Eddie Braben

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eddie Braben (born 1923 in Liverpool, in the north-west of England) is a comedy writer and performer who has provided material for such figures as David Frost and Ronnie Corbett, but who is most famous for having written for Ken Dodd and Morecambe and Wise.

As a child he was entranced by radio comedy and particularly that of Arthur Askey. After school, which he left with a handful of qualifications, he followed his parents into market trading, manning a fruit and veg stall. In spare moments he wrote jokes, frequently on the back of the brown paper bags he used to package his goods.

Although shy, he sent jokes off to whichever comedians were appearing in Liverpool at the time. His first joke was sold to Charlie Chester for 2s 6d, but his first major success was with Ken Dodd, who he went on to work with for 12 years. Dodd's style was good training for Braben because his relentless delivery averaged around seven jokes each minute. Writing a five- or 10-minute set was hard work. Braben also worked on 'Round the Horne' and was often ridiculed by Kenneth Williams, who once forced Eddie Braben to say, "I Love You Kenneth" on air. [Error: In fact the Round the Horne collaborator was Edwin Braden]

Braben's ultimate success was to come when the BBC lured Morecambe and Wise from ITV. Bill Cotton, then in charge of Light Entertainment at the BBC, was looking for a writer and asked Braben if he'd like to try. Braben had seen Morecambe and Wise some years previously in music hall and thought they were terrible. In the intervening years, the duo had polished their act significantly and were using Dick Hills and Sid Green to write their scripts. They had ended-up with on-stage personas Braben says he didn't like - Morecambe was "gormless" (a northern England phrase meaning stupid and unworldly), whereas Wise was tight-fisted with money, smart and hard-edged (they were not dissimilar to their older contemporaries Abbott and Costello in this respect).

Braben's first trick when writing for the duo was to alter these characterisations. Though retaining his love of money, Wise became more naive and his egotism more innocent and less self-aware - whilst Morecambe became more worldly-wise and even protective of his friend, though still retaining a child-like innocence himself. After meeting the duo, Braben had noticed their warm friendship and aimed to bring this out at the same time as adding enough jokes to make it funny. He provided, for example, the idea of the two men not only living together but also sharing a large double bed - something which would have been unthinkable in the case of their 'Hills and Green' characters but which, emphasising as it now did their closeness as well as their innocence, became a regular feature of the TV shows.

Morecambe, Wise and Braben formed what came to be known in the television industry as "The Golden Triangle". Together they won the Society of Film Television Artists 1973 award for Outstanding Contribution to Television. Braben himself won the Best British Light Entertainment Script award from the Writer's Guild of Great Britain in 1969, 1970, 1971, and 1973.

Braben found writing for Morecambe and Wise extremely stressful, particularly with the pressure he was under to produce the high-profile Christmas Specials, each of which took months to rehearse and film. As a result, he suffered nervous illnesses, including hallucinations.

In 1978 Morecambe and Wise were lured back to ITV - but Braben didn't initially go with them, because he was still under contract with the BBC. Before he rejoined them on ITV in the 1980s, Braben wrote and appeared in a number of comedy radio shows for the BBC, including The Show With Ten Legs; he had been a radio scriptwriter and performer since 1975, when he wrote and starred in a BBC radio comedy series called The Worst Show On The Wireless. In style and form, Ten Legs harked back to the old music-hall tradition - not least due to the presence in the show of James Casey and Eli Woods, both of them former stage-colleagues (and blood relatives!) of music-hall legend Jimmy James.

In 2001, Braben collaborated with Hamish McColl and Sean Foley to write The Play What I Wrote, a stage play and tribute to Morecambe, Wise and Braben, which opened in London's West End. The director was Kenneth Branagh.

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