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Terry-Thomas
Terry-Thomas
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Terry-Thomas in Where Were You When the Lights Went Out? (1968)

Terry-Thomas (born Thomas Terry Hoar Stevens; 10 July 1911 – 8 January 1990)[a] was an English character actor and comedian who became internationally known through his films during the 1950s and 1960s. He often portrayed disreputable members of the upper classes, especially cads, toffs and bounders, using his distinctive voice; his costume and props tended to include a monocle, waistcoat and cigarette holder. His striking dress sense was set off by a 13-inch (8.5 mm) gap between his two upper front teeth.

Born in London, Terry-Thomas made his film debut, uncredited, in The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933). He spent several years appearing in smaller roles, before wartime service with Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA) and Stars in Battledress. The experience helped sharpen his cabaret and revue act, increased his public profile and proved instrumental in the development of his successful comic stage routine. On his demobilisation, he starred in Piccadilly Hayride on the London stage and was the star of the first comedy series on British television, How Do You View? (1949). He appeared on various BBC Radio shows, and made a successful transition into British films. His most creative period was the 1950s when he appeared in Private's Progress (1956), The Green Man (1956), Blue Murder at St Trinian's (1957), I'm All Right Jack (1959) and Carlton-Browne of the F.O. (1959).

From the early 1960s Terry-Thomas began appearing in American films, coarsening his already unsubtle screen character in films such as Bachelor Flat (1962), It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) and How to Murder Your Wife (1965). From the mid-1960s on he also frequently starred in European films, in roles such as Sir Reginald in the successful French film La Grande Vadrouille. In 1971 Terry-Thomas was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, which slowly brought his career to a conclusion; his last film role was in 1980. He spent much of his fortune on medical treatment and, shortly before his death, was living in poverty, existing on charity from the Actors' Benevolent Fund. In 1989 a charity gala was held in his honour, which raised sufficient funds for him to live his remaining time in a nursing home.

Biography

[edit]

Early life: 1911–1933

[edit]
Ardingly College, where Terry-Thomas engaged in amateur dramatics.

Terry-Thomas was born Thomas Terry Hoar Stevens at 53 Lichfield Grove, Finchley, North London.[1] He was the fourth of five children born to Ernest Frederick Stevens, managing director of a butcher's business at Smithfield Market and part-time amateur actor, and his wife Ellen Elizabeth Stevens (née Hoar).[2][3] As a child, Terry-Thomas was often referred to as Tom, the diminutive used by his family. He led a generally happy childhood, but believed his parents secretly desired a daughter in his place.[2] By the time he reached adolescence, his parents' marriage had failed and both had become alcoholics.[4] In an attempt to bring them together, he often entertained them by performing impromptu slapstick routines, reciting jokes and singing and dancing around the family home. The performances seldom worked, and his father became increasingly distant from his family.[5]

In 1921 Terry-Thomas began to nurture his distinctive, well-spoken voice, reasoning that "using good speech automatically suggested that you were well-educated and made people look up to you".[6] He used the speech of the actor Owen Nares as a basis for his own delivery.[7] Terry-Thomas became fascinated by the stage, and regularly attended the Golders Green Hippodrome to see the latest shows. It was there that he developed an interest in fashion, and adopted the debonair dress-sense of his hero Douglas Fairbanks.[8] Terry-Thomas attended Fernbank School in Hendon Lane, Finchley,[9] which was a welcome escape from the stresses of his parents' break-up. When he was 13, he transferred to Ardingly College, a public school in Sussex.[9] He excelled in Latin and geography, and briefly took up drama. The latter subject later led to his expulsion from the school, after his frequent and inappropriate use of ad lib during lessons. He also took up a position in the school jazz band, first playing the ukulele and then percussion. He also often performed comedy dance routines to the band's music.[10]

Erich von Stroheim, on whom Terry-Thomas based his early look.

Terry-Thomas enjoyed his time at Ardingly, and relished his association with upper middle class school friends. His academic abilities were modest, and he came to the notice of staff only through his frequent tomfoolery.[11] Although he initially felt intimidated by his school surroundings, his confidence grew as he put on "a bold, undiluted and sustained show of chutzpah", according to his biographer, Graham McCann.[9] On his return home to Finchley in 1927, his more mature manner impressed the family's housekeeper Kate Dixon, who seduced him at the family home. He stayed at Ardingly for one more term and returned home to London, but made no plans to further his education or start long-term work.[12] Instead, he accepted a temporary position at Smithfield Market, where he earned 15 shillings a week as a junior transport clerk for the Union Cold Storage Company.[13]

By his own admission, he never stopped "farting around" and often kept his colleagues entertained with impersonations of the Hunchback of Notre-Dame and Erich von Stroheim. He invented various characters, including Colonel Featherstonehaugh-Bumleigh and Cora Chessington-Crabbe, and frequently recited comic stories involving them to his colleagues. His characterisations soon came to the notice of the company's management who prompted him to enrol in the company's amateur drama club. He made his début with the drama company as Lord Trench in The Dover Road which was staged at the Fortune Theatre, London. The production was popular with audiences, and he subsequently became a regular performer in amateur productions.[14]

Terry-Thomas made his professional stage début on 11 April 1930 at a social evening organised by the Union of Electric Railwaymen's Dining Club in South Kensington. He was billed as Thos Stevens, but only appeared as a minor turn. His performance brought heckles from the drunken audience, but earned him a commission of 30 shillings. After this, he played a few minor roles in Gilbert and Sullivan productions by the Edgware Operatic Society at the Scala Theatre. In 1933, he left Smithfield Market to work briefly with a friend at an electrical shop before he became a travelling salesman of electrical equipment. He enjoyed the job and relished being able to dress up in elaborate clothing in order to make his pitch.[15] In his spare time, he began playing the ukulele with a local jazz band called the Rhythm Maniacs. He took up dancing and formed a partnership with a sister of Jessie Matthews. The act starred in local exhibitions and at minor venues, and they earned well from it. News soon travelled of the couple's talent, and they were engaged as ballroom dancers at a hall in Cricklewood. He found the dance-style too restrictive and he left the act to try other aspects of entertainment.[16]

Early performances: 1933–1939

[edit]
"Everyone was talking about the gap between my teeth, my monocle, the fancy waistcoats I wore and the seven-inch cigarette holders I used."
—Terry-Thomas on his unique look[17]

By 1933 Terry-Thomas had moved out of Finchley and into a friend's flat; the friend was a film extra who introduced him to the idea of working in the industry.[18] Terry-Thomas made his uncredited film debut in the 1933 film, The Private Life of Henry VIII,[19] which starred Charles Laughton in the title role.[20] Between 1933 and 1941 Terry-Thomas appeared in 16 films, as an uncredited extra in all but one;[21][b] he later said that "this work suited me down to the ground. It wasn't really like work to me. I got an enormous kick out of it".[18] His first speaking role came in the 1935 Buddy Rogers comedy Once in a Million where he shouted "A thousand!" during an auction.[24] During the 1936 musical comedy This'll Make You Whistle, starring Jack Buchanan, he permanently damaged his hearing as a result of jumping into a water tank.[18] In between his film work, he developed his cabaret act and was employed as a dance teacher at the Aida Foster School of Dancing in Golders Green.[25]

During this period, he billed himself as Thomas (or Thos) Stevens, but rearranged the name to its backward spelling of Mot Snevets;[26] the name did not last long and he changed it to Thomas Terry. He soon realised that people were mistaking him as a relative of Dame Ellen Terry, so inverted the name to Terry Thomas.[27] He did not add the hyphen until 1947, and later explained that it was "not for snob reasons but to tie the two names together. They didn't mean much apart; together they made a trade name":[28] the hyphen was also "to match the gap in his front teeth".[3] By now, he was developing a unique sense of style both on and off stage. To avoid staining his fingers with smoke, he used a cigarette holder and later purchased "the most irresistible holder in Dunhill's. It was slightly outré because it was made of lacquered, black whangee ... with a gold band twisting neatly round it".[29][c] Adding to his look were a "monocle, raffish waistcoat and red carnation".[3] He later wrote that "sartorially I was an eccentric. But I knew that underneath the clothes I was very much a conservative Englishman who would have loved to have been a genuine eccentric".[31]

In 1937 Terry-Thomas met the South African dancer and choreographer Ida Florence Patlansky, who went by the stage-name Pat Patlanski,[27][d] while she was auditioning in London for a partner for her flamenco dancing act.[e] Patlanski was keen to employ Terry-Thomas as a comedian rather than a dancer, and they established a cabaret double-act billed as "Terri and Patlanski", which was immediately popular with audiences. The couple became romantically involved and married on 3 February 1938 at Marylebone Register Office, afterwards moving to 29 Bronwen Court in St John's Wood. Despite the success of Terri and Patlanski,[33] the act lasted only three months[34] and they took on small engagements on the cabaret circuit. On 6 June 1938 Terry-Thomas made his first radio broadcast on the BBC London Regional dance programme Friends to Tea. He later recounted that "I didn't give a very good performance ... I was a dismal failure".[35] At the end of the summer of 1938 they were hired by the bandleader Don Rico, who incorporated them into his orchestra, with Patlanski playing the piano and Terry-Thomas acting as the compère.[33][36]

Second World War

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I was with an ENSA party in Hereford when I received a cunningly worded, if not cordial, invitation to join the Army. I accepted with dignity, if not enthusiasm.

Terry-Thomas on his call-up[37]

The Entertainments National Service Association (ENSA) was formed in 1938 to provide entertainment to the British Armed Forces.[38][f] Terry-Thomas and Patlanski signed up in 1939[40] and during the Phoney War were posted to France, where they appeared in a variety show.[41] From early in their marriage, Patlanski had affairs, which prompted Terry-Thomas to reciprocate; he made sure he was sent on tour to France where a girlfriend was due to perform, although Patlanski accompanied him on the trip. During the tour, Terry-Thomas ensured Patlanski was sent back to Britain to enable him to continue his affair.[42] On his return to Britain, he continued with his solo variety act, while also acting as the head of the cabaret section of ENSA at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane,[43] where he clashed regularly with his counterparts running the drama sections, Sir Seymour Hicks and Lilian Braithwaite.[41] Terry-Thomas aimed to produce "good shows, sophisticated, impeccable and highly polished",[44] which included the violinist Eugene Pini playing light classical music, and the Gainsborough Girls chorus line.[41]

blue plaque commemorating Terry-Thomas
Blue plaque at Terry-Thomas's house at 11 Queens Gate Mews, Kensington
exterior of cream painted mews house, with blue plaque on front wall
Terry-Thomas's mews house, London

In April 1942 Terry-Thomas received his call-up papers; he later wrote that "it would have seemed rather rude and ungrateful to refuse";[45] as a result, he left ENSA and reported to the Royal Corps of Signals training depot in Ossett, West Riding of Yorkshire.[46] Within two weeks of his arrival he hired Ossett Town Hall and staged a concert, which included a freshly written sketch about his feet, which had been suffering in his army boots.[47] After basic training he was promoted to the rank of corporal and applied for a commission.[48] He was turned down because training had caused a duodenal ulcer, and his hearing was still problematic;[49] as a result he was downgraded from A1 to B1 fitness at the start of 1943.[50]

Terry-Thomas continued to appear in cabaret and variety shows while in the army, including at the Astoria Cinema in York, where he was seen by George Black.[g] Black established the entertainment troupe, Stars in Battledress, which was composed of entertainers who were serving in the forces, and he invited Terry-Thomas to join.[51] In February 1943 he appeared in his first Stars in Battledress show at London's Olympia, where he introduced the sketch "Technical Hitch". This involved him portraying a harassed BBC announcer introducing records that are missing. In order to cover up for the absent records he would use his vocal range of four and a half octaves[52] to mimic the singers; he included "impersonations of Britain's clipped crooner Noël Coward, the African-American bass-baritone Paul Robeson, the Peruvian songbird Yma Sumac, the Austrian tenor Richard Tauber and ... the entire Luton Girls Choir".[53] The show went on a national tour, with the stand-up comedian Charlie Chester as compere, during which Terry-Thomas refined and polished his act and finished as "one of the most prominent and influential members of Stars in Battledress".[54]

Terry-Thomas, along with his Stars in Battledress unit, travelled through Britain and Europe on a tour that lasted several months.[54] After the tour, and with his demobilisation approaching, he took compassionate leave to have free time while still receiving army pay. During his absence he went on a tour of the UK organised by George Black, accompanied on the piano by a former colonel, Harry Sutcliffe.[55] Terry-Thomas finished the war as a sergeant,[h] and was finally demobbed on 1 April 1946.[57]

Early post-war work: 1946–1955

[edit]

The ENSA and Stars in Battledress tours of Britain and Europe had raised Terry-Thomas's profile and, by October 1946, he was appearing alongside Sid Field in Piccadilly Hayride at the Prince of Wales Theatre, London.[3] The show was described by Graham McCann as "the West End's biggest money-spinner for years".[58] Terry-Thomas compered the show as well as appearing in some of the sketches, including his own "Technical Hitch" routine.[59] In 1959 he described the effect of Piccadilly Hayride on his career, saying "This show made me overnight. I'd arrived".[60] Ivor Brown, writing in The Observer, remarked on the "glorious rag of BBC modes, moods and intonations by Mr. Terry Thomas, a grand discovery".[61] Within three weeks of starting his run, Terry-Thomas was invited to appear at the Royal Command Performance on 4 November 1946 at the London Palladium.[62]

Piccadilly Hayride ran for 778 performances and ended on 17 January 1948. The show was seen by over a million people and earned £350,000 at the box office.[i] In conjunction with Piccadilly Hayride, Terry-Thomas undertook a number of other additional one-off appearances in cabaret and private functions.[64] He also appeared in editions of Variety Bandbox and Workers' Playtime on BBC Radio.[65] His ever-evolving act consisted of imitations, including that of his friend, the musician Leslie Hutchinson (known as "Hutch");[66] sketches, including "Technical Hitch";[67] urbane monologues,[64] and "languid shaggy dog stories".[59] At the end of his run with Piccadilly Hayride, Terry-Thomas took a three-week break to recover from nervous exhaustion and a recurrence of his peptic ulcer. He went back to cabaret and acted as a compere at the London Palladium before making his radio breakthrough on 12 October 1948 with his own series on the BBC Home Service. Consisting of a "mixture of sketches, solo routines, musical interludes and a range of popular and topical star guests",[68] To Town with Terry was broadcast weekly and ran for 24 episodes until 28 March 1949.[69] He was disappointed with the series, saying "I was never totally satisfied with [it] ... The perfectionist in me always made me aware of anything that was less than first class".[70] He also appeared in his first post-war film, A Date with a Dream, in 1949, alongside his wife.[71][72]

How do you view? Are you frightfully well? You are? Oh, good show!

Terry-Thomas's opening lines on
How Do You View?[73]

On 26 October 1949 Terry-Thomas wrote and starred in a new series on the BBC Television Service, How Do You View?, noted for being the first comedy series on British television.[73][74][75] The programme was based around an on-screen persona of Terry-Thomas as "a glamorous, mischievous and discreetly cash-strapped man-about-town", introducing a series of sketches in which he appeared[76] alongside Peter Butterworth as his chauffeur; Janet Brown (Butterworth's real-life wife); Avril Angers; H.C. Walton as the family retainer, Moulting; and Diana Dors.[77] The programme was broadcast live and often included Terry-Thomas walking through control rooms and corridors of the BBC's Lime Grove and Alexandra Palace studios.[77][78] The author and historian Mark Lewisohn described the series as being "inventive ... truly televisual and not just a radio programme in costume".[79] The series ran until 21 December 1949;[80] a second series followed between April and May 1950, with Sid Colin taking over the scripting duties and Terry-Thomas providing additional material.[81] By the third series, which was broadcast between November 1950 and February 1951, the audience reached four million viewers.[82] In total there were five series of How Do You View?; the final episode was broadcast on 11 June 1952.[80] Writing about Terry-Thomas on television, Wilfred Greatorex observed that "he has ... physical attributes that make him a gift to visual entertainment: a large, rather gaunt face, pre-fabricated for close-ups; the notorious space of one-third of an inch between his two most prominent top teeth; a mouth that is full of expression. Add to these pictoral [sic] advantages his eight-inch cigarette holder and Eddie Cantor eyes".[83]

Terry-Thomas in May 1951

In between filming How Do You View?, Terry-Thomas continued performing on radio as well as in cabaret, in Britain and increasingly the US.[80] In October and November 1949 he appeared at the Palmer House Night Club, Chicago; in June 1951 he appeared at The Wedgwood Room, Waldorf Astoria Hotel, New York,[84] and between 22 December 1951 and 29 February 1952 he returned to the London Palladium for 109 performances in Humpty Dumpty.[85][86] In September 1952 he travelled to the Federation of Malaya to entertain British troops in a series of concert parties, before returning to the UK to appear in the Royal Variety Performance in November. He finished the year in South Africa, as Honourable Idle Jack in Dick Whittington, which finished in January 1953;[87] he considered the pantomime to be "so tatty and unrehearsed it was pathetic".[88]

In June 1953 Terry-Thomas broadcast the pilot episode of the radio show, Top of the Town; the show was successful and the BBC commissioned a series of 16 episodes, which ran between November 1953 and February 1954.[89] In between recording sessions, he appeared at the London Palladium in the revue Fun and the Fair, with George Formby and the Billy Cotton band, from October 1953.[85] Fun and the Fair was unsuccessful at the box office and closed on 19 December 1953, after 138 performances. Terry-Thomas then reprised his role of Idle Jack for a run of performances in the Granada theatres of Sutton and Woolwich, and the Finsbury Park Empire, which ran to the end of January 1954.[90] That year, he separated from Patlanski following an increase in domestic tension and the plethora of affairs in which they had both indulged. Patlanski moved out of the shared home, and the couple lived separate lives; the press did not report the separation until 1957.[91]

Terry-Thomas spent the 1954 summer season performing at the Winter Gardens Pavilion, Blackpool before starring in a second series of Top of the Town, which ran from October 1954 to February 1955.[92] At the end of the series he appeared as Hubert Crone in the play Room for Two, which had a UK tour prior to a run at the Prince of Wales Theatre, London. The last stop on the UK tour was at the Brighton Hippodrome, where Terry-Thomas broke his arm on stage; he returned to the show five days later when the tour reached London.[93] He later joked that "the audience roared with laughter when I fell and made horrible faces, so much so that I considered breaking the other arm for an encore".[94] The London run was not a success and the show closed after 48 performances.[95]

British film years: 1956–1961

[edit]
Terry-Thomas in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, 1963

In February 1956 Terry-Thomas appeared on Desert Island Discs, and chose two songs from his "Technical Hitch" routine as part of his selection.[96][j] Later that year he appeared in his first major film roles: Charles Boughtflower in The Green Man, and Major Hitchcock, "a charlatan military officer on the take", in Private's Progress, directed by the Boulting brothers.[98] Terry-Thomas appeared in the latter film only briefly, with a total screen time of about ten minutes, but his biographer Graham McCann thought the actor "came close to stealing the show from the central character", Windrush, played by Ian Carmichael. Terry-Thomas's depiction of the character was not how he wished to play it: his desired choice was that of a "silly-ass" sergeant major, but the role was written as a strict, alcohol and prescription drug-dependent Army officer.[99] He was initially disappointed with the role, and turned it down but, after being persuaded to accept it by his agent, he embraced its possibilities.[100] One of his lines, delivered in his clipped upper class voice, was "You're an absolute shower", which became a catchphrase for him.[3] The Boulting brothers were so impressed with Terry-Thomas's performance that they signed him up to a five-film deal.[101]

The first of the five films was Brothers in Law, in which Terry-Thomas played the spiv Alfred Green, a performance which was based on Sid Field's characterisation in Piccadilly Hayride.[101] Roy Boulting later recounted that one short scene with Terry-Thomas, Richard Attenborough and Ian Carmichael took 107 takes because of Terry-Thomas's unfamiliarity with filming techniques; he initially struggled to hit his marks, or give his line and move on while still acting. Filming the scene took two days and Boulting described it as a "unique experience for him, and had a wonderful after-effect".[102] Following Brothers in Law he was cast as Romney Carlton-Ricketts in Blue Murder at St Trinian's by producers Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat,[103] before again appearing for the Boulting brothers in the cameo role of a local policeman in Happy Is the Bride.[104] Terry-Thomas starred in two further films in 1957. The first was as Bertrand Welch in Lucky Jim, an adaptation of the novel of the same name by Kingsley Amis.[105] Although Amis thought Terry-Thomas had been "totally miscast as Bertrand, the posturing painter and leading shit" of the book,[106] the critic for The Manchester Guardian considered Terry-Thomas as being "the nearest to a complete success" in the film, in a portrayal that "suggests possibilities for more serious roles".[107] His final part of 1957 was Lord Henry Mayley in The Naked Truth; this brought him together with Peter Sellers for the first time; the two of them appeared frequently together over the next few years, in scenes in which Graham McCann considered that each actor's performance "highlight[ed] what was special about the other".[108] During one scene Terry-Thomas was dumped in a near-freezing lake, and his health was affected for some time afterwards.[109]

Peter Sellers, who appeared with Terry-Thomas in four films between 1957 and 1959

In 1958 Terry-Thomas received the first of his two film award nominations, the BAFTA Award for the "Best British Actor in 1959" for the part of Ivan in the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film tom thumb.[110] He later described the film as his second favourite; he appeared opposite Sellers for much of his screen time, and later said that "my part was perfect, but Peter's was bloody awful. He wasn't difficult about it, but he knew it".[111] Terry-Thomas was still suffering with poor health following the filming of The Naked Truth when he suffered an attack of lumbago; filming went on for 85 days during 1957–58, and he took painkillers to enable him to continue. The role was physically demanding, and required him to ride a horse, run long distances and fight a duel. He said he fought and ran "just as [he] had seen Douglas Fairbanks Snr do in The Mark of Zorro".[112] Towards the end of filming, Terry-Thomas went to a Christmas party at the Trocadero, where he drank champagne[k] and took codeine tablets, and was subsequently arrested on suspicion of being drunk and disorderly. He considered the arresting policemen to have been rude, and "their attitude made me extremely angry and when I get angry ... I just go completely off my nut".[115] The case came to court on 14 March 1958 and his legal team from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer provided a medical report which showed Terry-Thomas had been on a course of prescription painkillers due to a gruelling filming schedule; along with inconsistencies in the arresting policemen's notes, the case proved inconclusive and was dismissed.[116] For much of the rest of 1958, Terry-Thomas appeared on stage at the London Palladium in Large as Life, alongside Harry Secombe, Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques. He played one of the Three Musketeers in one sketch and had another turn called "Filling the Gap"; the show ran for a total of 380 performances between May and December 1958.[117][118] He also released his first record, Strictly T-T, a collection of comic songs and sketches.[119]

In 1959 Terry-Thomas published his first autobiography, Filling the Gap, named after his spot in Large as Life;[120] he explained that "everything that has been printed about me is lies. I'm not suggesting the writers were lying, I was".[121] During the year he also appeared in two further Boultings brothers' films in their series of institutional satires, having appeared in the previous three.[122][l] The first, in which he was joined again by Sellers,[123] was Carlton-Browne of the F.O., in which he played Cadogan de Vere Carlton-Browne, a character he described as being "rubble from the nostrils up",[112] "a certain type of Englishman, the Englishman who reads The Times and no other newspaper. A brolly carrier. A squash player. A bowler hat wearer. White collar, stiff, of course".[124] Film writer Andrew Spicer thought Terry-Thomas's role "was the quintessential upper-class 'silly-ass', a sad relic of a vanished world".[125] The film was initially chosen as Britain's entry for the 1959 Moscow International Film Festival until the Foreign Office petitioned the British Film Producers' Association for it to be withdrawn, considering that the Russians might consider the film to accurately portray British diplomatic behaviour.[126]

Terry-Thomas in How to Murder Your Wife, 1965—his favourite film to make

Terry-Thomas's final film with the Boulting brothers was I'm All Right Jack, a post-war follow-up to Private's Progress with Terry-Thomas reprising the role of Major Hitchcock in an industrial setting, as the "tetchily incompetent" personnel manager.[127] Many of the other cast members of Private's Progress also returned, including Attenborough, Carmichael and Dennis Price; they were joined by Peter Sellers, who took most of the plaudits from the critics, although Stanley Kauffmann, writing in The New Republic also delighted in Terry-Thomas's "finesse" and "extraordinary skill".[126] The Los Angeles Times retrospectively considered I'm All Right Jack and Carlton-Browne of the F.O. to have been Terry-Thomas's best works.[128] His final film of 1959 was as William Delany Gordon in Too Many Crooks. Bosley Crowther of The New York Times thought Terry-Thomas provided "some of the fieriest conniptions to be seen on the contemporary screen", going on to say the actor's "skill is exercised in demonstrating how magnificently and completely a mad-cap comedian can completely blow his top. His eyes flash, his lips curl, his sibilants whistle and he glares like a maniac".[129] Filming took place during the daytime; in the evenings he appeared at the London Palladium, something he found trying on his nervous system.[130]

In 1960 Terry-Thomas appeared as Raymond Delauney in School for Scoundrels, a film his biographer, Robert Ross, called "the definitive screen presentation of his frightfully well-mannered, well-read and well-educated lounge lizard: T-T the man as T-T the film star".[131] He again appeared opposite Ian Carmichael, and they were joined by Alastair Sim and Janette Scott. Michael Brooke, writing for the British Film Institute, thought Terry-Thomas was "outstanding as a classic British bounder".[132] CNN listed the performance among the top ten British villains, stating, "generally found twirling his cigarette holder while charming the ladies — at least, when not swindling, cheating or behaving like an absolute rotter."[133] Later the same year he appeared in Make Mine Mink as Major Albert Rayne, a veteran of the Second World War who forms a gang of mink coat thieves with his female co-lodgers.[134] When he made an appearance at a screening of the film in Dalston, north-east London, he was presented with a white mink waistcoat by a local furrier.[135]

In 1961 Terry-Thomas played Archibald Bannister in A Matter of WHO, which he described as "my first (fairly) serious role".[136] He was joined in the film by his cousin's son Richard Briers,[137] with Terry-Thomas noting that he provided "no nepotic help" in getting Briers the part.[136][138] The film was not well received by the critics; an internal BBC memo described that in the UK the film was "murdered by the critics", although it was "something of a success" in America.[139] By this time Terry-Thomas had decided to stop being a stand-up comedian and compere and instead concentrate solely on making films. He stopped appearing on television and radio shows of his own, declaring "it was the cinema for me and me for the cinema!"[140] Having accumulated considerable experience by appearing in British films, he decided to try Hollywood, and moved to America.[101]

Breaking into Hollywood: 1961–1965

[edit]

Terry-Thomas spent part of 1961 in America, filming the role of Professor Bruce Patterson in Bachelor Flat—his first Hollywood role[141]—before flying to Gibraltar to film Operation Snatch, in which he teamed up with Lionel Jeffries.[142] By the end of 1961 Terry-Thomas was appearing on radio, such as the December broadcast of The Bing Crosby Show and in guest spots on American television shows; he was frequently the subject of US newspaper interviews.[143] In 1962 Bachelor Flat and Operation Snatch were both released,[23] and were followed by two more films: a large-budget biopic from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer called The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm, in which Terry-Thomas shared his scenes with the American comedian Buddy Hackett,[119] and Kill or Cure, in which he appeared with Sykes, a friend since they worked together in Large as Life.[144]

On 1 February 1962 Terry-Thomas and Pat Patlanski divorced, having spent the previous eight years estranged. He had by then split from his mistress of the previous few years, Lorrae Desmond, who returned to Australia shortly afterwards and married a surgeon; Terry-Thomas resumed his bachelor lifestyle. The break-up with Desmond caused him great upset, and he sought solace with Belinda Cunningham, a 21-year-old whom he had met on holiday in Majorca two years previously.[145][m] The couple began a romance, and married in August 1963 at Halstead Registry Office near Colchester, Essex. The following year she gave birth to their first son—Timothy Hoar—at the Princess Beatrice Hospital in London.[147][n]

Publicity shot of Terry-Thomas for The Bing Crosby Show, 1961

In 1962 Terry-Thomas was offered the role of Lt-Colonel J. Algernon Hawthorne in It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, and turned down the opportunity before leaving for the UK. By the time his flight arrived in London he had changed his mind, so he telephoned producer Stanley Kramer from the airport to signal his acceptance, and "popped back on a plane to be fitted for the part" the same day.[148] He was not comfortable with many of the other actors on set, later commenting that "I was the only non-American, and I found it exhausting and embarrassing because they never relaxed. They were always 'on'."[149] One of the American stars was Spencer Tracy, whom Terry-Thomas considered "an extra-special man"; Tracy and Buster Keaton—who also appeared in the film—were described by Terry-Thomas as "the only two people who ever produced in me this awe of greatness".[150]

Later in 1963 he picked up his second film nomination, the Golden Globe for Best Comedy Actor for his portrayal of Spender in The Mouse on the Moon.[151][o] He also tried his hand at production, with three 15-minute travelogues: Terry-Thomas in Tuscany, Terry-Thomas in the South of France and Terry-Thomas in Northern Ireland.[152][153] He did not enjoy the producer's role, complaining that "for some extraordinary reason that I could never understand, everybody was always out to do the producer of any film whoever he was. I had to be on the watch the whole time".[154] He worked consistently during 1963, appearing in television programmes on both sides of the Atlantic; these included Terry-Thomas, a one-off variety show on BBC Television in July that included Donald Sutherland.[119][p]

In 1964 Terry-Thomas started filming the role of Charles Furbank in How to Murder Your Wife, a part which brought him £100,000,[q] his largest fee to that point.[156] He said it was his favourite to make, "because I felt that I did a very good job".[157] He enjoyed working with Jack Lemmon, the film's star, partly because Lemmon would play jazz and sing while the scenes were being lit:[158] the two became friends and Terry-Thomas was invited to Lemmon's wedding.[159] Throughout the rest of the year Terry-Thomas continued to appear on US television, again in Burke's Law, but also on What's My Line? and An Hour with Robert Goulet, both on CBS;[160] he also released another record, Terry-Thomas Discovers America, a collection of songs and sketches,[119] described by Billboard as "a funny, funny comedy masterpiece".[161] His earlier record, Strictly T-T, was also released in the US.[119]

Alongside How to Murder Your Wife, there were two further releases for Terry-Thomas in 1965: Strange Bedfellows, in which he played the part of a mortician, and Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines.[23] In the latter, he played Sir Percy Ware-Armitage, a character the film historian Andrew Spicer calls "a cartoon version" of his usual persona in a "bloated mid-Atlantic comed[y]".[162] In the film, Terry-Thomas appeared again with Sykes, an experience Sykes later described as magical.[163] The roles of Ware-Armitage and his sidekick were written especially for Terry-Thomas and Sykes at the behest of the director Ken Annakin.[164]

European cinema: 1966–1970

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My work was done so quickly, I never even knew the title of the films or met the stars. Many's the time I have finished one picture on a Saturday and been flying somewhere on a Sunday to start shooting on the Monday ... Rome one week, Paris the next, Brazil the week after. It was madness.

Terry-Thomas on his "foreign productions"[165]

By the mid-1960s Terry-Thomas was tiring of the Hollywood lifestyle,[166] and, during the latter half of the 1960s, he worked with European filmmakers, returning occasionally to the US when he was filming there.[167] In one of his French-produced films, La Grande Vadrouille, he played Sir Reginald, a stranded Royal Air Force pilot travelling through occupied France with characters played by Bourvil and Louis de Funès. The film, released in 1966, held the record for highest box-office takings in France until 2004,[168] and it remains "one of the most popular films with television audiences in France".[169] Terry-Thomas undertook a number of roles with the Italian cinema industry. For one of the Italian-produced films, the 1967 farce Arabella, he played four parts and used "the help of wigs, moustaches and lashings of Max Factor" to help achieve the different characterisations,[170] which were all with the Italian actress Virna Lisi.[171][r][s]

Although the European films allowed him to travel and gave him a constant source of income, he received bigger fees from his less-frequent engagements in US films,[167] which he continued to appear in, joking that he "knew the fat cheques in the pipe-line were endless".[186] One of the bigger fees came with Gene Kelly's 1967 film A Guide for the Married Man; he was disappointed by Kelly's direction, later saying "I found him a very prudish director, not as imaginative or experimental as I would have liked".[187] Terry-Thomas had more time for the actress with whom he shared his short scene, Jayne Mansfield, commenting that "I found her rather intelligent to talk to and felt quite shattered when I read about the gruesome car accident that killed her".[188] An actress he had difficulties in working with was Doris Day: in the 1968 film Where Were You When the Lights Went Out?, which was produced by her husband Martin Melcher.[167] Day would instruct Terry-Thomas how he should act in a scene (he would "listen ... politely, then do it my own way, as if the conversation had never taken place").[189] She would also launch into improvisations while filming; director Hy Averback would mimic a scissor action behind her back to signal to Terry-Thomas that the material would be duly cut from the final print.[189] The result was a film that Geoff Mayer called "limp",[98] and Christopher Young described as "such an uneven movie that misses so many opportunities for real comedy".[190]

Terry-Thomas and Doris Day in Where Were You When the Lights Went Out? (1968)

In 1967 Terry-Thomas met his long-time friend Denholm Elliott in Bel Air and the pair talked about Elliott's new villa in Santa Eulària des Riu on the Spanish island of Ibiza. Terry-Thomas was intrigued by the possibility of a Mediterranean retreat and visited the island on the way to sing in the television special Monte Carlo: C'est La Rose (1968), a musical tour of Monte Carlo hosted by Princess Grace of Monaco.[191][192][193][194][t] Although he initially struggled to find the right plot of ground for the right price, he eventually settled on an appropriate location; declaring he was "allergic to architects", he designed the house himself.[196] His former wife Pat moved to the nearby island of Majorca, and Terry-Thomas's relationship with her became warm and friendly; Patlanski also had a firm friendship with Terry-Thomas's wife.[197]

In between films Terry-Thomas appeared on television on both sides of the Atlantic. In the US in March–April 1967 he was in "The Five Daughters Affair", a two-part story in the TV series The Man from U.N.C.L.E., and on 22 May he appeared on The Red Skelton Hour.[198] On British television, in an episode of the Comedy Playhouse called "The Old Campaigner", he played James Franklin-Jones, a salesman for a plastics company who was continually searching for love affairs while travelling on business. This character was "yet another variation on his rakish cad persona", according to Mark Lewisohn.[199] The episode was well-received, and a six-part series was commissioned that ran over December 1968 and January 1969.[167] Although the series performed well in the ratings, a second series was not commissioned.[200] In between the pilot and the series of The Old Campaigner, in April 1968, Terry-Thomas appeared on the British ITV network in a one-off variety special, The Big Show, which combined musical numbers and his urbane monologues. Robert Ross commented that Terry-Thomas "seemed to delight in resurrecting his vintage sophisticated patter after years in movies ... the top raconteur was back where he belonged".[201] In 1969 he again teamed up with Eric Sykes and director Ken Annakin for a joint Italian, French and British production Monte Carlo or Bust!. The film was "the only copper-bottomed sequel to ... Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines", according to Richard Ross.[202] Terry-Thomas played Sir Cuthbert Ware-Armitage, the "thoroughly bad egg son of flying ace Sir Percy Ware-Armitage", his role in Those Magnificent Men.[202] Terry-Thomas secured four other roles in minor films that year, including Arthur? Arthur! (which he joked had "never been shown anywhere—as far as I know!"),[196] as well as on television in the UK, US and Australia.[203][u]

The 1970s began well for Terry-Thomas; television appearances in the UK and US were augmented by filming for The Abominable Dr. Phibes,[204] which became what author Bruce Hallenbeck called a "camp classic",[205] despite being described by Time Out critic David Pirie, as "the worst horror film made in England since 1945";[206] the film was released in 1971.[207] On 1 August 1970 Terry-Thomas made his second appearance on Desert Island Discs;[204] his luxury item was a case of brandy, chosen because it lasted longer than champagne.[208][v]

Dealing with Parkinson's: 1971–1983

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Terry-Thomas (right) and Red Skelton in The Red Skelton Show (1968)

While appearing in Don't Just Lie There, Say Something! at the Metro Theatre, Sydney in 1971, Terry-Thomas felt unwell and visited a doctor, who noticed his patient's left hand was shaking slightly. The doctor suggested he visit a specialist on his return to the UK, who diagnosed him with Parkinson's disease.[209] Fearing the condition would affect offers of work, Terry-Thomas did not make the news public, but as the symptoms began to manifest themselves in tremors, a shuffling gait, stooped posture and affected speech, he made the news known—partly to stop rumours of on-set drunkenness.[210]

Terry-Thomas continued to work as much as possible, although—as the film historian Geoff Mayer pointed out—the situation "reduced his film career to supporting roles and cameos".[211] The lucrative voice-over role of Sir Hiss in the 1973 Walt Disney film Robin Hood was one notable part,[212] while others were less well-known, such as The Vault of Horror, a film described by Richard Ross as a "cornball terror", in which he starred with Curd Jürgens, Tom Baker and Denholm Elliott.[213] He also continued to appear on television shows in both the US and UK, as well as advertisements, including appearing with June Whitfield for Birds Eye fish fingers, a series of vermouth advertisements filmed in Italy, and an award-winning series for Benson & Hedges cigarettes, with Eric Sykes.[214]

During the 1970s he starred in a series of low-budget British films, including two in 1975, Spanish Fly—called a "gruesome smutfest" by the writer Christopher Fowler[215]—and The Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones, described by the Film Review Digest as a "cheap, crude, sexed-up rehash" of the other film adaptations of Henry Fielding's source novel.[216]

Some days it's worse than others. It's infuriating. One minute I can be behaving in a perfectly normal manner; the next I have become a shaking mass of humanity.

Terry-Thomas describing "perfidious Parkinson's"[217]

In 1977 he starred in The Last Remake of Beau Geste and The Hound of the Baskervilles, the latter starring Peter Cook and Dudley Moore as Holmes and Watson; Terry-Thomas thought "it was the most outrageous film I ever appeared in ... there was no magic ... it was bad!"[217] By then he had exhibited a decrease in bodily movement, a sign of how serious his condition had become.[218] His distinctive voice had developed a softer tone and his posture was contorted. Between 1978 and 1980, he spent much time with medical consultants.[219] Despite this he was offered a few engagements and was voted the most recognisable Englishman among Americans in a poll which also featured Laurence Olivier, Robert Morley and Wilfrid Hyde-White. As a result, he secured a lucrative advertising contract with the Ford Motor Company. Derek Jarman offered Terry-Thomas a role in his 1979 film The Tempest, but the actor was forced to pull out because of his deteriorating health.[220]

Terry-Thomas undertook his final film role in 1980 in Febbre a 40!, a German-Italian co-production that was "nondescript and barely screened", according to Robert Ross,[221] and did not even have a theatrical release in its two domestic markets.[222] He continued his involvement in the film industry, where he funded three films during the early 1980s (noted by Ross to be "destined from the outset for B-picture status or straight-to-video exposure");[223] he commented that "I have made a loss of one hundred per cent".[224] In 1982, with his condition worsening, Terry-Thomas appeared in two episodes of the BBC series The Human Brain, which examined his condition; his frank interview brought much public awareness of the disease and raised £32,000 for the Parkinson's Disease Society. Privately, he was becoming more depressed; his London flat had been sold to provide badly needed funds, and his work offers were decreasing.[225]

Final years and death: 1983–1990

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By 1983, with his medical bills at £40,000 a year and no longer able to work, Terry-Thomas's financial resources were dwindling. He and his wife sold their dream house and moved into the small cottage in Spain once owned by his former wife Pat Patlanski,[226] which she left to him in her will on her death in June that year.[227] Shortly afterwards he worked with ghostwriter Terry Daum on an autobiography, Terry-Thomas Tells Tales.[228] Although the first draft was completed by late summer 1984,[229] Terry-Thomas refused to release the manuscript and continued making alterations, but never completed his copyediting: the book was finally published after his death.[230]

By 1984 Terry-Thomas was increasingly depressed by his condition and when he was interviewed that year, he admitted that "one doctor said I've got about four more years to live. God forbid! I shall probably blow my brains out first".[231] In 1987 the couple could no longer afford to live in Spain, so moved back to London. They lived in a series of rented properties before ending up in a three-room, unfurnished charity flat, where they lived with financial assistance from the Actors' Benevolent Fund.[232][233] Richard Briers was one of his first visitors at the flat, and was shocked by the change he saw: "Sitting there, motionless, he was just a mere shadow. A crippled, crushed, shadow. It was really bloody awful."[232]

On 9 April 1989 the actor Jack Douglas and Richard Hope-Hawkins organised a benefit concert for Terry-Thomas, after discovering he was living in virtual obscurity, poverty and ill health.[234] The gala, held at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, ran for five hours, and featured 120 artists with Phil Collins topping the bill and Michael Caine as the gala chairman. The show raised over £75,000 for Terry-Thomas and Parkinson's UK.[235] The funds from the charity concert allowed Terry-Thomas to move out of his charity flat and into Busbridge Hall nursing home in Godalming, Surrey.[235] He died there on 8 January 1990, at the age of 78. The funeral service was held at St. John the Baptist Church, Busbridge, where the theme from Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines was played; he was cremated at Guildford Crematorium.[236]

Screen persona and technique

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Although there were exceptions, Terry-Thomas's screen characters were generally similar; Geoff Mayer wrote that "although there would be variations, he would remain the 'rotter', a pretentious, elitist, seedy, sometimes lecherous cad with an eye for quick money and the easy life".[98] Eric Sykes, with whom Terry-Thomas shared a number of screen moments, said it was "always the same character and always funny".[163] Andrew Spicer, writing for the British Film Institute, called him "the definitive postwar cad or rotter".[125] Terry-Thomas himself agreed with the view he presented, writing in the 1980s that "T-T with his permanent air of caddish disdain ... bounder ... aristocratic rogue ... upper-class English twit ... genuine English eccentric ... one of the last real gentlemen ... wet, genteel Englishman ... high-bred idiot ... cheeky blighter ... camel-haired cad ... amiable buffoon ... pompous Englishman ... twentieth-century dandy ... stinker ... king of the cads ... All those descriptions added up to my image as Terry-Thomas".[237]

What will, and what will not, make people laugh is a mystery and mine's a terrible trade. The best course is to accept it without too much analysis.

Terry-Thomas on being a comedian[37]

Terry-Thomas identified himself as a comedy actor, but regarded himself "first and foremost, as a comedian with a built-in ability to inject humour into situations".[238] He worked hard at the humour element, especially during his days in cabaret and revue; he wrote that he "spent an enormous amount of time studying how to write humour and reading books on the philosophical approach to it, but it didn't get me very far. I decided that humour was like a good watch. It would go well if left to do its job but the moment one started poking around, it went wonky".[239] While working on his television series How do you View?, he would change lines around to ensure the scene worked well, even if he gave the best lines to others;[102] it was a quality which was appreciated by a number of others, including Jack Lemmon, who appeared with Terry-Thomas in How to Murder Your Wife. Lemmon commented that "like most really good professionals he was generous to fellow actors. He worked with you, not at you".[240]

Before starting filming or making an entrance on stage, Terry-Thomas had a routine he would undertake: "my own technique to get myself going was ... to jump in the air and execute a few dance steps".[158] His approach for much of his film work was to underplay many of his reactions. Filming a scene in a cinema in Private's Progress, a close-up was needed showing his character "registering shock, fury, indignation and anything else I could stuff in"; he "just looked into the camera and kept my mind blank. It's a trick I've used often since. In this way, the audience does the work".[241] Terry-Thomas said "I like to do my own stunts",[242] which he did for films such as A Matter of WHO and Bachelor Flat. This included some dangerous work; for example, during Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines, he ran along the roof of a moving train.[243]

Legacy and reputation

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Terry-Thomas in 1961, showing his dental diastema which later provided the basis for naming a widening of the scapholunate space ("Terry-Thomas sign") in a traumatic wrist injury.[244]

Following Terry-Thomas's death, Lionel Jeffries called him "the last of the great gentlemen of the cinema",[245] while the director Michael Winner commented that "no matter what your position was in relation to his, as the star he was always terribly nice. He was the kindest man and he enjoyed life so much".[246] Reviewing his career in The Guardian, Adrian Turner considered that "we took him for granted and he was ideal for his time. Not to put too serious a point on it, his portrayal of crass stupidity and blatant deviousness struck a chord with British audiences during the fifties as they experienced the clumsy dismemberment of the Empire and the 'never had it so good' ethos of the Macmillan era. During the sixties he became a glorious anachronism, much in demand in America, who saw in him the irrelevant pageantry of Britain";[247] he also said Terry-Thomas was "a national treasure".[247] Gilbert Adair, writing in The Independent, considered that "for three decades, and in literally scores of films, he personified the Englishman as amiable bounder";[248] Adair wrote that "the characterisation he was to assume represented the very essence of patrician, double-barrelled caddishness".[248] Terry-Thomas's friend Jack Lemmon called him "a consummate professional ... he was a gentleman, a delight to be with personally, let alone professionally, and above all as an actor he had one of the qualities that I admire so much—he made it look simple".[240]

Terry-Thomas's image of an English cad was used by others. The personification started in the 1960s when the voice actor Ivan Owen, who had worked alongside Terry-Thomas in "Stars in Battledress",[249] based the voice for Basil Brush on that of Terry-Thomas, in a characterisation which also copied Terry-Thomas's "penchant for bad, self-satisfied, golf-club-bore jokes".[250] The 1960s also witnessed the fictional cartoon character Dick Dastardly in two Hanna-Barbera cartoon series (Wacky Races and Dastardly and Muttley in Their Flying Machines), who was inspired by Terry-Thomas.[251]

Other actors have used Terry-Thomas's persona as an inspiration for their characters: Dustin Hoffman acknowledged that he based his interpretation of Captain Hook in Hook on him; Rupert Everett disclosed that when he provided the voice for Prince Charming in Shrek 2 Terry-Thomas "was vocally my role model while I was doing it";[252] and Paul Whitehouse's character, the 13th Duke of Wybourne, from The Fast Show was also modelled on Terry-Thomas's on-screen persona.[253] Mark Ruffalo listed Terry-Thomas as one of the inspirations for his performance as Duncan Wedderburn in Poor Things.[254]

Terry-Thomas's popularity continued after his death. In February 1999 the National Film Theatre ran a season of his films;[255] an NFT spokesman described how attendees turned up "in evening dress, with false moustaches and carrying cigarettes in long holders ... everyone has been trying to steal the cardboard cutouts of Terry ... We've never had a response like it. To be honest, we are rather unprepared. Nobody expected Terry-Thomas Fever".[256]

Some of the innovations Terry-Thomas brought into his earlier television programmes were later copied by others; How Do You View? provided the "prologue" format of Up Pompeii!,[78] and was the first to use regular BBC announcers as foils in comic sketches—a practice continued later, particularly with the shows of Morecambe and Wise.[79] Terry-Thomas's anecdotes, stringing several stories together, later inspired Ronnie Corbett in his monologue spot in his series The Two Ronnies.[253] In 2014, BBC Radio 4 broadcast Memories of a Cad, a comedy drama by Roy Smiles about the relationship between Terry-Thomas and Richard Briers, played by Martin Jarvis and Alistair McGowan respectively.[257]

Filmography and other works

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Notes and references

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Terry-Thomas (born Thomas Terry Hoar Stevens; 10 July 1911 – 8 January 1990) was an English comedian and character actor celebrated for his distinctive gap-toothed smile, dandyish persona, and portrayals of scheming, upper-class "bounders" in film, television, and radio during the mid-20th century. Born in , , to a family involved in the butchery trade at Smithfield Market, Thomas Terry Hoar Stevens experienced an unstable childhood marked by his parents' failed marriage and struggles with alcoholism, which prompted him to develop an entertaining persona with a polished, upper-crust accent inspired by actor Owen Nares. After working as a transport clerk in the meat market and performing comic recitals at working men's clubs, he made his professional stage debut in 1930 and adopted the hyphenated Terry-Thomas in 1947, drawing from his middle names to craft a sophisticated image. His career breakthrough came in the late 1940s through BBC radio series following a Royal Variety Performance and television shows like How Do You View?, where his eccentric humor and catchphrases such as "an absolute shower" gained widespread popularity. He transitioned to film with roles in British comedies including Private's Progress (1956) as the pompous Major Hitchcock, The Green Man (1956), School for Scoundrels (1960), and I'm All Right Jack (1959), often embodying pretentious twits with his signature cigarette holder, bowler hat, and Wodehousian accent. International success followed in the 1960s with Hollywood productions like It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) as the foppish Lt. Col. J. Algernon Hawthorne, Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines (1965) as Sir Percy Ware-Armitage, and voice work as Sir Hiss in Disney's Robin Hood (1973) and Dick Dastardly in Wacky Races. In his , Terry-Thomas married Belinda Cunningham, daughter of a lieutenant-colonel, in 1961, and they had two sons, Timothy ("Tiger") and Cushan (nicknamed "Trumper"); the family relocated to in 1968, where he built a lavish villa called Can Talaias and enjoyed a vibrant social scene amid improved health and relaxation. However, his career declined after a 1971 diagnosis of , which progressively worsened his symptoms, forcing retirement by 1980 and leading to financial ruin from medical costs despite lucrative endorsements like advertisements. Returning to in the early , he lived in modest circumstances in , until a 1989 benefit gala raised £75,000 to support his care in a , where he died aged 78.

Biography

Early life (1911–1933)

Terry-Thomas was born Thomas Terry Hoar-Stevens on 14 July 1911 in , , to Ernest Frederick Stevens, a businessman involved in and butchery at Smithfield Market, and Ellen Elizabeth (née Hoar). He was the fourth of five children and experienced an unstable childhood marked by his parents' separation when he was five and their struggles with . His early education took place at Preparatory School, followed by , a in , where he attended from 1920 to 1927. At , he showed little academic inclination but excelled in extracurricular activities, participating in school plays and amateur dramatics that sparked his interest in performance. He also developed a passion for music and art, playing the and leading a school , which reflected his emerging flair for . Upon leaving school at age 16 in 1927, Hoar-Stevens took up employment as a transport clerk with the Union Cold Storage Company at Smithfield Market, later transitioning to a role as a meat salesman. During this period, he continued to nurture his performative talents by joining the company's dramatic society and performing impressions and dances in local talent shows and amateur revues. Around 1930, inspired by his middle name, he began using the stage name Terry Thomas, later adding a in to create a distinctive, unified .

Early career (1933–1939)

Terry-Thomas made his professional entertainment debut in 1933 with an uncredited role as an extra in the film The Private Life of Henry VIII, directed by Alexander Korda and starring Charles Laughton. This marked the start of his entry into the industry, where he initially worked as a film extra while supplementing his income with odd jobs, including as a clerk and meat salesman at Smithfield Market. By the mid-1930s, he had adopted the stage name "Terry-Thomas," derived from his middle names, and began performing in variety shows as a dancer and impressionist, honing his comedic timing through live sketches and impersonations of celebrities. His first speaking role came in 1935's Once in a Million, where he delivered the line "A thousand!" during an auction scene, a small but memorable moment that showcased his emerging flair for character work. During 1934 and 1935, Terry-Thomas gained experience in West End revues, serving as an in productions like Charlot's Revue and appearing in shows such as Streamline, where he refined his sketch work and comedic delivery. He also performed in cabaret acts, including a short-lived called "Terri and Patlanski" with dancer Ida Florence Patlanski (whom he married in 1938), presenting Spanish dancing routines that earned them about 30 shillings a week. His radio career began with the in 1935, featuring impressions of figures like , and by 1938 he made his first broadcast appearance on Friends to Tea, though he later recalled it as a "dismal failure." These early radio spots on programs like Band Waggon helped him experiment with his voice and timing, laying the groundwork for his signature upper-crust accent. In stage productions from 1937 to 1939, Terry-Thomas took on roles in musicals such as Going Greek and Bobby Get Your Gun, where he further developed his distinctive gap-toothed smile—exaggerated for effect—and posh persona, complete with and . Financial hardships plagued this period; he lived frugally, at one point in a caravan, and took on odd jobs like selling vacuum cleaners to make ends meet, building resilience amid the competitive pre-war entertainment circuits. These experiences, supported by his family's encouragement during his early hardships, shaped his tenacious approach to a career that would later flourish.

World War II service (1939–1945)

At the outbreak of , Terry-Thomas enlisted in the Royal Corps of Signals in , initially serving as a dispatch rider. He rose to the rank of by 1942 while undergoing training and performing duties in the unit. From 1942 to 1945, he was deployed to and , where his responsibilities expanded to include intelligence work alongside his signals duties. During his military service, Terry-Thomas organized and performed in troop entertainment shows to boost morale, drawing on his pre-war stage experience to deliver impressions and sketches. He was particularly active with the "Stars in Battledress" revues, a touring entertainment troupe for the forces, where he led performances across Britain and later in . In 1945, he was demobilized early, having been honored with a mention in dispatches for bravery in the field. The war profoundly shaped his comedic persona, as observations of officious upper-class behaviors during service helped refine his signature "bounder" character—an arrogant yet affable cad.

Post-war British career (1946–1955)

Following his demobilization from the Royal Corps of Signals in April 1946, Terry-Thomas quickly returned to entertainment, starring in the revue Piccadilly Hayride at of Theatre, where he performed stand-up routines and impressions that revitalized his pre-war act. This success led to radio work, including appearances in post-war broadcasts such as the Victory Star Show celebrating the end of , and he continued building his profile through variety programs in the late 1940s. By 1947, he was contributing sketches to comedy series, honing his persona as a bumbling upper-class rogue amid the burgeoning post-war entertainment scene. Terry-Thomas achieved a major breakthrough in television with How Do You View?, the BBC's first series, which aired from 1949 to 1953 across five series totaling 30 episodes. In the show, written by Sid Colin and Talbot Rothwell, he starred as a mischievous, scheming character inspired by his own life, delivering live sketches that satirized everyday absurdities and established his gap-toothed, cigarette-holder-wielding persona. Guest stars like singer Pat Kirkwood appeared in later seasons, adding musical interludes that complemented his comedic timing and helped popularize his catchphrases, such as variations on "You're an absolute shower!" derived from his on-screen disdain for incompetence during sketches. These physically demanding live performances did not hinder his rising prominence. His early film roles during this period were modest but pivotal, beginning with an appearance as himself in the 1949 comedy Helter Skelter, where he reprised his signature "Technical Hitch" sketch—a chaotic about mishaps that showcased his verbal dexterity and facial expressions. By 1955, he secured a supporting role as the pompous Major Hitchcock in , filmed that year and released in 1956, which further refined his screen character as a comically inept officer and marked his transition toward more substantial cinematic parts. Throughout this era, Terry-Thomas's marriage to dancer Ida Patlanski, which began in 1938, provided personal stability; the couple maintained a base in , allowing him to focus on his burgeoning broadcast career despite the strains of post-war readjustment, with their divorce not finalized until 1962.

British film stardom (1956–1961)

Terry-Thomas emerged as a prominent figure in British cinema during the late 1950s, building on his television persona of the eccentric upper-class bounder to secure leading comic roles in satirical comedies. His breakthrough came with the role of the crooked Major Hitchcock in (1956), a military satire directed by John Boulting that lampooned the absurdities of the during . This performance, marked by his signature gap-toothed grin and impeccable timing, nearly stole the show from stars like and , establishing him as a star and introducing his character to American audiences for the first time. The success of led to a key collaboration with the —John as director and Roy as producer—who crafted roles specifically to suit Terry-Thomas's flamboyant, unreliable . He reprised Major Hitchcock as a hapless personnel manager in (1959), a sharp satire on postwar industrial relations and union-management conflicts, where his bumbling interference exacerbated factory chaos alongside ' union steward. The , a critical and commercial hit that won the BAFTA for Best British Screenplay, highlighted his ability to embody institutional incompetence with sly charm. This period also saw him in supporting turns that showcased his versatility, such as the philandering salesman Charles Boughtflower in the black comedy The Green Man (1956), directed by Robert Day, where mistaken identities and plots provided ample room for his manic energy. Further films like (1957), in which he played the pompous Captain Romney Carlton-Ricketts amid the anarchic schoolgirls' schemes, and A Matter of Who (1961), where he led as the eccentric "germ detective" Archibald Bannister tracking a outbreak, demonstrated his range beyond pure into lightly dramatic territory. These roles, often blending his TV-honed catchphrases like "What a !" with , earned him a BAFTA nomination for Best British Actor in 1959 for his villainous turn in the fantasy (1958). By the early 1960s, his films had garnered international attention, with U.S. critics like praising his "funniest man" status in Too Many Crooks (1959), paving the way for transatlantic opportunities.

Hollywood entry (1961–1965)

Terry-Thomas made his American film debut in 1962's Bachelor Flat, directed by for 20th Century Fox, playing the role of Professor Bruce Patterson, a British whose courtly manners and nervous stutter lead to chaotic encounters with co-eds at a beach house. This marked his transition from British cinema, where his satirical cads had gained fame, to Hollywood's broader comedic style, requiring him to adapt his posh accent and persona for U.S. audiences. In 1963, he secured a supporting role in Stanley Kramer's epic ensemble comedy It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, portraying Lt. Col. J. Algernon Hawthorne, a scheming officer and rare plant collector who joins a frantic cross-country chase for , delivering lines critiquing American with his signature dry wit. The film paired him with American comedy icons like , as the greedy J. Russell Finch, and , as the opportunistic Murray Salt, elevating his international visibility through their on-screen rivalries and shared madcap antics. Under a contract with 20th Century Fox from 1962 to 1964, Terry-Thomas appeared in additional U.S. productions, including The Mouse on the Moon (1963), where he played Maurice Spender, a bumbling British spy investigating a tiny duchy’s unlikely space program fueled by wine. He also featured in A Ticklish Affair (1963), directed by George Sidney for MGM, as Captain Terrence McGrath, a naval officer entangled in the romantic and familial mishaps of a widow and her mischievous sons. These roles highlighted his versatility in American settings, often exaggerating his upper-class twit for transatlantic appeal. The period represented Terry-Thomas's financial peak, with lucrative Hollywood engagements enabling a lavish lifestyle. His collaborations and adaptations not only broadened his comedic reach but solidified his status as a beloved performer in U.S. cinema.

European films (1966–1970)

Following his successes in Hollywood, Terry-Thomas's prior exposure to international audiences facilitated his transition to European co-productions, where his distinctive caddish persona resonated across cultural boundaries. In 1966, Terry-Thomas starred in the French comedy (also known as Don't Look Now... We're Being Shot At!), directed by Gérard Oury, playing the role of Sir Reginald, a bumbling pilot whose bomber is shot down over Nazi-occupied . His character, alongside co-stars and , navigates absurd escapades with French civilians aiding the downed crew, blending his signature British eccentricity with Gallic farce to create a wartime that emphasized and cross-cultural misunderstandings. The film became one of France's biggest box-office hits, drawing over 17 million viewers and significantly elevating Terry-Thomas's profile on the continent by showcasing his gap-toothed grin and impeccable in a non-English-speaking context. That same year, Terry-Thomas appeared in the Italian spy spoof Baci e pugni (released internationally as Kiss the Girls and Make Them Die), directed by , portraying the suave Lord Aldric, a British agent entangled in a plot involving a mad scientist's scheme. This role allowed him to infuse his performances with the dry wit and aristocratic flair that defined his screen persona, adapting seamlessly to the film's Bond-inspired action-comedy elements amid settings. Terry-Thomas continued his European engagements with the 1967 Italian comedy , directed by , where he played the scheming Lord Thomas, a fortune-hunting Englishman pursuing a wealthy heiress in . His portrayal of the opportunistic cad highlighted his talent for verbal repartee and , contributing to the film's lighthearted exploration of romance and deception in a glamorous urban backdrop. In 1968, he took on the role of the pompous Minister of Finance in Mario Bava's stylish thriller Danger: , an Italian-French co-production that parodied tropes with its anarchic criminal mastermind. Here, Terry-Thomas's villainous turn added a layer of bureaucratic to the film's pop-art aesthetic, his exaggerated mannerisms contrasting the chaotic exploits of the titular anti-hero. The decade's highlight came in 1969 with Monte Carlo or Bust! (also titled Those Daring Young Men in Their Jaunty Jalopies), a multinational co-production directed by , in which Terry-Thomas reprised a villainous as Sir Cuthbert Ware-Armitage, a cheating aristocrat competing in a chaotic . Driving a across , his character employed underhanded tactics against rivals like and , delivering lines with his trademark drawl and sneer that amplified the film's road-rally farce. This ensemble comedy underscored Terry-Thomas's versatility in international settings, often casting him as suave antagonists whose schemes unraveled through comedic mishaps. In 1967, Terry-Thomas attended the alongside La Grande Vadrouille co-stars and , promoting the film on the Croisette and mingling at high-profile parties, which further cemented his status as a sought-after British import in European cinema circles. During this period, Terry-Thomas embraced a vibrant lifestyle in , , purchasing the hilltop villa Can Talaias near San Carlos in 1967 with his wife Belinda Cunningham, whom he had married in 1963, transforming it into a serene retreat amid the island's bohemian scene. He hosted lively gatherings there with fellow European celebrities, including actors and , fostering a social hub that reflected his affable off-screen charm and love for Mediterranean hospitality.

Parkinson's diagnosis and decline (1971–1983)

In 1971, while performing in a play in Sydney, Australia, Terry-Thomas experienced a slight clumsiness in his movements and an occasional tremor in his left hand, leading to his diagnosis with by a local doctor who recommended further specialist evaluation. The condition progressed gradually, initially allowing him to conceal its effects, but by the mid-1970s, symptoms such as tremors and a shuffling gait became more evident, particularly during the filming of The Last Remake of Beau Geste in 1977, where his trembling left hand was noticeably visible on screen. Despite the advancing disease, he continued working in reduced capacities, taking on voice roles to accommodate his physical limitations. As Parkinson's worsened, Terry-Thomas's on-screen appearances diminished significantly. In 1978, he provided the voice for Dr. Mortimer in the comedic adaptation , marking one of his final substantial contributions to film amid efforts to mask his tremors. His last on-screen role came in 1980 as Sir Roger Avery in , after which the severity of his symptoms forced him into retirement from acting. The disease not only curtailed his professional output but also imposed profound physical and emotional burdens, leaving him increasingly depressed and isolated. The escalating medical costs associated with Parkinson's placed immense financial strain on Terry-Thomas and his wife, , whom he had married in 1963. By the early 1980s, annual treatment expenses exceeded £40,000, compelling them to sell their flat and other assets to cover bills, including potential surgeries like a £100,000 brain operation considered in New York that he ultimately could not afford. Reliance on charitable support grew, with aid from organizations such as the Actors' Benevolent Fund helping to sustain them during this period of dwindling resources. In 1982, amid his worsening condition, Terry-Thomas made a public appeal through appearances on programs, including episodes of The Human Brain series, where he openly discussed his experiences with Parkinson's to raise awareness and funds for research into the disease. These efforts highlighted the personal toll of the illness and garnered support from the entertainment community, though immediate financial relief remained limited. Throughout his decline, Terry-Thomas was cared for by his wife, Belinda, and their two sons, Timothy ("Tiger" Hoar-Stevens, born 1964) and Cushan (also known as Trumper), who provided essential family support as his mobility and independence eroded. The family's devotion offered some solace amid the progressive debilitation that defined his final active years.

Death and immediate aftermath (1983–1990)

In the early 1980s, Terry-Thomas's advancing Parkinson's disease imposed severe financial strain, with annual medical bills reaching £40,000, forcing him and his wife to sell their villa on Ibiza and relocate to a modest cottage in England by 1984. By the late 1980s, his condition had deteriorated further, leaving him unable to work and reliant on a charity flat provided by the Actors' Benevolent Fund. In April 1989, a star-studded benefit gala at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, organized by writer Richard Hope-Hawkins and actor Jack Douglas, raised over £75,000 for Terry-Thomas and the Parkinson's Disease Society, supplemented by £25,000 from an ITV tribute broadcast; these funds enabled his transfer to the more suitable Busbridge Hall nursing home in Godalming, Surrey, where he received dedicated care for his final months. Terry-Thomas died on 8 1990 at the age of 78 in Busbridge Hall, succumbing to as a complication of his long battle with . His funeral, held shortly thereafter, drew showbusiness luminaries including and , with coverage by over 50 journalists; the service featured the organist playing the theme from his film Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines. In the immediate aftermath, the honored his legacy by airing two of his films—Too Many Crooks on 27 January and another the following day—as tributes to the late actor. The efforts of the 1989 gala also contributed to the establishment and support of the Terry-Thomas Benevolent Fund, aimed at assisting performers facing similar hardships, ensuring his plight raised awareness for Parkinson's support within the entertainment community.

Comedic style and legacy

Screen persona and technique

Terry-Thomas's screen was defined by his portrayal of the caddish bounder, an upper-class twit whose scheming incompetence and ironic detachment masked a hypocritical core. He embodied this through signature physical traits, including a prominent gap-toothed smile, a sly military , and dandified attire such as suits, spats, and waistcoats, often accessorized with a to enhance his air of brash sophistication. These elements created a visual of the English cad, as seen in roles like the scheming Major Hitchcock in Private's Progress (1956), where his manic grin underscored the character's futile bluster. His vocal style further amplified this , featuring a rich, fruity voice with elongated vowels, a braying laugh, and catchphrases like "You're an absolute !" delivered with upper-class mimicry and sarcastic detachment. Phrases such as "Oh, good show" or "What a !" punctuated his dialogue, evoking ironic disdain for incompetence, while his distinctive delivery—drawing out words like "frightfully well"—parodied the pretensions of the elite. This aural signature, honed in early radio and , lent an auditory layer of mockery to characters like the rotter Delauney in School for Scoundrels (1960), where his elongated exclamations heightened the comedic timing. Terry-Thomas's comedic technique drew heavily from traditions, emphasizing , precise timing, and exaggerated rooted in variety performance. His early work in and the wartime "Stars in Battledress" troupe informed a style of expressive physicality, where gestures and facial contortions conveyed without overt . This approach allowed for layered subtlety in film roles, such as the hypocritical aristocrat in The Green Man (1956), blending broad with ironic to avoid maudlin tones. His acting method involved meticulous preparation and improvisation within sketches, evolving from radio impressions—where he performed observational monologues and character voices—to more nuanced film portrayals. In radio and early TV, like the series How Do You View? (1949), he improvised anecdotes and innuendos as a suburban show-off, layering detachment over exaggeration. By the 1950s, this transitioned to cinema under directors like the Boultings, who encouraged his caricature of upper-class twits, as in I'm All Right Jack (1959), where precise facial expressions amplified the bounder's ironic hypocrisy. This progression refined his avoidance of emotional excess, favoring dry wit and physical precision for comedic impact.

Legacy and reputation

Terry-Thomas received critical acclaim for his sharp of the British class system, particularly through his portrayals of upper-class cads and bounders that highlighted the absurdities of social hierarchy during a period of social change. His in described him as an actor who "satirized virtually every type of Briton from upper-class cads to crooks," emphasizing his role in exposing the pretensions of the elite. Similarly, a analysis noted that he came to represent "the louche and degenerate side of the upper classes at a time when the class system was coming under full attack," cementing his status as a key figure in mid-20th-century . His contributions were recognized with notable awards during his career, including a BAFTA nomination for Best British Actor in 1959 for his role as in . Posthumously, he was honored with a at his former residence at 11 Queen's Gate Mews in , unveiled in 1996 by the Comic Heritage group to commemorate his birth and enduring comedic legacy. Terry-Thomas's work maintains cultural staying power through frequent archival clips and retrospectives on the , such as the 2015 radio essay in The Essay: British Film Comedians series, which explored his impact on film . His films continue to be featured in , with no major new honors emerging between 2020 and 2025, though his influence persists in the appreciation of classic British humor. A significant aspect of his legacy is the philanthropic effort surrounding his , highlighted by the 1989 benefit gala and its 1990 television tribute A Tribute to Terry-Thomas, which together raised over £75,000 (with the broadcast adding approximately £23,000, totaling nearly £100,000) for his care and Parkinson's UK, enabling his transfer to a .

Works

Filmography

Terry-Thomas's film career encompassed over 50 credited appearances from 1949 to 1980, transitioning from minor comedic supporting roles in British productions to starring parts in satirical comedies and later international ensemble casts. His performances frequently highlighted his signature gap-toothed grin and aristocratic cad persona, contributing to successes such as It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963), which grossed $46.3 million worldwide.

Early cameos (1949–1955)

During this period, Terry-Thomas made brief but memorable appearances in British films, often as eccentric side characters that showcased his emerging comedic timing.
YearTitleRoleBrief Context
1949Helter SkelterHimselfPerformed his 'Technical Hitch' sketch as himself in a chaotic comedy revue.
1949The Brass MonkeyHimselfAppeared as himself in a involving a stolen artifact.
1949How Do You View?Various rolesSketch comedian in an early variety film.
1954For Better, for WorseBartA mischievous friend in a domestic .
1955The LadykillersOne-RoundGang member in a classic crime comedy.

Leads (1956–1965)

This era marked Terry-Thomas's rise to stardom in British cinema, where he took on prominent roles in satires critiquing class and , often reprising characters across films.
YearTitleRoleBrief Context
1956Major HitchcockBumbling army officer in a .
1956The Green ManCharles BoughtflowerScheming assassin in a .
1957Captain Romney Carlton-RickettsPompous officer in the anarchic schoolgirls series.
1957Bertrand WelchEccentric in a .
1958IvanVillainous woodsman in a fantasy musical.
1959Major HitchcockUnion-busting manager in a labor ( box office: £500,000).
1959Man in a Cocked Hat (aka Carlton-Browne of the F.O.)AmbassadorDiplomatic cad in a foreign office spoof.
1960School for ScoundrelsRaymond DelauneyDeceitful etiquette instructor in a one-upmanship .
1961His and HersReggie BlakeHenpecked husband in a marital travelogue .
1962Bachelor FlatProfessor Bruce PattersonAbsent-minded inventor in a Hollywood .
1963Maurice SpenderScheming official in a .
1963It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad WorldJ. Algernon HawthorneFoppish Englishman in an all-star treasure hunt ($46.3 million worldwide ).
1965Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying MachinesSir Percy Ware-ArmitageBoastful rival pilot in an aerial race epic ($31.1 million US ).
1965How to Murder Your WifeCharlesSnooty butler in a comic murder fantasy.

International (1966–1980)

In his later years, Terry-Thomas worked extensively in European and American films, often in ensemble casts for spy spoofs, horror comedies, and historical farces, though his health began affecting output by the 1970s.
YearTitleRoleBrief Context
1966Bang, Bang, You're DeadEl CaidDesert sheikh in a James Bond parody.
1966Kiss the Girls and Make Them DieMiles HendersonBritish agent in an Italian spy thriller.
1966The Perils of PaulineCassius Columbo / Sten MartinVillainous henchman in a silent-era spoof.
1967A Guide for the Married ManHarold X.Infidelity advisor in a Hollywood sex comedy.
1967Dr. LongstreetBumbling dentist in a horror-revenge tale.
1967Those Fantastic Flying FoolsCapt. Sir Harry Washington-SmytheVictorian inventor in a parody.
1968Danger: DiabolikMinister of FinanceInept official in an Italian comic-book crime film.
1968Don’t Raise the Bridge, Lower the RiverH. William HomerEccentric businessman in a Liverpool-set .
1969Monte Carlo or Bust! (aka Those Daring Young Men in Their Jaunty Jalopies)Sir Cuthbert Ware-ArmitageRival racer in a comedy.
1970Enigmatic brother in a mystery.
1971The Vault of HorrorArthur CritchitNarrator/victim in an horror anthology.
1972Dr. LongstreetReturning dentist in the Phibes sequel.
1973Sir Hiss (voice)Treacherous snake advisor to Prince John in the animated feature.
1973Foppish monarch in a swashbuckling adventure.
1974The Return of the Pink PantherSir Charles LyttonDebonair thief in the Inspector Clouseau series.
1975Side by SideMax NuggetRival owner in a comedy about competing venues.
1976Spanish FlySir Percy de CourcyLecherous executive in an sex comedy.
1976The Last Remake of Beau GesteGovernorColonial authority in a Foreign Legion parody.
1977Dr. MortimerBumbling doctor in a spoof.
1980The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu ManchuSir Roger AveryBritish official in Peter Sellers's final film.

Other media appearances

Terry-Thomas made significant contributions to British television in the post-war era, most notably as the star of the sketch comedy series How Do You View?, which aired on BBC Television from 1949 to 1953 across five series totaling 30 episodes. In this pioneering program, the first regular comedy series on British TV, he portrayed a variety of eccentric characters in sketches interspersed with musical performances and guest stars, drawing on his cabaret roots to showcase his improvisational style and gap-toothed persona. Later, during his Hollywood period, he made several guest appearances on American variety shows, including multiple spots on The Ed Sullivan Show between 1963 and 1965, where he performed comedic monologues and sketches that highlighted his signature upper-class bounder routine. On radio, Terry-Thomas built his early reputation through BBC broadcasts starting in the late 1930s, including appearances on popular wartime and post-war programs. He contributed to various sketches in ensemble casts like those led by Arthur Askey and Tommy Handley, amassing over 100 appearances where his versatile impressions and quick wit were featured. In 1954, he starred in the BBC radio series Top of the Town, a 16-episode run that further solidified his status as a radio comedian with its mix of topical humor and character-driven bits. Terry-Thomas's stage career spanned revues and acts, beginning with wartime ENSA productions in the such as Stars in Battledress, a series of military-themed shows he helped stage for troops, totaling more than 15 productions that honed his live performance skills amid the rigors of entertainment. , he achieved a breakthrough as compère in the hit Piccadilly Hayride at London's in 1946, a role that led to a slot and established him as a revue star blending song, dance, and comedy. Beyond broadcasts and theatre, Terry-Thomas lent his voice to recordings and advertisements that extended his comedic reach. In 1958, he released the comedy album Strictly T-T on , featuring monologues and impressions in his trademark style, followed by Terry-Thomas Discovers America in 1964 on , a satirical take on transatlantic culture with nine tracks of spoken-word humor. He also appeared in tonic water commercials during the 1960s, notably in the iconic "No Tonic" spots where he played a frantic aristocrat decrying the absence of mixer for his , embodying British eccentricity in a campaign that ran for several years. Overall, Terry-Thomas's non-film output encompassed approximately 200 television and radio episodes alongside around 20 stage productions, showcasing his adaptability across media and cementing his legacy as a multifaceted entertainer.

References

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