Irish Daily Mirror

The true Ronnie

Some people look like they are nice but aren’t really... but Ron was a lovely person & his fans adored him – ANNE CORBETT, HIS WIDOW

- CLAIRE O’BOYLE News@irishmirro­r.ie

AS one half of The Two Ronnies, his laugh-out-loud sketches, madcap news reports, hilariousl­y rambling monologues and stupendous songs had millions glued to their TV on Saturday nights.

The late Ronnie Corbett, along with his pal and comedy partner Ronnie Barker, was a national treasure.

In a heartwarmi­ng documentar­y to be aired tonight, Ronnie Corbett’s, family and friends reveal the man behind the fanfare was just as wonderful in real life.

“His fans just adored him,” says wife Anne. “I think everybody thought he was a lovely person, but I suppose some people look like they’re nice and they’re not really. But Ron was a lovely person, he really was.”

As part of the documentar­y – The Two Ronnies: Ronnie Corbett’s Lost Tapes – Anne, along with the couple’s daughters Emma and Sophie, look at archive footage of their time together including trips abroad.

Ronnie, who died five years ago aged 85, and his famous laugh are at the heart of the action in the tapes.

“Seeing some of the films again all these years later, with the girls when they were little and my lovely Ron swimming in the pool, well it was very emotional,” says Anne. “We all cried.”

Daughter Sophie adds: “Now seems like the right time because I want everyone out there to know the man, not just the comedian.”

Anne says: “We had a very special relationsh­ip. I’d known him for six years as a friend and I think that’s the best way to start a relationsh­ip.”

She adds: “I feel extremely blessed. He was very kind, although he wasn’t soppy. He couldn’t bear the thought of candles over dinner for an anniversar­y. But he was the most generous man in the world and we really used to laugh.

“I think he was 5ft 2in, and I’m about 5ft 8in. But that wasn’t all, because when we met and I was performing in the clubs I’d have my 4in heels on and a great big wig, so I was probably more like 6ft 4in. It didn’t bother me. I knew what a wonderful person he was.”

Born the son of an Edinburgh baker in 1930, Ronnie’s start in life was modest. An aunt investigat­ed techniques to help make people taller – essentiall­y “stretching”, Ronnie said.

At 16 he discovered his flair for entertainm­ent while performing as the wicked aunt in a church panto.

After his national service in the RAF, he moved to London aged 21 to pursue his dream of a life in entertainm­ent with a grand total of £91 [€106] in his account.

Living in a bedsit and doing everything from bar work to shifts in a betting shop, it wasn’t until the late-1950s he started getting regular work in nightclubs.

He soon met singer and dancer Anne Hart at Winston’s nightclub, just off Bond Street.

Comedy writer Barry Cryer says: “We could tell Ronnie was attracted to her, but being a gentleman, he was doing nothing about it.” Because, at the time, Anne was already married.

Anne said: “The marriage [went] down the swanny quite quickly.

“I’d never been so alone. I went in one night and Ron said, ‘I go to a little club called the Buxton. Meet me down there’. That was the little spark.” But as friendship grew into romance, Anne was invited to perform in Australia.

With four months apart, the sweetheart­s wrote regularly. Speaking to the Mirror, Anne says she rediscover­ed the letters 18 months ago.

“I sat here reading them, about four a day,” she recalls. “I couldn’t read any more. He was here with me as I read them. He was absolutely here with me. It was very, very moving.”

Revealing the nature of the notes, Anne says: “It was ‘how much I miss you’, ‘I have never felt like this’, ‘I can’t wait for you to come back so we can do all these lovely things together’.”

She reads: “‘Darling, at this moment I would just love to kiss you and hold you just for a moment… Roll on June and July. You are my wanton woman’.”

Despite the romantic nature of the letters, Anne says the man who went on to be her husband often struggled to open up emotionall­y. “He found it very difficult,” she says. “So before I went away I said ‘if you want to say something nice to me and you can’t, say Ambrosia Cream Rice, then I know you’re saying something nice’.”

She then reads a note which ended: “My love and kisses in the biggest possible way. ACR to you.”

Anne says: “When I got back we both knew we really had a lovely relationsh­ip and we never really left each other’s side after that – I used to love a tin of Ambrosia Cream Rice.”

The couple wed in the mid-60s at

Brixton Register Office. As Ronnie’s love life took off, so too did his career. He was spotted by David Frost, then one of TV’S most influentia­l figures, who paired him up with Ronnie Barker and John Cleese for The Frost Report.

Their classic “class sketch” in 1966 was a game-changer for Ronnie.

But a personal tragedy hit the comedian around the same time – the death of his baby son Andrew.

“We had our first baby when I wasn’t married. Sadly he was born with the heart on the wrong side. We got married before we lost him,” says Anne.

“After losing Andrew, thank God we had each other.” The next year, in 1967, their daughter Emma was born, and Sophie followed a year later. Anne

With my heels I was 6ft 4in. He was 5ft 2in. It didn’t bother me ANNE CORBETT RECALLS GROWING CLOSE TO RONNIE

ays that after Andrew’s

eath, she was very rotective of her girls, nd stepped back from

er career to devote her fe to them and Ronnie.

The Two Ronnies’ big reak came in 1970 when a technical litch at the BAFTAS led to the pals

eing called up for an impromptu erformance. They brought the house own.

After their hilarious ad-libbing mpressed BBC bosses they got their wn show. The first episode of The wo Ronnies aired in 1971.

Part of their magic was the warmth f their friendship. “They were oulmates,” says Ronnie C’s daughter

Sophie. The partnershi­p came to an end in 1987 when Ronnie Barker announced on live TV that he was quitting entertainm­ent.

But Ronnie C carried on in comedy for many years to come. And, as the documentar­y explores with appearance­s from comedians such as David Walliams, Harry Hill and Rob Brydon, Ronnie became a mentor to those following in his footsteps.

Stand-up comic Stephen K Amos, who recalls Ronnie going to see him perform, says: “End of the show he goes, ‘That was really great’.

“You go, ‘ah, gold star for me’. He’s still funny and wants to help other people. That’s the mark of a fine man.” Comedy legend Ronnie died in 2016, surrounded by his family.

“My mum and dad knew three months before they told Emma and I that he had motor neurone disease,” says Sophie. “The day they told us it was like being hit by a truck.

“When you lose somebody that is part of your world and that you love wholeheart­edly, it’s really hard.”

Anne adds: “He said, ‘I’ve lived my dream’. Lovely children who adored him, grandchild­ren who adored him and a wife who adored him. You can’t ask much more in life, can you?”

The Two Ronnies: Ronnie Corbett’s Lost Tapes is on ITV today at 9pm.

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 ??  ?? TRIBUTE Anne hails Ronnie
TRIBUTE Anne hails Ronnie
 ??  ?? LOVED ONES... Ronnie with his wife and kids in 1980
LOVED ONES... Ronnie with his wife and kids in 1980

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