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3. Everything / Arts and Entertainment / Movies / Walk of Fame
Kenneth Williams - the Actor

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Entry Data
Entry ID: A425792 (Edited)
Written and Researched by:
Demon Drawer (Barnsley Ain't No Inter Milan, then Again Inter Aren't...)

Edited by:
Hypoman
Date: 21   September   2000
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Referenced Guide Entries
Just a Minute - the Radio Programme

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Kenneth Williams was a comic actor on stage, radio, television and film, but a very private person who apparently loved his mother, Louie, despised his homophobic father, Charlie, and yearned for someone to hold him in their arms and love him.

His best known roles were in the 22 Carry On1 films in which his comedy voices delivered the toilet humour lines to great effect. However, his diaries revealed how he hated the level to which he had sunk with these roles, and that he yearned to take on good comedy roles on the West End stage again.

His comedy on radio gave his vocal range a whole medium in which to shine. He basically had four character voices, including his own. The others were 'Snide', who was a grinning cheeky chap, an upper crust 'aristo', and a cockney based on his father. His great radio shows include Round the Horne and Beyond our Ken2, Hancock’s Half Hour3 and Just a Minute. The last of these is the ad-lib panel game of which Williams is remembered as being part of the classic quartet.

Around the Horne and Beyond our Ken broke some ground. Homosexuality was still illegal in the UK at the time these shows were first broadcast, yet Williams paired up and created the character of Sandy, who, along with Julian, made double entendres of a homosexual nature that were the running joke in suburbia.

Williams lived his life constantly ashamed and guilty about his homosexuality yet his comedy personae were often so camp that it appeared he found escape in making comedy from his sexuality. He lived alone, only becoming involved in brief encounters.


1 Kenneth Williams appeared more times than any other actor in this series of typically British comedies which focussed on smutty jokes and cheap laughs.
2 Both these shows were based on the activities of Kenneth Horne, a British comedian.
3 Which transferred to television.

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Most of the content on h2g2 is created by h2g2's Researchers, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of any external sites referenced. In the event that you consider anything on this page to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please click here. For any other comments, please start a Conversation above.


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