The Man Who Was Private Widdle
Charles Hawtrey 1914–1988
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Narrateur(s):
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Auteur(s):
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Roger Lewis
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Stephen Fry - introduction
À propos de cet audio
In The Man Who Was Private Widdle, Roger Lewis conjures this sense of doom and acute melancholy which is at the same time hysterically funny. The book opens out like a Chinese box to address such issues as the nature of fame, neglect, loss, sexual confusion, Drambuie, betrayal, Royal Marines bandsmen, and fine cambric knickers trimmed with lace and blue ribbon. Its moral would seem to be that you don't necessarily turn out as the person you thought you'd become. Hawtrey, born to play Shakespearean clowns or Restoration fops, ended up sacked from the Carry On films, wandering about the stage drunk on a provincial tour of Stop It Nurse!
Incorporating extensive new research and exclusive interviews with the major players, The Man Who Was Private Widdle is a masterpiece of biographical investigation and a fitting testament to a quirky comic genius whose place in British cultural history is now assured. ©2026 Roger Lewis (P)2026 Hodder & Stoughton Limited
Ce que les critiques en disent
(A) brilliant little biography
(A) pungent, opinionated and brilliantly intuitive biography of the saddest act in the history of British cinema
Lewis evokes Hawtrey's weird by wholly joyful persona in a monograph worthy of Ken Tynan
Roger Lewis s small but perfectly formed biography . . . like its subject, Lewis s book may be slim but it packs a surprising amount between its covers
This brief book rewards reading
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