Tommy Cooper

Tommy Cooper

Date of birth: 19-03-1921
Date of death: 15-04-1984

Tommy Cooper was a true original - the trademark Fez, that distinctive laugh, the clumsy, bewildered delivery, and, of course, the catchphrases make him one of the most instantly recognisable of all comedy icons. He didn't have to say anything to make his audience laugh, his appearance alone was enough.

Like many others, Cooper's first foray into showbusiness was with the forces. After serving as an apprentice shipmaker he joined Horse Guards, from where he became part of the entertainments unit.

It was while entertaining the troops, at a Naafi show in Egypt, that the fez became part of his look. Legend has it that he simply lost the pith helmet he had intended to wear, and grabbed the waiter's hat instead.

The tale of how he adopted his maladroit stage act is equally apocryphal . He supposedly botched an audition as a serious magician so badly that everyone thought it was deliberately hilarious.

If the persona came about by accident, Cooper was meticulous in honing it for every last laugh. A notoriously demanding perfectionist, he would be the bane of those working alongside him.

He was a hard worker, too. On demob in 1947 he joined London's Windmill Theatre - the devilishly hard venue where so many comics learned their craft, performing to uninterested punters between the strip shows. Cooper reputedly performed up to 52 shows a week there.

Tours, TV and a role in Eric Syke's film The Plank followed as, throughout the Sixties and Seventies, he cemented his place in the public's affections. In 1969 he was voted ITV's Personality of the Year.

His appetite for work was so voracious that few were surprised that his death came on stage, doing what he loved. And such was his reputation as a relentless joker that when he collapsed during that televised show, most of the audience thought it was just another of his gags.

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Unseen Tommy Cooper footage gets an airing

Performances taped in America in the 1960s

Footage of Tommy Cooper never before seen on British TV is to air this Christmas.

A new tribute programme will feature his guest appearance on The David Frost Show in New York in 1969 and his tour-de-force performance on an American television special in 1967.

Coper as a private detective with trenchcoat and gun

The Channel 5 programme, Tommy Cooper: The Lost Tapes,  will also include performances unseen since their original single transmission decades ago, to be show in full.

The programme includes testimony and memories from those who worked with or knew Tommy, including actress Dame Sheila Hancock, music producer Trevor Horn, broadcaster Janet Street-Porter, entertainer Jimmy Tarbuck and writer Colin Edmonds. 

Cooper signing autographs in the street

Also featured are famous fans including broadcaster Sir Trevor McDonald, comedian Zoe Lyons and comedy magician Pete Firman.

Cooper died on stage during a televised performance at  Her Majesty’s Theatre in London in April 1984, at the age of 63.

Cooper on stage in trademark fez

Tommy Cooper: The Lost Tapes is produced and directed by Mark Wells for Double Yellow Entertainment, which previously made Morecambe & Wise in America for U&Gold.

The new documentary  will air at 9pm on December 30 on Channel 5.

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Published: 8 Dec 2024

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Agent

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