Press clippings Page 2
The sad, secret life of Benny Hill
In Hollywood journalist Craig Bennett's new book, True Confessions of a Shameless Gossip, he recalls speaking at length about Hill with one of the comedian's closest friends, the late Australian actress Sarah Kemp. According to Ms Kemp, Hill spent hours confiding in her about how he felt unloved and unattractive to women - despite his oversexed on-screen persona.
Nick Hadley, Daily Mail, 26th April 2019Benny Hill's The Strolling Ones
The Strolling Ones never made it as part of the British invasion. Here, singing "Rose" as Mick Jagger, Benny is also the drummer, the guitar player, the rest of the band, a man in the audience and a screaming girl.
Bill Young, Tellyspotting, 28th July 2018Seven comedy icons with a seedy reputation
It seems that every day a new showbusiness career lies in tatters as the world finally catches up to the men who abuse their power to harass and grope women. But for decades bad behaviour has gone unpunished... here are seven comedians beloved in their day - and some even now - despite widespread reports of pretty salacious behaviour that surely would not be tolerated today.
Chortle, 20th November 2017Ten comedians who have played Shakespeare
Including Catherine Tate, Benny Hill and Ken Dodd.
Chortle, 23rd April 2016Comedy film studio is flattened
As the dust clears away from the latest casualty in the war waged by the 'regenerative' bulldozers, it's left to Londonist to sift through the rubble and find out just what we've lost with the current demolition of Teddington Studios. This was where Tommy Cooper, Benny Hill and Morecambe and Wise filmed their shows, as well as more recent sitcoms such as Birds Of A Feather, The Office, Mr Bean, Black Books and Goodnight Sweetheart.
Stuart Black, Londonist, 24th November 2015In Lenny Henry's Danny and the Human Zoo (BBC One), his thinly veiled autobiographical drama of rising as a black comedy star in the 1970s, the last 20 minutes dealt with the self-disgust our hero felt after performing on the same bill as white men in blackface.
Earlier, we saw Danny and his family watching telly in their Dudley home. Like the rest of the TV nation, they giggled at Brucie on The Generation Game and Michael Crawford's Frank Spencer. And then the Black and White Minstrels came on. Smiles switched to open-mouthed disbelief. Just as, you'd suspect, happened in Henry's family living room.
Much of the appeal of Danny and the Human Zoo was the light it cast on its writer, that outlier for black British entertainers, and the compromises he made as a naive teenager in this racist realm. That wasn't how the Queen put it when she knighted Henry in June, but, you'd like to think, it's one of the reasons he was honoured.
In the drama, Danny blew up his showbiz career by coming on the Blackpool stage naked apart from tribal makeup - and telling his audience a few home truths. As security goons chased Danny, looking like a naked Fela Kuti, around the stage, Benny Hill chase music started up. Nice period touch. I wish they'd let that scene run longer.
There was wish fulfilment in this and the denouement in which, having rebelled, Danny returned, tail between his legs, to Dudley. There, Danny (a pitch perfect performance of innocence from Kascion Franklin, if not quite as disarmingly cheeky as the young Lenny was) got the girl (the sweet stand-up black one, not the fair-weather white one) and reunited with his fond but invertebrate white mates, and with his family. "Jamaicans don't have parents," Danny told his mates. "They have drill sergeants lamping them around the house." Really? In the drama, the love that Danny's endearingly firecracker mom (Cecilia Noble played her superbly as hard as nails and brittle as pressed flowers) had for her son looked unconditional.
And then there was Danny's sad British Leyland drone of a Jamaican stepdad, played with masterful restraint by Henry himself. Nice to see him inhabiting previous generations' ground-down shoes so empathetically. For 90 minutes Henry had a face like a wet weekend in Lower Gornal until, very near his and the drama's end, he gave us an unexpected laugh, sounding as lubricious as Lenny Henry's comic character Theophilus P Wildebeest. It was good to hear.
The truth about Henry is probably more painful than Danny and the Human Zoo suggested. Those photos of the young Lenny from the 70s, giggling amiably while flanked by two Black and White Minstrels with whom he was contractually obliged to appear, make difficult viewing in 2015. But white people like me don't get to call Henry on what he did then, nor, quite possibly, should anyone else.
Stuart Jeffries, The Guardian, 1st September 2015Blue plaques celebrating comic greats stolen
Plaques celebrating careers of Tommy Cooper, Sid James, Benny Hill and Irene Handl were snatched from outside Teddington TV Studios in London.
Mark Jefferies, The Mirror, 15th July 2015David Cameron sung Benny Hill song in debate ad break
Tasked with keeping the audience entertained during an advert break, Sky News host Kay Burley asked Cameron could sing. The Prime Minister said no -- but revealed he does sing "Ernie" in the shower, a comic ditty about a milkman by legendary British comedian Benny Hill.
Rob Price, Business Insider UK, 27th March 2015Farewell Teddington, birthplace of comedy
When Granville locks up and Still Open All Hours finishes shooting at Teddington Studios later this month, Thames Television's former home will close for ever. The front of the building is covered with blue plaques commemorating the comedy legends who worked there, including comedians Morecambe and Wise, Benny Hill, Tommy Cooper and Only Fools And Horses writer John Sullivan.
Louis Barfe, The Daily Express, 9th November 2014Benny Hill's sex controversy and comedic legacy
The king of bawdy British humour was an enigma whose global success was driven by a lifetime of confusion and loneliness. Chased off screen by prudish conservatives and PC prigs, he remains a pariah to some but a genius to others.
Roger Lewis, GQ, 17th April 2014