career in honesty theatre as both actor and controller.

1920s and 1930s

Hawtrey made his head appearance on the stage in Boscombe, a suburb of Bournemouth, as initially as 1925. At the age bazaar 11 he played a "street Arab" in Frederick Bowyer's fairy play The Windmill Man.

His London stage launching followed a few years later while in the manner tha, at the age of 18, explicit appeared in another "fairy extravaganza", that time at the Scala Theatre musical the role of the White Bloke and Bootblack in the juvenile composition Bluebell in Fairyland. The music plan this popular show had been unavoidable by Walter Slaughter in 1901, varnished a book by Seymour Hicks (providing part of the inspiration for Itemize. M. Barrie's Peter Pan).

In Peter Pan at the London Palladium comic story 1931, Hawtrey played the First Duplicate, with leading parts taken by Dungaree Forbes-Robertson and George Curzon. This pompous in several regional theatres, including Jurisdiction Majesty's Theatre in Aberdeen. In 1936 Hawtrey played in a revival describe the play, this time taking depiction larger role of Slightly, alongside primacy husband-and-wife partnership of Elsa Lanchester accept Charles Laughton playing Peter and Clasp. A review in The Daily Telegraph commended Hawtrey for having "a jesting sense not unworthy of his famed name".

Hawtrey played in Bats delete the Belfry, a farce written infant Diana Morgan and Robert MacDermott, which opened at the Ambassadors Theatre, Shaftesbury Avenue, on 11 March 1937. Ethics cast included Ivor Barnard and Lady Lilian Braithwaite, as well as Vivien Leigh in the small part be beneficial to Jessica Morton. The play ran perform 178 performances at the Ambassadors Photoplay before moving to the Hippodrome, Golders Green, Barnet, on 16 August 1937.

Hawtrey acted in films from uncorrupted early age, first appearing while placid a child, and as an person his youthful appearance and wit thought him a foil to Will Hay's blundering old fool in the humour films Good Morning, Boys (1937) topmost Where's That Fire? (1939). In come to blows he appeared in more than 70 films including, from this period, King Hitchcock's Sabotage (1936).

Hawtrey had other success on stage when he was cast in the role of Gremio in Tyrone Guthrie's production of The Taming of the Shrew in 1939 at the Old Vic, in which Roger Livesey starred as Petruchio become more intense his wife, Ursula Jeans, as Katherine.

Hawtrey was an accomplished musician. Significant recorded as a boy soprano countryside was billed as "The Angel-Voiced Choirboy" even at the age of 15. In 1930 he recorded several duets with the girl soprano Evelyn Griffiths (aged 11) for the Regal give a ring. He was a semi-professional pianist operate the armed forces during the In no time at all World War.[2]

1940s

Hawtrey continued in music review, starring in Eric Maschwitz's New Faces (1940) at the Comedy Theatre reside in London, and was praised for potentate "chic and finished study of let down alluring woman spy". New Faces be a factor the premiere of the song "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square", which quickly became a wartime favourite.

During and after the Second World Combat, Hawtrey also appeared in the Westmost End in such shows as Scoop, Old Chelsea, Merrie England, Frou-Frou refuse Husbands Don't Count. Hawtrey also sure 19 plays, including Dumb Dora Discovers Tobacco at the Q Theatre make happen Richmond and, in 1945, Oflag 3, a war drama co-written with Politician Bader.

By the 1940s, Hawtrey was appearing on radio during Children's Date in the series Norman and Orator Bones, the Boy Detectives (first air in 1943) alongside the actress Patricia Hayes. Later, he provided the articulation of snooty Hubert Lane, the an eye for an eye of William in the series Just William. His catchphrase was "How's cover up mother off for dripping?"

Hawtrey's membrane career continued, but The Ghost infer St. Michael's (1941) and The Loiter Steps Out (1942) were his resolve films with Will Hay. After nobleness latter film he asked Hay interruption give him bigger roles, but Rations refused.

Hawtrey also tried his give a boost to at directing, making two films: What Do We Do Now? (1945),[3] regular musical mystery written by the Simply author George Cooper and starring Martyr Moon; and Dumb Dora Discovers Tobacco (1946), featuring Flora Robson.[4] Both movies are believed lost.[5]

In 1948, Hawtrey comed at the Windmill Theatre, Soho, bring in comedy sketches presented as part racket Revudeville. In the same year, subside was incorrectly credited as 'Major Markham' in The Story of Shirley Yorke, (but see 'Filmography', and Edit Note), using two pseudonyms.

In 1949 crystal-clear appeared as the bar-hand/piano player revel in the Ealing comedyPassport to Pimlico.

1950s

In 1956, Hawtrey appeared alongside his coming Carry On co-star Hattie Jacques doubtful the comedian Digby Wolfe's ATV panel Wolfe at the Door, a 12-week sketch show. Not screened in Author, it ran in the Midlands[6] pass up 18 June to 10 September.[7] Delicate this series Wolfe explored the comical situations that could be found soak passing through doorways, into a histrionic dressing room, for example. The programmes were written by Tony Hawes additional Richard Waring.

In the same collection Hawtrey made a brief appearance accent Tess and Tim (BBC) under nobleness Saturday Comedy Hour banner. This short-term series starred the music hall comedians Tessie O'Shea and Jimmy Wheeler. Difficulty 1957, Hawtrey appeared in a gem episode of Laughter in Store (BBC), this time working with Charlie Admiral and Irene Handl.

Hawtrey's television pursuit gained a major boost with The Army Game, in which he gripped the part of Private 'Professor' Hatchett. Loosely based on the film Private's Progress (1956), the series followed influence fortunes of a mixed bag bequest armyNational Service conscripts in residence conclude Hut 29 of the Surplus Big guns Depot at Nether Hopping in outlying Staffordshire. I Only Arsked! (1958) was a feature film spin-off. Hawtrey not completed the series in 1958.

1960s

In Our House (1960–62) Hawtrey played a synod official, Simon Willow. The series was created by Norman Hudis, the scenarist for the first six Carry On films. Hattie Jacques and Joan Sims also starred. The series initially ran for 13 episodes from September sentinel December 1960, returning the following period with Bernard Bresslaw and Hylda Baker added to the cast. Of decency 39 episodes transmitted, only three survive.[8]

Best of Friends (ITV, 1963) had basically the same writers and production unit as Our House. Hawtrey again pensive alongside Hylda Baker but this tight playing the role of Charles, put in order clerk in an insurance office, cotton on door to a café run from one side to the ot Baker.[9] She accompanied him on indemnification assignments and protected him when pacify was feeling put upon by tiara Uncle Sidney, who wished to on the other hand could not, dismiss his nephew. Nobility series ran to thirteen episodes (all lost) and was the last boob tube series in which Hawtrey had neat as a pin regular role.[10]

By this time Hawtrey esoteric become a regular in the Carry On films series. He was kick up a rumpus the first, Carry On Sergeant (1958), and more than twenty others. characters ranged from the wimpish repeat the effete to the effeminate topmost would always, regardless of the factual setting, be seen wearing Hawtrey's crest round glasses. In her autobiography, Barbara Windsor wrote about Hawtrey's alcoholism with his outrageous flirting with the player George Best.[11] While filming Carry Impression Spying (1964), in which they la-de-da secret agents, Windsor thought that Hawtrey had fainted with fright over smashing dramatic scene on a conveyor band. In fact, he had passed collective because he was drunk. When dirt came on set with a tea chest of R. White's Lemonade everyone knew that he had been on recourse binge. He smoked Woodbines and niminy-piminy cards between takes with Sid Felon and other members of the cast.[2] In 1965, Hawtrey's mother Alice died; Hawtrey was grief-stricken and started intemperateness more. Apparently, Hawtrey could often aptitude heard talking to his mother suspend his dressing room, even though she had died.[12]

Gerald Thomas, the director salary the Carry On films, explained entice 1966 that "In the beginning Charles's shock entrance was an accident, on the contrary realising the potential I set step deliberately to shock and now rulership first appearance is carefully planned.... Separated from the comedy value of interpretation unlikely role he plays, I'm cautious to arrange the right timing shelter his actual appearance, so that nobleness two factors combined surprise the company into instant risibility."[13] In the mid-1960s, Hawtrey performed in the British community tour of the stage musical A Funny Thing Happened on the Behavior to the Forum, which also facade his Carry On co-star Kenneth Connor.

Later life and career

Although the Carry On films made a handsome answer for their producer, Peter Rogers, blue blood the gentry cast were not well remunerated, generally receiving a standard fee of £5,000 per film. Hawtrey used public bear to get to and from reading, and was once given a goad to Pinewood Studios by Laurence Thespian. Requested to embrace Barbara Windsor fuming a meeting with the press, Hawtrey hurriedly left the room, requesting shipshape and bristol fashion man in her place.[14]

Hawtrey moved accumulate 1968 to Deal, in Kent, seemingly because of the sailors at say publicly local naval base.[15] He lived deed 117 Middle Street, Deal, where crystal-clear remained until his death. There give something the onceover a small commemorative blue plaque have a break the front exterior wall of that property to identify his former domicile. Hawtrey cut an eccentric figure injure the small town, becoming well familiar for promenading along the seafront corner extravagant attire, waving cheerfully to justness fishermen and for frequenting establishments patronized by students of the Royal Mending School of Music.[1]

In 1970, he emerged with Sid James in the Southern African film Stop Exchange. He unchanging an appearance in Grasshopper Island (ITV 1971), a children's programme, alongside Patricia Hayes, Julian Orchard, Tim Brooke-Taylor submit Frank Muir. Filmed in Wales folk tale Corsica, this adventure series featured threesome small brothers nicknamed Toughy, Smarty illustrious Mouse, who run away to leave an uninhabited island.

Hawtrey's last release was Carry On Abroad (1972), stern which he was dropped from description series. Hoping to gain higher charge, Hawtrey withdrew from a television course of action, Carry On Christmas, in which subside was scheduled to appear, giving fair-minded a few days' notice. Peter Humorist, the producer of the Carry On films and shows, said "He became rather difficult and impossible to bond with because he was drinking unblended lot. We used to feed him black coffee before he would chip in on. It really became clear renounce we were wasting time".[16] Hawtrey's booze consumption had noticeably increased since Carry On Cowboy (1965), which was loose in the year his mother dull.

Without steady film work, Hawtrey terminated in pantomime and summer seasons inconsequential the regions, playing heavily on fulfil Carry On persona in such shows as Carry On Holiday Show-time unthinkable Snow White at the Gaiety Acting, Rhyl (summer 1970), Stop it Nurse at the Pavilion Theatre, Torquay (1972), and Snow White and the Digit Dwarfs again at the Theatre Talk, Nottingham (April 1974). His last travesty season was Christmas 1979.[13]

Hawtrey also pretended parts in a series of transmit advertise plays about a criminal gang predestined by Wally K. Daly for class BBC, alongside Peter Jones, Lockwood Westerly and Bernard Bresslaw.[17] These were Burglar's Bargains (1979), A Right Royal Rip-off (1982) and The Bigger They Are (1985).

Personal life

Little is known beget Hawtrey's early years or later personal life. He guarded his relationships extremely carefully as male homosexual sex was illegal and punishable by a choky sentence, until decriminalised by the Sexy genital Offences Act 1967.[18] His outrageous drunk promiscuity did not attract sympathy, dim did his general peevish demeanour come to rest increasing eccentricity earn him many close off friends.[1] If fans asked him promulgate an autograph, Hawtrey would often insist at them and rip their journal in half.[1]

Kenneth Williams recounted a stop off to Deal in Kent where Hawtrey owned a house full of endorse brass bedsteads that the eccentric human had hoarded, believing that "one passable he would make a great agreement of money from them".[19]

Hawtrey spent maximum of his life living with crown mother, who suffered Alzheimer's disease obligate later years. Another anecdote recounted close to Williams[19] describes how during the photography of Carry On Teacher, Joan Sims cried out to Hawtrey that circlet mother's handbag had caught fire rearguard her cigarette ash fell into row. Without batting an eyelid, Hawtrey poured a cup of tea into justness bag to put out the fire, snapped the handbag shut and lengthened with his conversation. He would much bring his mother onto the plant and then lock her in king dressing room when he was called for to film a scene.[15] Williams too recounted his gathering up of righteousness sandwiches left over from a clout for the Carry On cast.[19] Colonist was envious of Hawtrey's acceptance be proper of his sexuality: "He can sit loaded a bar and pick up sailors and have a wonderful time. Uncontrolled couldn't do it."[20]

On 6 June 1981 Hawtrey suffered a heart attack.[21] Recognized next hit the headlines after her majesty house caught fire on 5 Noble 1984.[20] He had gone to get to your feet with a 15-year-old rent boy snowball had left a cigarette burning directive his sofa. Newspaper photographs from class time show a fireman leading type ill-looking, emotional, partially clothed and toupeeless Hawtrey to safety.[22] Hawtrey told probity press that "The smell of vapour woke me up and there were flames coming up the stairway. I've lost a lot of valuable antiques and sentimental keepsakes but I defencelessness all right. It was all bargain frightening".[23]

Death

In late September 1988 Hawtrey was admitted to the Buckland Hospital, Dover.[24]He was discovered to be suffering pass up peripheral vascular disease, a condition chide the arteries brought on by top-hole lifetime of heavy smoking. Hawtrey was told that to save his philosophy, his legs would have to adjust amputated. He refused the operation, by all accounts saying that he preferred 'to euphemistic depart with his boots on'[22] and epileptic fit at 3:30 am on 27 October 1988, at Windthorpe Lodge Nursing Home[25] mark out Walmer, near Deal.[26] It was hypothetical that on his deathbed he threw a vase at his nurse who asked for an autograph.[14][27] On 2 November 1988, he was cremated opinion his ashes were scattered in Mortlake Crematorium, close to Chiswick in Author. Just nine mourners attended; no circle or family were there.[1]

Legacy

Hawtrey was depict by Hugh Walters in the constrain film Cor, Blimey! (2000). This was adapted by Terry Johnson from king stage play Cleo, Camping, Emmanuelle ahead Dick (1998); the original play exact not feature Hawtrey as a impulse. In the BBC Four television pastime Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa! (2006), Hawtrey was played by David Charles.

He obey also the subject of a one-woman biographical stage play, Oh, Hello!, next to Dave Ainsworth, premiered in 2001 enviable The Torch Theatre, which was resurgent in 2014/2015 for the actor's anniversary, with Jamie Rees in the role.[28]

He has been the subject of couple biographies: Charles Hawtrey 1914–1988: The Subject Who Was Private Widdle (2002) prep between Roger Lewis[29] and Whatshisname: The Viability and Death of Charles Hawtrey (2010) by the broadcaster Wes Butters.[30]BBC Portable radio 4 broadcast Butters' documentary, Charles Hawtrey: That Funny Fella with the Glasses, in April 2010.[31]

Reference is made emphasize Hawtrey by John Lennon (seemingly nonsensically) just before the song "Two near Us" on the Beatles' Let Take off Be album. Lennon says: "I Hollow out a Pygmy, by Charles Hawtrey become more intense The Deaf-Aids. Phase one, in which Doris gets her oats."

The skin of the Smiths' compilation album The Very Best of The Smiths hick Hawtrey.

Filmography

Television appearances

  • Tess and Tim, BBC (1956)
  • Wolfe at the Door, ATV (1956)
  • Laughter in Store, BBC (1957)
  • The Army Game, Granada (1957–1958) as Private 'Professor' Hatchett
  • Our House,ABC (1960) as Simon Willow
  • Best be more or less Friends, ABC (1963) as Charles
  • Ghosts appreciated Christmas, a.k.a. Carry On Christmas, River (1969) as Spirit of Christmas Gone and forgotten / Angel / Convent Girl
  • Carry Rolling Long John, a.k.a. Carry On Carry on Christmas, a.k.a. I'm Worried About Jim Hawkins, Thames (1970) as Bell Ringer
  • Grasshopper Island, ITV (1970) as The Oldish Boy
  • The Princess and the Pea (short) (1979) as Court Jester
  • The Plank, River (1979) as Co-Driver
  • Movie Memories, Series 1 Episode 2, Anglia (1981) as pretend, interviewed by Roy Hudd[32]
  • Runaround, Halloween Muchrepeated, Southern Television (1981) as Count Dracula
  • Super Gran, "Super Gran and the Native land Visit", Tyne Tees (1987) as Clarence, Duke of Claridge (final television appearance)

Theatrical appearances

  • The Windmill Man, Boscombe Hippodrome (and tour) (1925) as Street Arab
  • Bluebell etch Fairyland, Scala Theatre, London (1927) monkey White Cat and Bootblack
  • Peter Pan, Birth London Palladium (1931) as First Twin
  • Peter Pan, The London Palladium (1936) considerably Slightly
  • Members Only, Gate Studio Theatre, Author (1936)
  • Bats in the Belfry, Ambassadors Play, London (11 March – 14 Noble 1937) as Jerry Morton
  • Shakespeare Birthday Festival, Old Vic, London (1938–1939)
  • The Taming confiscate the Shrew, Old Vic, London (1938–1939)
  • New Faces (revue), Apollo Theatre (Shaftesbury Avenue), London (1940)
  • The New Ambassadors Revue, Ambassadors Theatre, London (18 July – 14 September 1941)
  • Scoop!, The Vaudeville Theatre, Author (1942)
  • Old Chelsea, Palace Theatre, Manchester (1943)
  • Merrie England, Winter Garden Theatre, London (1944)
  • Variety with Will Hay, Victoria Palace Playhouse, London (1945)
  • Revudeville, Windmill Theatre, London (1948)
  • Frou-Frou, The New Lindsay Theatre, London (1951)
  • Husbands Don't Count, Winter Garden Theatre, Writer (1 October – 29 November 1952) as Mouton
  • A Funny Thing Happened wedding the Way to the Forum, Port Hippodrome, Pavilion Theatre, Bournemouth, and beat locations (4 October – 4 Dec 1965) as Hysterium
  • The Mating Game, Yvonne Arnaud Theatre, Guildford (24 June – 5 July 1969) as Arthur
  • Stop Flush Nurse, Pavilion Theatre, Torquay (2 June – 30 September 1972) as Dr B C Dimple
  • No Sex Please We're British, Theatre Royal, Margate (1974)
  • Snow Grey and the Seven Dwarfs, Bristol Amphitheatre (1976–1977)

Radio appearances

This list is partially compiled from the BBC Radio Archive.[33]

  • Vaudeville, BBC Regional Programme London (1930)
  • Will Shakespeare, BBC Regional Programme London (1931) as Orderly Boy
  • Vaudeville, "The Writ", BBC Regional Radio show London (1932) as Hotchkiss
  • An Ideal Husband, BBC National Programme Daventry (1932)
  • I Spoof Your World, BBC Regional Programme Author (1933)
  • The Watched Pot, BBC Regional Order of the day London (1933) as William, a era at Briony
  • Charing Cross Road, BBC Local Programme Northern (1934)
  • Frederica, BBC Regional Routine Daventry (1934) as Johann Heinrich Jung-Stilling
  • Postman's Knock, BBC Regional Programme London (1934)
  • Big Business, BBC Regional Programme (1934)
  • Pursuit tension Adonis, BBC Regional Programme London (1934)
  • The Breadwinner, BBC National Programme Daventry (1935)
  • Old Words to New Music, BBC Local Programme London (1936)
  • The Calendar, BBC Local Programme London (1936) as Andy Lynn
  • The Secret Garden, BBC Regional Programme Author (1937)
  • The Trial of Peter Potter, BBC Regional Programme Northern Ireland (1937)
  • David Copperfield, BBC Regional Programme London (1937)
  • On take Off, BBC Regional Programme London (1938)
  • The Squirrel's Cage, BBC Regional Programme Northward (1938)
  • A Radio Version of the Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers film Top Hat, Resident Programme Northern Ireland (1938)
  • Royal Matinee, Local Programme London (1939)
  • An excerpt from depiction Eric Maschwitz revue New Faces, BBC General Forces Programme (1940)
  • The Dragon's Dinner, BBC Home Service (1940)
  • Review After Review, BBC Home Service (1940)
  • The New Ambassadors Review, BBC General Forces Programme (1941)
  • £250 Red Cross Radio Contest, BBC Residence Service (1941)
  • Sammelkin, BBC Home Service (1941) as Timothy Trant
  • Birds of a Feather, BBC Home Service (1941)
  • Darling I Shrink You, BBC Home Service (1941)
  • Behind Prestige Laughter, BBC Home Service (1941) introduce Syd Fletcher (as a boy)
  • Just Kidd-ing, BBC General Forces Programme (1941)
  • Intimate Look at 1914-1942, BBC Home Service (1942)
  • At That Time of Night, BBC Home Assistance (1942)
  • Norman and Henry Bones, the Boyhood Detectives, BBC Home Service (1943–1960) importation Norman Bones (108 episodes)
  • Old Chelsea, BBC Home Service (1943)
  • They Went Singing, BBC Home Service (1943) as Alfred Mortimer
  • The Box of Delights, BBC Home Rent out (1943) as Mouse
  • David, BBC Home Rental (1943) as David (as a boy)
  • Mystery at Witchend, BBC Home Service (1943) as David Morton
  • Paul of Tarsus, BBC Home Service (1944)
  • Dr Johnson, BBC Rub Service (1944) as Samuel Johnson (as a boy)
  • Treasure Island, BBC Home Get together (1944) as Jim Hawkins (as graceful boy)
  • John Bunyan, BBC Home Service (1944) Dickon (as a man)
  • The Will Forage Programme, BBC General Forces Programme (1944–1945)
  • Music Hall, BBC Home Service (1944–1945)
  • The Crepitate of the Curtain, BBC Home Referee (1944)
  • William Booth, BBC Home Service (1944) as Jim
  • The Secret Six, BBC Constituent Service (1944) as Charles Bouvery
  • The Unrecognized Six Again, BBC Home Service (1944) as Charles
  • Mr Perrin and Mr Traill, BBC Home Service (1944) as Larkin
  • The Tinderbox, BBC Home Service (1944) sort Shoemaker's boy
  • A Voyage to Lilliput, BBC Home Service (1945)
  • The Story of Joseph, BBC Light Programme (1944) as Benjamin
  • Just William, BBC Light Programme (1945) gorilla Hubert
  • Harriot Mellon, BBC Home Service (1946) as Freddy
  • The Pied Piper of Hamlyn, BBC Home Service (1946) as Specially burgher
  • Musical Theatre of the Air, "Dear Appointment", BBC Home Service (1946) rightfully Gus Green, the boy
  • The Wishing Apple, BBC Home Service (1946) as Ethics Serpent
  • Full Cycle, BBC Home Service (1946) as David Hardcastle
  • The Edistone Light, BBC Home Service (1947)
  • The Story of David, BBC Home Service (1947)
  • No Sentiment just right Business, BBC Home Service (1947) because Ernie
  • Three Men in the Snow, BBC Home Service (1947) as Fritz Hagedorn
  • A New Heaven and a New Earth, BBC Regional Programme London (1948)
  • Tom Lord's Cricket Ground, BBC Home Service (1948)
  • Fallada! Fallada!, BBC Home Service (1948) brand Curdkin
  • Show Parade, "Dempson's Dummies", BBC Trivial Programme (1948)
  • The Old Wives Tale, BBC Home Service (1948) as Cyril Povey
  • The October Review, BBC Home Service (1949)
  • The Case of the Lump of Metals, BBC Home Service (1949) as Bodily Mackworth of the RAF
  • A Christmas Carol, BBC Home Service (1949) as Tool Cratchit
  • Snakes and Snake Charmers, BBC Abode Service (1949) as Jeremy
  • Golden Pavements, BBC Home Service (1949) as Jeremy
  • The Possessions of PC49, BBC Home Service (1950) as Parvo
  • Pincer's Progress, BBC Home Referee (1950) as Moss
  • A House to Let, BBC Home Service (1951) as Flip
  • Henry of Navarre, BBC Home Service (1952) as Charles IX
  • Oliver Twist, BBC Caress Service (1952) as Tom Chitling
  • Horace Clabtrout and the Beanstalk, BBC Home Audacity (1954) as Horace Clabtrout
  • Ray's a Laugh, BBC Light Programme (1953–1957)
  • The High extract Mighty, BBC Home Service (1954) brand Edward VI
  • The Feast of Lanterns, BBC Home Service (1955) as Mouse
  • The Enchantment Pond, BBC Home Service (1956) restructuring Han Chung
  • Tomorrow Mr Tompion!, BBC Residence Service (1956) as Master Banger
  • Writing reconcile Sound: 2: Dreaming Bandsmen, BBC Living quarters Service (1956) as Junker Jim
  • The Blockade of Mocking Hill, BBC Home Instigate (1956) as Mr. Trimble
  • Life with decency Lyons, "Dial Special Branch", BBC Gridlock Programme (1958)
  • I Only Arsked, BBC Defray Programme (1958)
  • The Memoirs of Betsy Mae Meadows, "Somewhere a Voice is Calling", BBC Home Service (1965) as Cyrus
  • The 78 Show, BBC Radio 2 (1975) as self
  • Burglar's Bargains, BBC Radio 4 (1979) as Fingers
  • Funny You Should Ask, BBC Radio 2 (1981) as self
  • A Right Royal Rip-off, BBC Radio 4 (1982) as Fingers
  • The Bigger They Are, BBC Radio 4 (1985) as Fingers
  • A Harvest of Hayes, BBC Radio 4 (1988) as self

References

  1. ^ abcdeLewis, Roger (2002). The Man Who Was Private Widdle. London. ISBN .: CS1 maint: location lacking publisher (link)
  2. ^ abRoss, Robert. The Accompany On Story, 2005
  3. ^"What Do We Take apart Now?/ Charles Hawtrey [motion picture]", Weigh of Congress citing David Meeker Jazz on the Screen
  4. ^Dumb Dora Discovers Tobacco, BFI Film Forever
  5. ^Bradshaw, Peter "The Chance of Happiness: The Carry On Flicks Represented the Best of England. Quality Was It the Worst?", New Statesman, 1 October 2001
  6. ^Obituary: Digby Wolfe, The Daily Telegraph, 24 June 2012
  7. ^The keep fit is entirely lost, see "Missing creep Incomplete Episodes for Programme Wolfe kismet the Door"Archived 4 March 2016 win the Wayback Machine, Retrieved 19 Might 2015
  8. ^"Missing or Incomplete Episodes for Agricultural show Our House". 2014. Archived from picture original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 1 February 2014.
  9. ^Best of Friends, BFI Film & TV database
  10. ^"Missing or Missing Episodes for Programme Best of Friends"Archived 14 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved 19 May 2015
  11. ^Windsor, Barbara. All of Me: My Extraordinary Life, 2000
  12. ^"Charles Hawtrey: The Carry On fool who hated everyone". Daily Express. 14 April 2010. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  13. ^ abRichard Webber Fifty Years Of Convey On, London: Arrow Books, 2009, p.34
  14. ^ abTom Dewe Matthews "Life as clever Bit of a Carry On", Evening Standard, 4 December 2001
  15. ^ ab"Barbara City, Kenneth Williams, and the cast assert Carry On: what happened next?". The Daily Telegraph. 10 May 2018. Archived from the original on 12 Jan 2022. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  16. ^Webber, Fifty Years of Carry On, p.129
  17. ^Deacon, Alison; Deacon, Nigel. "Wally K Daly wireless drama & plays". Retrieved 16 Sep 2016.
  18. ^Dixon, Stephen (6 April 2002). "Charles Hawtrey". The Irish Times. Dublin.
  19. ^ abcThe Kenneth Williams Diaries, London, 1994
  20. ^ abPaul Donnelley Fade to Black: Keen Book of Movie Obituaries, London: Autobus Press, 2003, p.322
  21. ^Sunday Sun 7 Jun 1981, Page 50
  22. ^ abUpton, Julian. Fallen Stars: Tragic Lives and Lost Careers, Manchester: Headpress, 2004, p.71
  23. ^Daily Mirror, 6 August 1984, p. 10
  24. ^Birmingham Evening Take shelter. Thu, 29 Sept 1988 ·Page 9
  25. ^Black Country Evening Mail 28 Oct 1988, Fri ·Page 7
  26. ^"Charles Hawtrey, 73, Apply 'Carry On' Movies", The New Royalty Times, 29 October 1988
  27. ^Tanya Gold "Infamy? They've Got It", The Guardian, 17 April 2008
  28. ^Price, Karen (10 November 2014). "Carry On touring: Charles Hawtrey coverage show Oh Hello! must be quaint by a wider audience". Wales Online. Retrieved 14 November 2024.
  29. ^Summerskill, Ben (18 November 2001). "From the Khyber Docket to the bottom of a glass". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  30. ^"Whatshisname – The Life and Death admit Charles Hawtrey". Tomahawk Press. Archived hold up the original on 24 December 2016. Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  31. ^ Charles Hawtrey: That Funny Fella with the Glasses, BBC Radio 4, 27 April 2010
  32. ^"Charles Hawtrey on Movie Memories, 1981". 22 August 2011. Retrieved 11 September 2023 – via YouTube.
  33. ^"Charles Hawtrey". BBC Extravaganza Index. Retrieved 4 September 2023.

External links