Kenneth Williams
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| Kenneth Williams | |
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| Born | Kenneth Charles Williams 22 February 1926 Islington, London, England |
| Died | 15 April 1988 (aged 62) Camden, London, England |
| Years active | 1945–1988 |
Kenneth Charles Williams (22 February 1926 – 15 April 1988) was an English comic actor, star of twenty six Carry On films and notable radio comedies with Tony Hancock and Kenneth Horne, as well as a witty raconteur on a wide range of subjects.
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[edit] Life and career
Kenneth Williams was born in 1926 in Bingfield Street, King's Cross, London.[1] The son of barber Charles Williams, he was educated at Lyulph Stanley School. His relationship with his parents—he adored his vivacious mother, Louisa ("Lou"), but hated his morose and selfish father—was key to the development of his personality. Williams became an apprentice draughtsman to a mapmaker and joined the army aged 18. He was part of the Royal Engineers survey section in Bombay when he had his first experience of performing on stage with Combined Services Entertainment along with Stanley Baxter and Peter Nichols.[2]
[edit] Comic performer
After the war, his career began with a number of roles in repertory theatre, but few serious parts were to lend themselves to his style of delivery. His failure to become established as a serious dramatic actor would disappoint him, but it was his potential as a comic performer that gave him his big break. He was spotted playing the Dauphin in George Bernard Shaw's St Joan in 1954 by the radio producer Dennis Main Wilson, who was casting Hancock's Half Hour. He would lend his distinctive voice and amazing vocal talent to the radio series to almost the end of its run, five years later.[3] His nasal, whiny, camp-cockney inflections (epitomised in his famous "Stop messing about..." catchphrase) would endure in popular lore for many years.[4]
When Hancock tired (or grew envious) of him, Williams joined Kenneth Horne in the series Beyond Our Ken (1958–1964), and its sequel, Round the Horne (1965–1968). In the latter, his roles included Rambling Syd Rumpo, the eccentric folk singer; The Amazing Proudbasket, human cannonball; J. Peasemold Gruntfuttock, professional telephone heavy breather and dirty old man; and Sandy of the extremely camp couple, Julian and Sandy (Julian was played by Hugh Paddick), notable for their double entendres and use of the underground gay slang, Polari.
Williams appeared in a series of West End revues including Share My Lettuce with Maggie Smith and written by Bamber Gascoigne, and Pieces of Eight, which included sketch material from Peter Cook who was still a student at Cambridge University. The revue included a number of Cook sketches such as One Leg Too Few that would become classics and also starred Fenella Fielding. Williams' last revue was One over the Eight, in which he starred with Sheila Hancock. Williams later starred opposite Jennie Linden in the stage hit My Fat Friend in 1972. He also appeared with Ingrid Bergman in a highly successful stage production of George Bernard Shaw's Captain Brassbound's Conversion in 1971.
[edit] Carry On
Williams worked extensively in television and British films, most famously the Carry On series[5] with its very British "nudge nudge" double entendre-laced humour, but for which he along with the rest of the cast were very poorly paid. Williams' diaries claimed he earned more in a British Gas commercial than he did out of the entire Carry On series put together—although that might only be considered true if one adds in the considerable fee he earned from the highly successful spin-off cartoon series Willo the Wisp (taken up by the BBC rather than the commercial TV network). Despite making a good living in his later years, he lived in a series of small flats in north London, the best known location being the now demolished block on Osnaburgh Street.
[edit] Radio and television shows
Particularly in the theatre, Williams was famous for breaking character, ad-libbing and talking to the audience. He was a regular panelist on the BBC radio panel game Just a Minute from its second season in 1968 until his death, a frequent contributor to BBC2's What's My Line? in the 1970s and presented several editions of the children's story-reading series Jackanory. Extremely well read, he was also a "professional" talk-show guest, able to regale an audience with amusing (and often risqué) anecdotes on every subject; he appeared on Michael Parkinson's interview programme on eight occasions. Williams was also one of the stand-in hosts on the popular early evening Wogan talk show.
[edit] Private life
Williams publicly insisted that he was celibate, but in private found his homosexuality difficult to deal with. His diaries contain many references to unconsummated or barely consummated relationships, described in code as "traditional matters" or "tradiola", probably because homosexuality was still a criminal offence in the United Kingdom for much of the period covered by the diaries. He befriended Joe Orton who wrote the role of Inspector Truscott in Loot (1966) for him and enjoyed holidays with Orton and Kenneth Halliwell in Morocco. Other close friends included fellow thespians Stanley Baxter, Gordon Jackson and his wife Rona Anderson, Sheila Hancock, Maggie Smith and her playwright husband, Beverley Cross. By turns gregarious and reclusive, Williams was also fond of the company of fellow Carry On regulars Barbara Windsor, Kenneth Connor, Hattie Jacques, Joan Sims and Bernard Bresslaw.
Williams rarely revealed his private life, but he spoke frankly to Owen Spencer-Thomas about his feelings of loneliness, despondency and underachievement during two half-hour interview programmes, Carry On Kenneth, on BBC Radio London.[6] The comic actor lived alone for the whole of his adult life. In later years his health declined, along with that of his elderly mother, and his depression deepened. He died on 15 April 1988 in Camden.[7] The cause of death was an overdose of barbiturates.[8] An inquest recorded an open verdict as it was not possible to establish whether his death was the result of suicide or an accident. Doctors said it was "possible but very unlikely" that his overdose was accidental.
[edit] In popular culture
The best-selling posthumous publication of his diaries and letters, both edited by Russell Davies, not only caused some controversy over their contents (particularly Williams' often caustic remarks about many of his fellow professionals), but also revealed the periodic bouts of despondency (often primed by feelings of isolation and underachievement) that marked his life.
It was revealed on Steve Wright's Radio 2 show that the flat Williams had lived in was later bought by Rob Brydon and Julia Davis for the writing of their dark comedy series Human Remains. The building was demolished in May 2007 and according to the actor David Benson's Myspace blog, he and ex-Radio 1 DJ Wes Butters broke in to take photos immediately prior to demolition.
In April 2007, Williams' line "Infamy! Infamy! They've all got it in for me!" (from Carry On Cleo) was voted the greatest one-liner in movie history by a poll of a thousand comedy writers, actors, impresarios and members of the public for the launch of Sky Movies Comedy Channel.[9] The line was borrowed by scriptwriter Talbot Rothwell from Frank Muir and Dennis Norden.[citation needed]
In April 2008, BBC Radio 4 broadcast the two-part documentary The Pain of Laughter: The Last Days of Kenneth Williams. The programmes were researched and written by Wes Butters, and are narrated by Rob Brydon. Butters revealed that he had purchased a large collection of Williams' personal belongings from the actor's godson, Robert Chidell, to whom they had been bequeathed.[10]
The first of the two programmes also included the claim that, towards the end of his life and struggling with depression and ill health, Williams abandoned his Christian faith following discussions with the poet Philip Larkin. Williams had been a Methodist and took a great interest in religion. He had spent much of his life struggling with the tension between his own sexual orientation and Christianity's teachings on homosexuality.[11]
Kenneth Williams Unseen by Wes Butters and Russell Davies, the first Williams biography in over fifteen years, is due in October 2008.[12]
[edit] Performances
[edit] Films
[edit] Television
- International Cabaret
- Jackanory
- Willo the Wisp
- Galloping Galaxies
- An Audience with Kenneth Williams
- What's My Line?
- Some You Win
- Whizzkids Guide
- Lets Make a Musical
- Meanwhile on BBC2
- Join Jim Dale
- The Wednesday Play
- BBC Sunday Night Theatre
- Saint Joan
- Sword of freedom
- The School
- Dick and the Duchess
- The Armoured Car
- Moby Dick Rehearsed
- Misalliance
[edit] Radio
- Hancock's Half Hour
- Beyond Our Ken
- Round the Horne
- Kenneth Williams Playhouse
- Oh Get On with It
- Stop Messing About
- Just a Minute
- The Wind in the Willows
[edit] Books
- Acid Drops
- Back Drops
- Just Williams
- I Only Have To Close My Eyes
- The Kenneth Williams Diaries
- The Kenneth Williams Letters
[edit] Albums
- Kenneth Williams on Pleasure Bent 1967, Decca LK 4856. Arrangements and musical direction by Barry Booth, sound supervision by Roger Cameron.
[edit] Portrayals
Williams has been portrayed in two separate made-for-television films. In 2000, Adam Godley played him in the story of Sid James and Barbara Windsor's love affair, Cor Blimey! Subsequently, in 2006, Michael Sheen played him in the BBC Four drama Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa!.
David Benson's 1996 Edinburgh Fringe show, Think No Evil of Us: My Life with Kenneth Williams saw Benson playing the character of Williams, and after touring, the show ran in London's West End. Benson reprised his performance again in a number of shows at the 2006 Edinburgh Fringe and continues to tour with this portrayal[13].
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ GRO Register of Births: MAR 1926 1b 408 ISLINGTON - Kenneth C. Williams
- ^ Army http://www.britmovie.co.uk/actors/w/004.html Retrieved 08/10/07
- ^ Hancock's Half Hour http://www.britmovie.co.uk/actors/w/004.html Retrieved 08/10/07
- ^ Stop messing about.. http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbc7/comedy/progpages/kw/kennethwilliams.shtml Retrieved 08/10/07
- ^ Carry On Films roles. He was in more films in the series than any other actor. http://www.britmovie.co.uk/actors/w/004.html Retrieved 08/10/07
- ^ Radio Times (London edition) July 23 - 29, 1977
- ^ GRO Register of Deaths: JUN 1988 14 1873 CAMDEN - Kenneth Charles Williams, DoB = 22 Feb 1926 aged 62
- ^ Overdose http://www.britmovie.co.uk/actors/w/004.html Retrieved 08/10/07
- ^ Greatest one-liner http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6524729.stm Retrieved 08/10/07.
- ^ "The truth behind that famous smile", Radio Times 5–11 April 2008
- ^ BBC Radio 4: The Pain of Laughter: The Last Days of Kenneth Williams
- ^ HarperCollins http://www.harpercollins.co.uk/Content/Title/Default.aspx?id=40926
- ^ David Benson - JAMES SEABRIGHT
- Williams, Kenneth (1993), Russell Davies, ed. The Kenneth Williams Diaries. London: HarperCollins.
[edit] External links
- The Kenneth Williams Appreciation Society - Online since 1997
- Carry On Line: Official Website of the Carry On films
- Arts: Kenneth Williams
- BBC photo gallery of the radio and TV career of Kenneth Williams
- BBC Four Interviews: Kenneth Williams
- Kenneth Williams:Fantabulosa!
- Kenneth Williams at the Internet Movie Database
- Kenneth Williams at Find A Grave
- David Benson's website
- Fyne Times -Gay Great
- Off the Telly: The TV Career of Kenneth Williams
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