Date of birth: 13-08-1930 Date of death: 18-06-2007
Bernard Manning, was comedy's bete noir, with a repertoire that included vile, racist jokes designed to wind up the politically correct brigade he hated so much.
For the alternative comedians, he came to epitomise everything that was wrong with the tired old-school acts, using generic material based on lazy stereotypes. But to his fans, he was a no-nonsense hero.
Manning was born in 1930 in the Ancoats district of Manchester, at the time one of the city's poorest areas, and his entire life revolved around the city.
He left school at 14 and worked briefly in his father's greengrocer's shop before becoming a big-band singer while doing his National Service in Germany.
He started compering shows, and gradually put more and more jokes into his act, until he was considered primarily a comedian.
He made his TV debut on Granada TV's stand-up show The Comedians, which made him a household name. So when producers wanted a host for The Wheeltappers and Shunters Social Club, an attempt to recreate the working men’s club nights for television, he was the obvious choice for the host.
But gradually his stand-up fell out of fashion - and became considered too offensive for TV.
He continued to work on the Northern club circuit, however, and was the big draw at his own club, the Embassy Club in Manchester.
His act was a mix of old pub gags, racist comments and cloying sentimentality - although he would defend himself by claiming he took the mickey out of everyone. 'I tell jokes,' he said. 'You never take a joke seriously.'
However, although he would claim anything was fair game for humour he had his own code, saying it was unacceptable to quip about bereavement, tampons or disability.
Yet he was happy to use words like 'niggers' and 'coons' in his act, claiming they were historical terms with respectable roots. And of black Britons, he would say: 'If a dog is born in a stable, it doesn't make it a horse.’
Manning died in June 2007, aged 76, of kidney disease. His son, Bernard Jr, took over the Embassy Club.
Before being immortalised as Dad's Army's Captain Mainwaring, Lowe was a long-serving cast member of Corrie, joining the show on its very first episode in 1960 and remaining until 1965, racking up 199 appearances. His character, a draper and lay preacher called Leonard Swindley, was so popular he spawned two spin-off series: the 1965 sitcom Pardon the Expression and its comedy-drama sequel Turn Out The Lights in 1967. A year later he got his call-up papers to join the fictional Home Guard of Warmington-on-Sea.
Kay has actually appeared twice on the cobbles. The first time was in 1997, when he played a shopfitter. But her returned in 2004, playing Shelley's date, Eric Gartside, over a couple of episodes. A drayman at Newton & Ridley, he scared Shelley off for being such a mummy's boy.
Kay's old mukka turned Take Me Out host played Bear Grylls-style wilderness survival expert Dougie Ryan across six episodes. A boastful know-it-all, Dougie proved himself a bore when some characters took a week's break in Wales in 2015.
In 2004, Wisdom, pictured, had a cameo role as Ernie Crabbe, a jogging pensioner who turned up at Jack and Vera Duckworth's house, gasping for breath, and interested in buying a bike the couple were selling. Ernie said he needed to get into shape for an inter-pub bowls challenge…
The controversial comic appeared as himself in a cameo role on Coronation Street in December 1971 – even though he had yet to achieve much fame outside his own Embassy Club at the time. In fact, Corrie was only his second TV appearance. According to the Coronation Street Wiki, his niece, Francesca Manning, also appeared in the programme as Sandra Milligan in 2002 and as an unnamed bouncer in March 2010.
Five years after leaving Never Mind The Buzzcocks, Hughes joined the Corrie cast in 2007 as smooth-talking salesman Pat Stanaway, who struck up a flirtatious relationship with Street Cars operator Eileen Grimshaw – despite being a married man. His story arc lasted 12 episodes – ending with Eileen punching him in the face .
The stand-up has appeared on Corrie twice. In 2011, he played Duggie, who delivered a car to Sally Webster , and in 2014 he was Dean Upton, landlord of The Flying Horse, a rival of the Rovers' Return, in two episodes, in which the two pubs vied in a cricket match.
The doyenne of British comedy appeared in three episodes in May 2010 as May Penn, who visited Wetherfield to tell Deirdre Barlow about the death of her mother, Blanche. The characters were friends in Portugal, and May also attended Blanche's funeral
9. Roy Hudd
Whitfield's regular collaborator, Roy Hudd has regularly appeared as good-natured undertaker Archie Shuttleworth since 2002, making 117 appearances. He was Blanche's companion, before falling for Audrey Roberts. He last appeared at the funeral of Blanche in 2010, reuniting Hudd with Whifield.
10. Max Wall
The pigeon-legged comic played a character called Harry Payne in the Street for four episodes in 1978 and 1979. He also appeared in Crossroads and Emmerdale.
And some of the rest…
As well as famous names with substantial Corrie pars such as Craig Charles and Les Dennis, various circuit comedians have also appeared on the show.
Gareth Berliner played Macca on-and-off from 2014 to 2016, making 22 appearances in all. Initially described as a 'loveable rogue', he became an increasingly unsavoury character, after his half-brother Clayton Hibbs murdered Kylie Platt.
In 2016, Alun Cochrane is played a character called Dom, described as a 'fairly ordinary, friendly, northern bloke' who got caught in the crossfire of a feud at a school reunion.
John Shuttleworth creator Graham Fellows has taken two roles in the soap: first as a young man who chatted up Gail Potter whilst she was waiting for a date in January 1979. Then he returned as Les Charlton who had a platonic friendship with Gail in the summer of 1992.
Toby Hadoke and Archie Kelly have both played three roles: Kelly was a football referee in 2005, an enquiry officer manning the front desk at Weatherfield Police Station in 2010 and kebab shops' owner Terry Howarth in 2016.
And Hadoke played the vicar who married Curly and Emma Taylor in December 2000; a solicitor in 2004 and a doctor in 2009.
John Warburton played coach driver Barry Sidwell for an episode in February 2009; and long before he was a comedian, Adam Riches played an unnamed waiter in both October 1998 and June 1999.
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