Kenneth Williams
Kenneth Charles Williams (
22 February 1926 â€"
15 April 1988) was a
British comic actor, star of twenty six
Carry On... films and notable radio comedies with
Tony Hancock and
Kenneth Horne, as well as a witty
raconteur on a wide range of subjects.
Kenneth Charles Williams was born in Bingley Street, King's Cross, the son of a hairdresser (Charles Williams). He was educated at Lyulph Stanley School. His relationship with his parents - he adored his mother, Louisa Williams, but hated his father - was key to the development of his personality. Williams became an apprentice draughtsman to a mapmaker and joined the army aged 18. He was part of the
Royal Engineers survey section in
Bombay when he had his first experience of going on stage with
Combined Services Entertainment along with Stanley Baxter and Peter Nichols.
After the war, his career began with a number of roles in repertory theatre, but few serious parts were to lend themselves to his style of delivery. His failure to become established as a serious dramatic actor would disappoint him, but it was his potential as a comic performer that gave him his big break. He was spotted playing the Dauphin in
George Bernard Shaw's
St Joan in
1954 by the radio producer
Dennis Main Wilson, who was casting
Hancock's Half Hour. He would lend his distinctive voice and amazing vocal talent to the radio series to almost the end of its run, five years later.
When Hancock tired of him, Williams joined
Kenneth Horne in the series
Beyond Our Ken (
1958–
1963), and then consolidated this with its sequel
Round the Horne (
1964–
1969). In the latter, his roles included
Rambling Syd Rumpo, the eccentric folk singer,
The Amazing Proudbasket, human cannonball,
J Peasemould Gruntfuttock, professional telephone heavy breather and dirty old man, and Sandy of the extremely camp couple,
Julian and Sandy (Julian was played by
Hugh Paddick), notable for their
double entendres and use of the underground
gay slang,
Polari.
He also worked in television and British films, most notably the
Carry On... series with its very British "nudge nudge"
double entrendre laced humour, but for which he along with the rest of the cast were very poorly paid. Williams' diaries claimed he earned more in a
British Gas commercial he did during the 1970s than he made out of the entire "Carry On" series put together - although that might only be considered true if one adds in the considerable fee he earned from the highly successful spin off cartoon series
Willo The Wisp (ironically taken up by the BBC rather than the commercial TV network).
Particularly in the theatre, he was famous for breaking out of character and talking to the audience. He was a regular panellist on the
BBC radio panel game
Just a Minute from its second season in
1968 until his death and regularly presented the children's story-reading series
Jackanory. He was also a "professional" talk-show guest, able to regale an audience with amusing anecdotes on every subject. He was extremely well read and occasionally used to stand in as host on the popular early evening
Wogan (talk) show. He jointly holds the record (with
Billy Connolly) as having made most appearances on
Michael Parkinson's eponymous chat show, having been a guest on eight occasions.
Williams publicly insisted that he was celibate, but in private found his
homosexuality difficult to deal with. His diaries contain many references to unconsummated or barely consummated relationships, described in code as "traditional matters" or "tradiola", probably because homosexuality was still a criminal offence in the
United Kingdom for much of the period covered by the diaries. He befriended
Joe Orton who wrote the role of Inspector Truscott in
Loot (
1966) for him and enjoyed holidays with Orton and
Kenneth Halliwell in Morocco. In later years his health declined. Despite making a good living in his later years, he lived in a series of small flats in north London.
Kenneth Williams died on
April 15,
1988 apparently from an overdose of
barbiturates. An inquest recorded an
open verdict into his death as it was not possible to establish whether his death had been suicide or an accident. (Williams's father had died in similarly unclear circumstances after drinking a bottle of
disinfectant on 15 December 1962.).
The main protagonist for the "suicide" theory was
Gyles Brandreth, a friend of Williams for many years (and who edited two editions of "Acid Drops" for him) mainly centring on his dread of hospitals (despite being a self-confessed hypochondriac) and on the last sentence Williams wrote in his diary :
"By 6.30 pain in the back was pulsating as it's never done before … so this, plus the stomach trouble combines to torture me — oh — what's the bloody point?"
Friends continue to maintain that, because of Williams's devotion to Lou, his mother, for whom he bought the flat next to his, he would never — in her lifetime — have seriously contemplated suicide. The posthumous publication of his diaries and letters, both edited by
Russell Davies, caused not only some controversy over its contents, but highlighted that self-pity primed by a feeling of underachievement were common facets throughout his lifetime. His flat was later bought by
Rob Brydon and
Julia Davis for the writing of their dark comedy series,
Human Remains. The building is due to be demolished in a controversial regeneration scheme agreed in 2006.
Films
almost completeTrent's Last Case (1952)
The Beggar's Opera (1953)
Valley of Song (1953)
Innocents in Paris (1953)
The Seekers (1954)
Carry On Sergeant (1958)
Carry On Nurse (1958)
Carry On Teacher (1959)
Tommy the Toreador (1959)
Make Mine Mink (1960)
Carry On Constable (1960)
His and Hers (1960)
Raising the Wind (1961)
Carry On Regardless (1961)
Love Me, Love Me, Love Me (1961)
Twice Round the Daffodils (1962)
Carry On Cruising (1962)
Carry On Jack (1963)
Carry On Spying (1964)
Carry On Cleo (1964)
Carry On Cowboy (1965)
Carry On Screaming (1966)
Don't Lose Your Head (1966)
Carry On... Follow That Camel (1967)
Carry On Doctor (1967)
Carry On Up the Khyber (1968)
Carry On Camping (1968)
Carry On Again, Doctor (1969)
Carry On Loving (1970)
Carry On Henry (1970)
Carry On at Your Convenience (1971)
Carry On Matron (1971)
Carry On Abroad (1972)
Carry On Dick (1974)
Carry On Behind (1975)
That's Carry On (1977)
The Hound of the Baskervilles! (1978)
Carry On Emmanuelle (1978)
Television
International CabaretJackanoryWillo the WispGalloping GalaxiesRadio
Hancock's Half HourBeyond Our KenRound the HorneKenneth Williams PlayhouseOh Get On with ItStop Messing AboutJust a MinuteThe Wind in the WillowsBooks
*
Acid Drops*
Back Drops*
Just Williams*
I Only Have To Close My eyes*
The Kenneth Williams Diaries*
The Kenneth Williams LettersPortrayals
Williams has been portrayed in two separate made-for-television films. In 2000,
Adam Godley played him in the story of
Sid James and
Barbara Windsor's love affair,
Cor Blimey! Subsequently, in 2006,
Michael Sheen gave an uncanny impression in
Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa!.
Perhaps the most well-known portrayal of Williams, however, came in theatre, in
David Benson's 1996 Edinburgh Fringe show,
Think No Evil of Us - My Life With Kenneth Williams, which subsequently toured and ran to much acclaim in London's West End.
Stop Messin' About - The Kenneth Williams WebsiteThe Kenneth Williams Appreciation Society - Online since 1997Carry On Line: Official Website of the Carry On filmsWhat a Carry On - Carry Tribute site
*Knitting Circle: Kenneth Williams
*Arts: Kenneth Williams
*Carry On Films at The Whippit Inn Detailed information on the Carry On film series
BBC Four Interviews: Kenneth Williams*
Kenneth Williams:Fantabulosa!