The Daily Courier

BELOVED COMEDIAN A VIRUS CASUALTY

Tim Brooke-Taylor dies at age 79/

-

LONDON (AP) — British performer Tim Brooke-Taylor, a member of comedy trio The Goodies, has died after contractin­g the new coronaviru­s. He was 79.

Brooke-Taylor’s agent says he died Sunday morning “from COVID-19.”

Brooke-Taylor was part of Cambridge University’s Footlights revue, the breeding ground of several generation­s of British comic talent. He broke into radio and television comedy in the 1960s alongside future Monty Python members John Cleese and Graham Chapman.

Brooke-Taylor went on to form The Goodies with Graeme Garden and Bill Oddie. The trio specialize­d in slightly surreal sketches incorporat­ing visual inventiven­ess, slapstick and songs. Their song “Funky Gibbon” even became a U.K. top 10 chart hit in 1975.

Their TV show, which ran throughout the 1970s, was a hit in Britain, Australia and New Zealand and developed a cult following in many other countries.

“The Goodies” formed part of a golden era of British television comedy in the 1960s and 70s that included “Monty

Python’s Flying Circus” and “Not the Nine O’Clock News.”

For more than 40 years, Brooke-Taylor was also a panelist on BBC radio’s much loved comic quiz show “I’m Sorry I Haven’t a Clue.”

Goodies co-star Garden said BrookeTayl­or was “a funny, sociable, generous man who was a delight to work with. Audiences found him not only hilarious but also adorable.”

“His loss at this dreadful time is particular­ly hard to bear,” Garden said.

Writer-performer Stephen Fry tweeted: “Just heard the devastatin­g news of the death of Tim Brooke-Taylor. A hero for as long as I can remember, and — on a few golden occasions -— a colleague and collaborat­or on I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue.”

Brooke-Taylor is survived by his wife, Christine, and two sons.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? The Goodies, from left, Bill Oddie, Graeme Garden and Tim Brooke-Taylor pose for a publicity photo in 2003.
The Associated Press The Goodies, from left, Bill Oddie, Graeme Garden and Tim Brooke-Taylor pose for a publicity photo in 2003.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada