ChatterBank0 min ago
Ventriloquist
Is it true there used to be a ventrilouist on radio. He was a big star apparently in the 1950's.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Fletch937. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.His name was Peter Brough, and the radio show, which started in 1950, was 'Educating Archie'.
The notion of a ventriloquist on radio sounds weird, but it was hugely popular - with the dapper striped blazer clad Archie demeaning his 'helper' by refering to him as "Brough" as though he was some menial.
In years to come, Archie's 'tutors' included Max Bygraves, Tony Hancock, and Bruce Forsyth.
This was one of the first examples of 'superstardom' - there were Archie lollies, comics, posters, and so on - even though the dummy's face is a dead ringer for Hugo Fitch, the 'psychotic' dummy in the fantastic b/w film Dead Of Night made just a few years previously.
Archie followed in the tradition of the American ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and his dummy Charlie McCarthy.
The show often averaged 15 million listeners.
Due to the success of his radio show, he debuted on television in 1956 in the BBC sitcom Here's Archie which co-starred Irene Handl and Ronald Chesney. The show was written by the latter and Ronald Wolfe, who would later team up on classic British sitcoms The Rag Trade and On the Buses.
Two years later, Peter was on ITV in Educating Archie, utilising the same team as before, although Marty Feldman took some of the writing credit as well.
By 1961 Peter decided to retire Archie following the death of his father, also a ventriloquist, and proceeded to take over the family's textile and menswear business. His TV appearances from then on were sporadic. He died in 1999.
Archie went missing several times.
In 1947, he was in Peter Brough's car when it was stolen from Lower Regent Street, London, but found two days in a garden at Paddington.
He was left in the rack of a railway carriage at Chatham, but a railway porter sent him back by taxi in time for his show.
In 1951, Brough was travelling to Leeds to compere the televised Northern Music Hall at the Theatre Royal, Leeds, with Archie in his suitcase. Brough went for dinner in the dining car, and whilst away the carriage in which he had been sitting was taken off the train and went on to Bradford. Unable to locate the puppet, at the venue Brough went through a revised script without the dummy. A �1000 reward was offered and he was returned.
Only one Archie has ever existed, as the mould, made in 1942, was destroyed in The Blitz