Les Dawson

(Shows)
(Biography: reword bracketed bit; was defog his last appearance? I always thought his appearance on Surprise, Surprise was - it was described as such on a BBC4 documentary)
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== Biography ==
== Biography ==
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Lancashire-born comedian who will always be remembered for playing the piano wrong and jokes about the mother-in-law, as well as being, along with Roy Barraclough, one half of the constantly-gossiping fictional double-act, Cissie and Ada. After appearing on [[Opportunity Knocks]] in 1967, he never looked back. (He even returned to host that show in 1990).
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Lancashire-born comedian who will always be remembered for playing the piano wrong and jokes about the mother-in-law, as well as being, along with Roy Barraclough, one half of the constantly-gossiping fictional double-act, Cissie and Ada. After appearing on [[Opportunity Knocks]] in 1967, he never looked back. (Until 1990, that was, when he returned to host it.)
He died in 1993 after a heart attack.
He died in 1993 after a heart attack.

Revision as of 19:48, 12 August 2017

Contents

Shows

Blankety Blank

Fast Friends

It's a Knockout (commentator: The Grand Knockout Tournament)

Joker's Wild (team captain)

Opportunity Knocks

Biography

Lancashire-born comedian who will always be remembered for playing the piano wrong and jokes about the mother-in-law, as well as being, along with Roy Barraclough, one half of the constantly-gossiping fictional double-act, Cissie and Ada. After appearing on Opportunity Knocks in 1967, he never looked back. (Until 1990, that was, when he returned to host it.)

He died in 1993 after a heart attack.

Trivia

Before he became famous as a comedian, Dawson used to write poetry.

He broke his jaw in a boxing match, thus being able to pull grotesque faces by pulling his jaw above his upper lip. No doubt he would have shone in the gurning competition, held annually in the Cumbria town of Egremont.

He began his entertainment career as a pianist.

His last-ever television role, which was screened posthumously, was in ITV's 1993 comedy-drama "Demob", alongside Griff Rhys-Jones and Martin Clunes. Dawson played the wartime comedy legend Morton Stanley. He had also played a 100-year-old woman in a BBC drama a few years earlier.

Dawson made an amusing appearance on a 1990 edition of The Generation Game in a 'chat show' game. The two female finallists had to announce that their special guest would be Clint Eastwood, while the men had to annouce that theirs would be Goldie Hawn - and the guest turned out to be Dawson in all four cases. Of course, the contestants did not get any indication of the surprise in store, because they were not allowed to watch each other play the game. Dawson proved a good and amusing interviewee, and very kind to the contestants, just as he had been on Opportunity Knocks earlier that year.

Dawson's first wife tragically died during his time on "Blankety Blank". He later remarried and had a daughter by his second wife, although he sadly died soon after that.

Books / Tapes

No Tears for the Clown (biography, hardcover) (paperback)

Come Back with the Wind

Well Fared, My Lovely

Web links

Official website

Les Dawson tribute page

IMDb entry

Wikipedia entry

Feedback

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