- Secombe, Sir Harry Donald
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▪ 2002British comedian, actor, and writer (b. Sept. 8, 1921, Swansea, Wales—d. April 11, 2001, Guildford, Surrey, Eng.), starred as the gullible Neddie Seagoon in the revolutionary 1950s radio program The Goon Show, a zany, satiric, anarchic series that became a cult favourite and paved the way for such shows as the TV cult hit Monty Python's Flying Circus. Secombe left school at age 15 and worked as a clerk before joining the army during World War II. After the war he appeared as a comic at the Windmill Theatre in London's Soho district, in provincial variety theatres, and on such radio programs as Variety Bandbox and Welsh Rarebit. He also began gathering with Peter Sellers, Spike Milligan, and Michael Bentine in the Grafton Arms pub, where they shaped their jokes and banter into radio scripts. The quartet's work was accepted by BBC radio, and they began presenting Crazy People in 1951. It was renamed The Goon Show in 1952 and continued until early 1960 (without Bentine after the second season); a reunion, “The Last Goon Show of All,” was broadcast in April 1972 to honour the BBC's 50th anniversary. Secombe's most notable stage appearances were in the musical Pickwick (1963)—which featured “If I Ruled the World,” a song he made famous—and The Four Musketeers (1967); his best-known film was Oliver! (1968), in which he played Mr. Bumble. He also contributed to Punch magazine and published the novels Twice Brightly (1974) and Welsh Fargo(1981), as well as two autobiographical works, short stories, and children's books. From 1983 to 1993 he was host of the Sunday evening religious TV program Highway, and from 1995 he presented another religious program, Songs of Praise. Secombe was made CBE in 1963 and was knighted in 1981.
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Universalium. 2010.