He was super smashing, a telly great
had some late nights haha. Great memories.” And former heavyweight boxing champ Frank Bruno tweeted: “Jim Bowen RIP great comic we had a lot of laughs together.”
Bullseye’s Twitter account posted a message from creator Andrew Wood, saying: “Thank you for all the memories Jim, you will be greatly missed.”
John Clayton, Bowen’s editor at BBC Radio Lancashire – where he worked for three years from 1999 – said every day with him was “a joy”. He said: “He took our listeners on a radio adventure where no one was ever quite sure about the destination, least of all Jim.
“Sketches, competitions, interviews and even ‘talent’ shows, Jim handled them all in his unique, irreverent and delightfully shambolic way.
“But his humanity and his love of life and the people of Lancashire always shone through. In an interview to mark his 80th birthday, Jim said the years spent on the Happy
Daft Farm were the best and happiest of his long career in entertainment and all of us at BBC Radio Lancashire were delighted and proud to share them with him.”
Bowen was born Peter Williams in Heswall, Cheshire, on August 20, 1937. He went to Accrington Grammar School before becoming a teacher, ending up as deputy head of Caton Primary School, near Lancaster. While teaching, he became involved with the local dramatic society and in the 1960s worked part-time as a stand-up comic on the northern club circuit.
He was inspired to take up comedy after watching Ken Dodd – who died earlier this week, aged 90 – perform two shows lasting a total of seven hours in one night in Blackpool.
Jim said last year: “I watched seven hours of Ken Dodd and I watched him completely decimate 7,000 people. He left them in ruins with laughter.
“And I thought, that’s some feeling that he must get after that. And so I learned his act.”
Granada TV’S The Comedians gave him the chance to do national TV, which made him want to be a fulltime entertainer.
Jim appeared in Granada’s The Wheeltappers and Shunters Social
ON HOW SEEING KEN DODD SHOW INSPIRED HIM
Club and Thames Television’s latenight chat show Take Two before landing Bullseye.
He also appeared in TV dramas and comedies, playing a crooked accountant in ITV’S 1982 drama Muck and Brass, and later guest-starred in BBC1’S Jonathan Creek and Channel 4 comedy Phoenix Nights.
Jim began presenting on BBC Radio Lancashire in 1999 but resigned three years later after referring to a guest on his show as a “n*g-n*g”.
He said even though he had apologised almost immediately, he believed his showbusiness career was over.
But Jim returned to the limelight in 2005, when he performed a solo show at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe about Bullseye, called You Can’t Beat a Bit of Bully. He then returned to Edinburgh in the summer of 2006, performing at Jongleurs.
In February 2011, he suffered two mild strokes and said afterwards he had learned to “appreciate all the things in life”.
I thought, that’s some feeling he must get. So I learned his act
JIM