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 | | Statue of Tony Hancock in Old Square |
This page may be referred to as:
www.birmingham.gov.uk/hancock
To many people Tony Hancock
was probably the best known comedian of the 1960s. He was born at 41
Southam Road, Hall Green, Birmingham, on 12th May, 1924, but within
three years his family moved to Bournemouth. His father kept a public
house in Bournemouth where theatrical people, like Elsie and Doris
Waters, used to stay.
He served in the forces throughout the
Second World War, from 1942, as a member of the Royal Air Force. Before
he became a part of Ralph Reader's RAF Gang Show he had had some
experience as a youthful amateur entertainer, and after his demob in
1946 he was experienced enough to find himself continual engagements in
pantomime, in summer seasons in the holiday resorts, and occasionally as
a straight actor.
In 1948 he was employed by the 'Windmill
Theatre' which led to radio and then to television. From 1951 to 1953 he
added a new voice to the Radio Show, Educating Archie and then in 1954
his lugubrious character appeared on radio in Hancock's Half Hour, and
then from 1956 to 1960 on television with superb scripts written by Ray
Galton and Alan Simpson.
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He left Britain in March 1968 to work on a proposed comedy series for
Australian television but was found dead in his Sydney flat on 26th June
1968 with an empty vodka bottle and an empty bottle of sleeping pills at
his side.
A commemorative plaque on the exterior of 41 Southam
Road commemorates his birth. A statue in his memory stands in Old Square
- appropriately the former home of the Birmingham Blood Transfusion
Service. The statue was unveiled by Sir Harry Secombe in 1996. It has
since been moved a few yards, to the centre of Old Square.
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