British Comedy Guide
Sez Les. Les Dawson. Copyright: Yorkshire Television
Les Dawson

Les Dawson

  • English
  • Actor, writer, stand-up comedian, presenter and musician

Press clippings Page 7

Les Dawson's daughter pulls his iconic funny face

She once said that she could do 'all his faces' and Les Dawson's daughter Charlotte wasn't lying. The 19-year-old actress and model was spotted leaving the ITV studios today and couldn't resist pulling one of her late father's funny looks.

Daily Mail, 8th June 2012

The Trials and Triumphs of Les Dawson - book review

A new life of Les Dawson celebrates a great British comic talent too often overlooked.

Peter Preston, The Observer, 5th February 2012

Video: Billy Connolly voted most influential UK comic

Billy Connolly has been voted the most influential British comedian of all time.

The Big Yin beat the likes of Morecambe and Wise, Les Dawson and Victoria Wood to top the poll.

It was voted for by the public and comedians.

It puts Billy Connolly on a par with his friend Robin Williams, who was named most internationally influential comedian.

BBC News, 31st January 2012

A lesson from Les Dawson in free thinking

Comedy in the Seventies seems to have been packed with out-and-proud Tories.

Michael Deacon, The Telegraph, 27th January 2012

If a documentary's purpose is to makes you want to find out more about the subject then The Many Faces of Les Dawson was a huge success.

Dawson is one of those classic comedians that, annoyingly, I haven't paid as much attention to as I should have. That's a shame, really, because there's a lot to like about him.

The fact that he had to overcome the adversity of poverty and was selling vacuum cleaners for years and years until he became famous was new to me and an interesting segment of the show.

However, I think the thing I most like about his early career was that he appeared on Opportunity Knocks - and failed to win - but became just about a bigger success than anyone else who appeared on it. Even back in 1967, comedians were proving just how stupid and pointless talent shows were.

There were a few other fascinating factual nuggets in this show, too. The fact that Dawson's show Sez Les was the only TV show that John Cleese did between Monty Python and Fawlty Towers was a revelation. I never knew the two of them worked together until now.

Yes, he is manly known for mother-in-law gags and deliberately playing the piano badly, but there's much more to Les Dawson than that, as I've just found out.

Ian Wolf, Giggle Beats, 26th December 2011

There was so much more to Les Dawson than an endless stream of mother-in-law jokes; he was erudite, well read, a brilliant writer and a master of the comically surreal. John Cleese, who worked with Dawson on his TV show Sez Les in the 1970s, says of his old friend: "He was an autodidact, a very smart guy who was fascinated by words."

Dawson was a product of those unforgiving crucibles of a certain kind of comedy, northern working me's clubs. He developed what became the most beloved part of his act - playing the piano brilliantly badly - as a means of shutting up vituperative audiences. Colleagues, admirers and Dawson's widow, Tracy, contribute.

Alison Graham, Radio Times, 24th December 2011

In terms of laughs-per-minute, this brilliant documentary profiling the life and work of the late Northern comedian Les Dawson is the one to beat tonight. Featuring many guffaw-inducing clips of Dawson in performance (sample quote: "I'd like to play you something by Mozart, but I won't because he never plays any of mine") as well as interviews with John Cleese, Jon Culshaw and others, it's a welcome celebration of one of the last century's most gifted comics.

Pete Naughton, The Telegraph, 23rd December 2011

Excellent clip/talking head profile of Les Dawson, progeny of the north-west club scene, and from his late 30s until his death, a mainstay of comedy and light entertainment on television. Proper stars like John Cleese and Robert Webb duly doff their caps, which is diverting enough, but the real fun is in the archive material, whether it be Les singing with Lulu, his magnificently satirical piano-playing, or his deadpan one-liners. Features many a reference to Dawson's equivalent of Moriarty, his mother-in-law.

John Robinson, The Guardian, 19th December 2011

A welcome new addition to the Friday night schedules - some real comedy in among the chat shows masquerading as such. Pitched at the post-pub crowd it's an archive show in which some of today's comics celebrate the great TV moments that inspired them to pursue a career in stand-up, or simply left them doubled over helpless with laughter and admiration.

Jack Dee is up first, recalling the impact that Billy Connolly's debut appearance on Parkinson - when the Big Yin told the infamous bum joke that turned him into a comedy superstar overnight - had on his teenage self back in 1975. Among those piling in to concur, and recall what an enormous influence Connolly was, are Jon Culshaw, Dara O'Briain, Alan Carr and Jo Brand. Then, before it all gets too indulgent, Brand recalls her own favourite - a groundbreaking 1988 sketch from French and Saunders in which the duo play dirty old men watching a beauty pageant. Again, there's praise from the likes of Alan Carr, Joan Rivers, Andi Osho and - a touch bizarrely - Paddy McGuinness, before moving on to the next (Rhod Gilbert on Eddie Izzard's surreal "learning French" routine), and finishing with hymns to Max Miller and Les Dawson. In truth, the old doesn't always mix with the new, and the insights aren't always scintillating, but it's a chance to enjoy again some hilarious moments, and to discover some past flights of genius that may have passed you by.

Gerald O'Donovan, The Telegraph, 21st July 2011

TV's focus on Les Dawson's daughter Charlotte

While she missed out on winning the crown of Miss Manchester, the stunning daughter of comedy legend Les Dawson has certainly caught the eye of TV bosses.

Dianne Bourne, Manchester Evening News, 20th June 2011

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