Barry Took
Date of birth: 19-06-1928Date of death: 31-03-2002
Took was born the son of a commercial traveller, who was prone to bouts of depression. His academic brother committed suicide, and Took has admitted to periods of darkness himself - the almost stereotypical comedian wracked by misery.
But his public face was of the genial old duffer - unfortunately more to do with his long-running role as the host of BBC1's Points Of View - which raised his profile, but did little to acknowledge his impressive contribution to the world of comedy.
Took was the long-time writing partner of Marty Feldman, starting as a gag writer and on such radio shows as Beyond Our Ken, whose stars included Kenneth Horne, Kenneth Willams, Hugh Paddick and Stanley Unwin.
One of the writing pair's greatest acheivements is Round The Horne, took off from where Beyond The Ken left off.
The groundbreaking shows featured such over-the-top characters as Rambling Syd Rumpo, and Dame Celia Molestrangler contrasting with the straight-laced Horne.
It also featured the overtly camp Julian and Sandy, played by Kenneth Williams and Hugh Paddick, whose archaic Polari gay slang proved sufficiently impenetrable to the BBC censors, who unwittingly allowed some outrageous double entendres to be broadcast .
Although in the foreward to the 1999 collecion of scripts The Best Of Round The Horne, Took wrote: "With hand on my heart, Marty and I were not aware of everything into which the audience read a double meaning."
He added: "It was a joy to be a part of the team that created Round The Horne. I was involved with the show at a time of my life when I was very happy., and that happiness overflowed into the scripts."
After Round The Horne, Took moved more heavily into TV, co-writing Marty Feldman's show It's Marty , and the World Of Beachcomer, a TV show based on the writings of the famed Daily Express column.
Took wrote, on occassion, for most of the biggest names in comedy, including Tommy Cooper, Harry Secombea nd Frankie Howerd.
He also took a sabbatical from the BBC to go to the US to work on NBC's seminal Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In as one of the scriptwiritng team.
One of Took's biggest contributions to comedy, though, was not as a writer: for he was the man responsible for bringing the Monty Python team together.
A BBC producer the time, he had the foresight to bring two together separate writing teams John Cleese and Graham Chapman and Michael Palin and Terry Jones with spectacular results.
Took also, as head of light entertainment at LWT, discovered the scriptwriting team of Laurence Marks and Maurice Gran, responsible for a slew of British sitcoms from The New Statesmen to Birds Of A Feather.
Although primarily a writer, he was also a performer - most notably as the host of Radio 4' s long-running News Quiz
But Took's genial persona occassionally cracked. In 1994, he launched an attack on the BBC's bigwigs of the time, Marmaduke Hussey and John Birt, saying they knew "bugger all" about broadcasting. In another attack, three years later, he slammed the corportaton for neglecting comedy, a subject he said they never understood.
He underwent treatment for cancer in 1998, and was plagued by ill health in his later years - including a stroke in 2000 which affected his speech and his dexterity. In an interview soon afterwards he said: "Of course there are times when I think, 'I'd be better out of this.'"