Hancock died while I was in the womb which was unfortunate - for both of us.
I started listening to Hancock via an LP recording of the Blood Donor and Radio Ham in the mid-70s and collected the LPs avidly after that.
At Christmas I got a 2CD set of 2 missing episodes plus some interviews with Galton & Simpson.
Oh, I nearly forgot. I 'interviewed' G&S at Ray's house four years ago - a truly awesome experience and just shows what can happen (and who you can meet) if you ask the right questions of the right people.
Thinking back I can't quite believe it happened. I was invited in by Ray before Alan arrived and we chatted in this miniscule kitchen while he made tea. The house is really grand but a bit rough round the edges these days but I'll never forget that kitchen because it was so out of proportion with the house.
Interesting that there were disagreements between the two over 'facts' and details in Freddie Hancock's biog.
I asked them about the results for the Best British Sitcom on the BBC. Consensus was that 30 for Hancock was pretty good considering its age, black and white and that it doesn't get shown that often. Ray was horrified that Vicar of Dibley was No.3.
Steptoe was 15 and it was felt that the subject matter meant that it wasn't repeated as often as it might be but it was fascinating to go over their career like that.
I recorded the interview and edited it onto a single CD so it was a nice memento plus I got a book of Hancock photos autographed.
I had planned to publish an article to commemorate what would've been Hancock's 80th birthday and 50th anniversary of the first show but the opportunity was missed. May revisit that CD to write an article now I've read this.