Macclesfield Express

Superhero COMICS

MARION McMULLEN looks back at some of our best-loved funnymen ahead of what would have beenTommy Cooper’s 100th birthday

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MAGIC tricks that went gloriously wrong, props galore and an infectious laugh helped to make Tommy Cooper a comedy star... just like that.

The fez-wearing comedian was born in Caerphilly in Wales 100 years ago on March 19, 1921, and later moved with his family to Exeter and Southampto­n.

At 6ft 4in tall, he was a towering stage presence who made use of his gangly frame, but prior to finding fame he served with the Horse Guards.

The star is said to have acquired his trademark hat at a NAAFI concert in Cairo during the Second World War. He could not find his own army issue pith helmet so he borrowed the fez from a passing waiter. It looked so comic that the headgear immediatel­y became part of the act.

Tommy was an accomplish­ed magician and a member of the Magic Circle, but quickly realised he could get more laughs if his tricks went wrong.

He kept a gag file of all his handwritte­n jokes that included such gems as “This officer stopped me and said ‘Why are you driving with a bucket of water on the passenger’s seat?’ I said ‘So that I can dip my headlights’ and I asked the waiter ‘How long will my spaghetti be?’ He said ‘I don’t know. We never measure it.’”

Tommy became one of Britain’s highest-paid and best-loved entertaine­rs, part of a golden age of British comedy that also saw the rise of Sir Ken Dodd.

Knotty Ash’s most famous son was extremely knowledgea­ble about the art of comedy and had thousands of books on the subject.

He became famous for his tickling stick, the Diddy Men and his marathon live shows. He earned a place in the Guinness Book of

Records for telling 1,500 jokes over three and a half hours at one Liverpool Theatre with the audience attending in shifts. At another show he was still going strong as midnight approached and he told the audience: “You think you can get away, but you can’t. I’ll follow you home and I’ll shout jokes through your letterbox.”

Bob Monkhouse kept books filled with jokes during his career and offered a £10,000 reward when they were stolen in 1995. They were later recovered.

The comedian and game show host once joked: “When I first said that I wanted to be a comedian, everybody laughed. They’re not laughing now.”

Comedy favourite Les Dawson,

 ??  ?? GENIUS: Tommy Cooper
TICKLED: Ken Dodd
KEY MAN: Les Dawson
STORY TIME: Max Bygraves
CHEERS: Bob Monkhouse
HAVE A GOOD TITTER: Frankie Howerd
Bob Monkhouse’s self-deprecatin­g jokes were a signature of his act
GENIUS: Tommy Cooper TICKLED: Ken Dodd KEY MAN: Les Dawson STORY TIME: Max Bygraves CHEERS: Bob Monkhouse HAVE A GOOD TITTER: Frankie Howerd Bob Monkhouse’s self-deprecatin­g jokes were a signature of his act
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