Tuesday, 18 August 2015
211 Sykes
First watched : 1975
For a guy who worked in TV for the best part of 50 years, with his own show for a dozen of them, Eric Sykes is curiously uncelebrated these days. You don't see tribute shows with comedy's young guns - and the ubiquitous Barry Cryer - lining up to pay homage . He wrote for and performed with all the greats - Tommy Cooper, Spike Milligan, Tony Hancock - but he's become the forgotten man of British comedy. Perhaps that's because there was no apparent edge to him ; apart from his struggle with deafness , he lived a long and happy, scandal-free life , never swore and his work stayed firmly in the mainstream.
Having said all that I was never a great fan of this. I remember Tuesdays being a particularly dull telly night and Sykes was a part of that. He lived with his unmarried sister Harriet ( Hatti Jacques ) in an unremarkable terraced house regularly visited by snooty neighbour Richard Wattis and under-worked policeman Corky ( Derrick Guyler ) . It seemed small, cramped and airless, each episode much like another. Part of the reason was that up to Wattis's death in 1975 most of the shows were colour remakes of Sykes's early sixties series Sykes And A ... which had exactly the same premise.
It came to an end with Jaques's death in 1980. Apart from a reviled ITV sitcom The Nineteenth Hole which lasted for one series in 1989 , Sykes never had a regular series again alhough he worked steadily as an actor into his eighties.He died in 2012 aged 89.
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