The Dick Emery Show
1 9 6 3 - 1 9 8 1 (UK)
166 x 30 minute episodes
Dick Emery excelled as a comic master of
impersonations in what became the BBC's longest running sketch-show.
His mimicry produced such characters as Gaylord the delinquent bovver
boy; Old Lampwick; The bucktoothed vicar; Hettie, the frustrated
spinster ("Excuse me, Madam", "It's Miss!"); College the upper-class
tramp; Farmer Finch; the wily Mr Crump; and the ultimate
street-interview subjects, Mandy the dumb blonde (who always
misunderstood the street interviewer and read sexual innuendo into
every sentence), the even dumber Hells Angel and Honky Tonk the 'camp'
man.

"Ooh, you are awful . . . but I like you!" (voiced by
the aforementioned Mandy) was Emery's most famous catch phrase, and in
1972, Dick Emery starred in a movie called (oddly enough)
Ooh, You Are Awful. After
cheating the Mafia out of a fortune, conman Emery trusts his partner
to stash the loot in a Swiss bank. As the number of the account is
tattooed on the rear of one of his girlfriends, a cheeky undercover
operation begins. The "bottom" line is to photograph the evidence for
posterity or he'll make a complete arse of himself (sorry, I was
getting into the spirit of it all there). Dick Emery trots out all
his famous impersonations.
Dick
Emery's holiday specials, The Dick Emery Christmas Show, were
also extremely popular. They aired on Christmas Eve 1972, Christmas
Eve 1977 and December 27 1980.
Richard Gilbert Emery was born on February 19 1917 at
the University College Hospital in St.Pancras, London. His parents
were a double-act known as Callan and Emery. They performed around
Britain at music halls throughout much of Dick's childhood (depriving
him of a formal education). His parents divorced in 1926 and Dick went
to live with his mother who, realised that
her son had inherited a talent for entertaining and insisted that he
perform whenever possible.
During
WWII, Dick joined Ralph Reader's Gang Show and entertained troops, and
in 1948 he appeared at London's famous Windmill Theatre (around the
same time as another new and unknown comedian, Tony Hancock). He began
appearing on radio and television in the 1950s, and his face soon
became well known to the viewing public. By 1960 he was playing
Private 'Chubby' Catchpole in the popular comedy series
The Army Game.
In 1963 the BBC offered Dick his own TV series and he
quickly established himself as a class act. In 1979, following fifteen
successful years with the BBC, Emery decided to switch channels to
Thames for The Dick Emery Comedy Hour. There were two more
comedy specials for ITV before Emery returned to the BBC in 1982 for
two series of comedy thrillers (Emery Presents) in which he
played Bernie Weinstock, the boss of a private detective agency.
Later in his life, Emery was plagued with ill health
and bouts of depression (with periods of insecurity), and before the
second series of Emery Presents could be shown, he passed away
on January 2 1983 at King's College Hospital, London. He was aged 67.
The second series, which was due to air on 13th January, was held over
until later in the year.
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