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Ken Dodd
Ken Dodd, OBE, Britain's King of Comedy, was also a major
recording artist in the 1960s with hits like Tears (one of
the biggest selling UK singles of all time), Love is Like a
Violin and many other slushy sentimental songs, much loved by
mums and grandma's.
Ken Dodd burst onto the local holiday scene in 1955, still
virtually unknown, in the Central Pier's Let's Have Fun summer
show, where the stars were Morecambe
and Wise. The chaotic comedy of the toothy, wild-haired comic
with the weird props and wonderful words of his own invention, was
an instant hit, much to the delight of legendary star-spotter
Peter Webster who had seen him at the resort's Queen's Theatre in
October, 1954, on a variety bill headed by Frankie
Vaughan.
The nut from Knotty Ash was rebooked for a second season at the
Central Pier on better money, as second top to the great Jimmy
James, and in 1957 Ken Dodd topped a summer show bill for the
first time. He starred at the old Hippodrome in Rocking With
Laughter, before returning to the Central Pier in 1958,
starring with Josef Locke.
He signed a recording contract with Decca during 1960, and his
first single, Love Is Like A Violin - a ballad from the
1920s - bolted into the Top 10. Once In Every Lifetime
followed in 1961 (a Number 28 hit), then Pianissimo a year
later (Top 30). When Dodd's deal with Decca expired, he joined the
Columbia label, a subsidiary of EMI Records. His musical director,
Geoff Love, steered him to a Number 35 hit with Still
during 1963, Number 22 with Eight By Ten, and the immortal Happiness
during 1964 which, surprisingly, faltered at Number 31.
But it was the ballad Tears that was to prove the best
of the bunch. Ken Dodd was in his publisher's office and came
across the sheet music. He played it on his radio program and
letters poured in asking him to record it. At this point there
were no less than 18 other versions of the song, from its first
recording by Rudy Vallee in 1929, to artists like Layton and
Johnstone, Jack Payne and Bob and Alf Pearson. The sad song
captured the public's imagination and it sold in excess of two
million copies to reach the top of the British charts in October
1965, where it stayed for five weeks.
The follow-up to Tears was taken from the Italian
original Le Colline Sono In Fioro (The River) which soared
to Number 3, and during 1966 Dodd enjoyed a further three hit
singles: Promises, More Than Love and It's Love.
Early in 1967 Let Me Cry On Your Shoulder re-established
him in the Top 20 but was his last hit until his Top 30 single Tears
Won't Wash Away These Heartaches during July 1969.
The 70s were somewhat kinder to the buck-toothed comic. Over
the span of five years he enjoyed four notable hits, although one,
Broken Hearted - his second Italian cover version - charted
twice, the first time in December 1970 when it peaked at Number
15, and again during February 1971 when it was a Top 40 hit.
Dodd's third Italian interpretation, When Love Comes Round
Again (L'Arca Di Noč) took him back to the Top 20 in July
1971, while Just Out Of Reach and (Think Of Me) Wherever
You Are both faltered outside the Top 20 in 1972 and 1975
respectively. The last time Ken Dodd's name appeared in the
British Top 50 was with Hold My Hand in 1981.
Dodd had a whole host of TV shows during the 1960s and 1970s
including The Ken Dodd Show, Doddy's Music Box and Ken
Dodd's Showbiz. He is almost certainly the last of his kind.
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