Happiness and Tears: The Ken Dodd Story
£20.00
A definitive life one of the best-loved and most enduring figures of British comedy, the eccentric genius and national treasure Ken Dodd, whose seven-decade career straddled the end of the era of variety and the golden age of television comedy.
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‘I suffer from acute kleptomania. But when it gets bad, I take something for it.’ Ken Dodd was a legend of British comedy. He launched his career in 1954, adopted his trademark ‘tickling stick’ two years later and went on to enjoy a sixty-year career as the nation’s jester. Dodd’s act was frenzied and zany, exploiting his saucer-eyed, buck-toothed appearance and deploying a repertoire of one-liners, whimsical and verbal inventions and liberal doses of saucy – but never dirty – jokes. Louis Barfe charts Dodd’s life and extraordinarily long career, revealing him to be the last of the great variety acts – and a comic phenomenon who delighted his audiences across seven decades. Reviews for Happiness and Tears: ‘The definitive account’ The Times. ‘An industriously thorough, entertaining biography’ The Spectator. ‘Sure to delight Dodd’s many admirers’ TLS. ‘Fascinatingly odd’ Daily Express. ‘An absolute joy’ Choice.
| Weight | 0.642 kg |
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| Dimensions | 23.4 × 15.3 × 3.3 cm |
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| Imprint | |
| Cover | Hardback |
| Pages | xviii, 382 , 8 unnumbered of plates |
| Language | English |
| Edition | |
| Dewey | 792.7028092 (edition:23) |
| Readership | / Code: |
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