Humphrey Lyttelton
1921 - 2008

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Jimmy Clitheroe, Diana Day, Danny Ross Film, Much Too Shy (1942)
“The Clitheroe Kid”
(Jimmy, Susan and Alfie)
Jimmy aged 21


Jimmy Clitheroe was a star of Variety, films, radio and television. Born in 1921, his career spanned five decades, from the 1930s to the 1970s, and he made his mark in every medium of show business.

Click here for details of Jimmy's films From small but humorous beginnings in Variety, as a boy in an all-girl juvenile troupe, he moved into films, firstly with Arthur Lucan (Old Mother Riley) and subsequently with George Formby, Jewel & Warriss and Frank Randle. The two films he made with Randle were for Film Studios (Manchester) Ltd, and are featured in a recent book.

In the 1940s he worked in Variety with comedians Albert Whelan and Albert Burdon, principally in the North of England, and most often in shows presented by John D Roberton or by Jack Taylor. He began working in Blackpool.

He built an impressive reputation in Variety, and in Blackpool set a record for the number of appearances in summer season shows. He worked there with Frank Randle, Jimmy James and Ken Dodd, amongst others.

He also played in Pantomime. His first panto appearance was alongside Two Ton Tessie O’Shea in 1938. His final panto was in 1971.

In the mid-1950s, Jimmy Clitheroe moved into radio. His first appearance was on the Home Service, in comedian Jimmy James’s show “The Mayor’s Parlour”. He soon had his own series, “Call Boy” - a Variety show.

Then came his biggest hit, “The Clitheroe Kid”. It ran for 15 years from 1957 on the Light Programme and Radio 2. It was the BBC’s longest-running situation comedy.

          ·  Listen to a clip from the show (requires Winamp)  ·

In the 1960s he broke into television, starring on ITV in “That’s My Boy” and “Just Jimmy” for 5 years from 1963 to 1968. Both shows were made by ABC Television. In the 1960s he also made his best remembered film, Rocket to the Moon, which he made in 1967 with Burl Ives and Terry-Thomas.


Site map  Don’t some mothers ’ave ’em ?

Coming from a background in the Variety theatre, his humour was broadly in the style of the “St Trinians” films and early “Carry On” pictures. His most famous catchphrase was “Don’t some mothers ’ave ’em” - though when referring to Alfie, it was often amended to “Don’t some twits mothers ’ave ’em”.

Another of his catchphrases was “I’m all there with me cough drops” (a Lancashire expression for someone quick-witted). When he got into a scrape - as he frequently did - his catchphrase was “Ooh, flippin’ ’eck”.

Blacko village He was born in Clitheroe, but his childhood was spent in the village of Blacko near Nelson, Lancs. His first stage appearances were in the local Methodist Chapel, performing in Sunday School concerts.

At the age of 14 he joined a professional juvenile troupe and began touring in Variety with them, under the stage name “Little Jimmie”.

He never grew taller than 4ft 3ins. For most of his life he could easily pass for an 11-year-old boy, a role he played to the hilt. He was the eternal schoolboy.

He never told people his age, in case it spoiled the illusion, and always performed in schoolboy cap and blazer (even at radio recordings, for the benefit of the studio audience). He fostered the illusion by appearing in publicity stunts for his local Boy Scout troop (dressed as a wolf cub), by living with his mother after his father's death, and by seemingly never having a girlfriend.

It all helped to maintain his show business career, which was dependent on that illusion. He almost always played a schoolboy - in the Variety theatres, in his films, on the wireless, on television, and on record. And he maintained the illusion successfully until his death. To the newspapers he always remained “the Peter Pan of Showbusiness”- the little boy who never grew up.

Only in Pantomime, and his 1967 film, did he step out of the cheeky schoolboy role. Even then it was only to play Tom Thumb - another part for which he was eminently suited. But his most frequent Panto role was in “Aladdin”, where he reverted to the cheeky boy, playing Widow Twankey’s son, Wishee Washee.

As a celebrity, he was much in demand at public events. For example, he opened the model village Miniland at Belle Vue in Manchester. He also opened local fetes, appeared at charity events, and crowned local beauty queens.

He had many business interests outside show business. He owned a racehorse, betting shops and a hotel. The latter was managed for him initially by his boyhood friend from Blacko, Tommy Trafford, who was also in show business.

Jimmy had a reputation for being “careful” with his money - a trait he got from the hard background he endured in childhood, growing up in the Great Depression. He maintained a very private private-life, away from all his other interests, living quietly at Blackpool in a semi-detached bungalow with his mother.

He died in June 1973, following her death. He was found unconscious on the morning of her funeral and died later the same day. An inquest found that his death was due to an accidental overdose of sleeping pills.

 

Career Highlights
1939 Pantomime with Old Mother Riley
(Arthur Lucan)
1940 First film - Old Mother Riley In Society
1942 Much Too Shy - film with George Formby
1949 School for Randle - film with Frank Randle

1954 First radio appearance - "The Mayor’s Parlour" written by James Casey and Frank Roscoe
1956 Starred in the radio Variety series, "Call Boy"
1956 Pilot show of "The Clitheroe Kid"
1967 Final film - Rocket to the Moon
1957-72 16 series of The Clitheroe Kid on the wireless
1939-71 16 Blackpool Summer Season shows over 32 years

 

Just Jimmy (tv series), c.1964
"Just Jimmy" television series

 


 


If you have fond memories of Jimmy’s radio series, “The Clitheroe Kid”,
why not suggest to the BBC that they repeat some of the shows

Contact BBC Radio

Or contact them by clicking here


To check this week’s radio schedules for “The Clitheroe Kid” click here

 


 

Jimmy Clitheroe
The Kid Himself



A Biography of the Clitheroe kid
-  by  -
Stephen Poppitt & Sandra Skuse





An appeal for information

We’re writing a book about Jimmy Clitheroe’s life and career, and in the course of our research we’ve spoken to many of his surviving relatives, friends and colleagues.

But we’d still very much like to hear from anyone else who knew or worked with him. Or if you have memories of Jimmy, even if you only saw him in a theatre show or on TV, do please contact us.

We’re currently researching his later variety career, having completed the research we needed to do in Lancashire and into his early show business career of the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s.



The Clitheroe Kid

We’re also looking for details about his co-stars in “The Clitheroe Kid” :

 
  • Actress and singer Diana Day - who played his posh sister, Susan (affectionately known in the show as “scraggy neck”)

  • Oldham comedian Danny Ross - who played her daft boyfriend, Alfie Hall

  • Comic Tony Melody - who played Jimmy’s sworn enemy, Mr Higginbottom

 


Feedback

We’re always happy to hear from anyone about Jimmy Clitheroe or his co-stars...

Anything concerning Jimmy or the others, no matter what,
is always of interest to us.

To contact us by e-mail, click here   Do, please, e-mail us

We promise to reply to ALL e-mail correspondence!

Feedback

 

Click here for the latest News

 



 

Jimmy Clitheroe - The Kid Himself

 

We’ve been researching this biography of Jimmy Clitheroe for the last 3 years, and have met most of his surviving friends and colleagues. We’ve now researched almost all of his career in radio, television and Variety.

A fascinating story it is too, going back to his earliest days in show business in the 1930s, when he worked in pantomime and films with Old Mother Riley, and in films with George Formby.

Jimmy’s best-remembered period is the 1960s, on BBC radio in “The Clitheroe Kid” and on ITV in his tv series “Just Jimmy”, in which he starred alongside Mollie Sugden and his “Clitheroe Kid” partner Danny Ross. We’ve talked to “Clitheroe Kid” producer James Casey and to Mollie Sugden, among many others.

In the 1950s, Jimmy worked in Variety for two years with Ken Dodd, who’s told us a lot about those shows and his memories of Jimmy.
 
We hope to publish the book in 2008.

· The book will be called Jimmy Clitheroe - The Kid Himself  ·

 


 

All There With My Cough Drops

- The Story of Jimmy Clitheroe -

Tuesday, June 10th, 2003
BBC Radio 4


This latest radio documentary about Jimmy Clitheroe
was produced by Libby Cross of BBC Radio Features in Manchester

For further details, see the News page

 



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