Featured Article - Winter Issue 2009 

Morecambe & WiseBring me Sunshine?

Morecambe & Wise

Bring me sunshine

Simply the best comic double act that Britain has ever produced, Morecambe and Wise were masters of their craft and became a beloved national institution. For almost two decades their Christmas shows dominated the ratings, becoming as much a part of the Yuletide celebrations as turkey and plum pudding, and to this day they still hold the record audience for a television variety show of 28 million viewers for their Christmas 1977 special.

But it wasn?t always plain sailing for the duo; their first series in 1954, was so savagely panned by critics (one of them defining a TV set as ?The box they buried Morecambe and Wise in) that they didn?t make another for over six years. They contented themselves on making guest appearances and in 1960 were much in demand when they made twelve visits to Sunday Night at the London Palladium, performed six spots on Saturday Spectacular and four on Star Time. For the television audience of that era, which had only two channels to choose from, it must have seemed as though Morecambe and Wise were on television every time they switched it on, so it was only natural for them to have their own show.

The first of the new series of shows left them feeling unhappy with the formula that ITV, and their scriptwriters Sid Hills and Dick Green, insisted on. But fate was to play ?the boys? a stroke of good luck. A strike by the actors union Equity robbed them of numerous guest stars and extras. Eric and Ernie (who were members of a different union) played all the different parts-giving them full audience attention. Sid and Dick themselves were included in many of the sketches, often bearing the brunt of Eric?s jibes and ad-libs.

More and more the boys own personalities began to shine forth and it was this that won the audience over. The strike lasted for twelve weeks, the same length of the series and by the end of it Morecambe and Wise had established themselves as the most watchable duo on television.

With the success of their first ATV series, Morecambe and Wise established themselves in the minds of the British television public along with their various catchphrases (?Get out of that!? - ?Tea Ern??). The quality of their guests got better, and in December 1963 they recorded a show with The Beatles, treating the most famous pop group of all time with a total irreverence that they would become famous for in later years.

The shows were based very much in the old variety hall style of sketches, song and dance routines, and musical guests. Their stage personae would be Eric Morecambe as the mischievous but loveable clown, and Ernie Wise as the self-important but equally foolish ?straight man?. Such was the quality of their shows and the professionalism of their performances that over the years they were able to attract guests from every corner of the entertainment industry including Tom Jones, Sir Laurence Olivier, memorably Angela Rippon, and even former Prime Minister Harold Wilson, all of whom became the butt of their jokes.

At the end of the 1960s Morecambe and Wise left ATV for pastures new at the BBC. Award followed award for Morecambe and Wise, from BAFTA (1969, 1970, 1971, 1972 and 1973), Variety Club of Great Britain (1974, 1976 and 1978), Radio Industries Organisation (1971 and 1972), Water Rats (1970 and 1974), The Freedom of the City of London (1976) and OBE?s (1976). Their ?Christmas Specials? became the highlight of the year for most viewers and in 1977 they broke all records when over 28 million viewers? - more than half the population of the entire country - tuned in to watch their show on the 25th December. They also made three feature films: ?The Intelligence Men?, ?That Riviera Touch? and ?The Magnificent Two?.??

In the late 1970s they switched back to ITV but their days were sadly numbered. Eric had suffered from ill health since a heart attack in 1968 and in 1984 his untimely death brought down the final curtain on a golden age of comedy partnerships. Ernie passed away in 1999 after a long illness, and while the lad?s themselves are no longer with us their legend lives on in the form of repeat showings and video/DVD recordings. They brought sunshine to quite literally generations of appreciative fans.

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