Bud Flanagan, OBE (born Chaim Reuben Weintrop, 14 October
1896 – 20 October 1968) was a popular British music hall and vaudeville
entertainer and comedian, and later a television and film actor. He was best
known as a double act with Chesney Allen.
Like many Jewish families living in eastern Europe at the
end of the 19th century Wolf Weintrop knew if his family were to survive it
would mean leaving Poland for the safety of another country, he chose to come
to England.
Settling into Whitechapel he opened a barbers shop to
support his growing family of ten children, his youngest Chaim Reuven Weintrop
was born in their new country on the 14th October 1896, young Chaim went to
school in Petticote Lane, but when he was just ten years old he found himself a
job as call boy at the local Cambridge Theatre, it was probably here that the
young Chaim got his taste for show business, two years later he entered a local
talent show as "Fargo, The Boy Wizard". It’s not recorded whether he
won the competition or not.
Chaim with brother Simon |
Weintrop was born with a sense of adventure and was keen
to see the world. In 1910, aged 14, he decided to leave home and walked all the
way to Southampton where he claimed to be an electrician aged 17 in order to
get a job aboard ship. He sailed with the SS Majestic to New York, and jumped
ship when it arrived in the U.S.A. Reuben got various jobs selling newspapers,
delivering telegrams for Western Union, and even harvested wheat in Fargo,
North Dakota. He joined a vaudeville show that toured across the U.S.A. and in
October 1914, he sailed with a show to perform in New Zealand and Australia.
He travelled to perform on stages in South Africa where
he met up
with his brother Alec (Alexander) who was living there at the time. Once
back in San Francisco, Reuben decided to return to England in order to enlist
to fight for Britain in World War I. He returned to England in 1915 and
enlisted as “Robert” Weintrop. He joined the Royal Field Artillery, and was
sent with his unit to fight in France. In the Army, he worked as a driver and
entertained the troops with his singing and impersonations. Here he met the
unpopular Sergeant Major Flanagan from whom he later adopted his stage name. In
1919 he formed a comedy double act, 'Flanagan and Roy'.
Bud met his wife Anne ("Curly"), daughter of
Irish comedian Johnny Quinn, ('The Singing Clown'), who was a dancer in
"Mrs. Stacey's Young Ladies". They were married in 1925 and in 1926
their son Buddy was born. Tragically, Buddy died of leukemia in Los Angeles,
U.S.A., in February 1956.
Bud Flanagan is best remembered as part of a double act
with Chesney Allen, Flanagan and Allen. They had first met on active service in
Flanders, but did not work together until 1926, touring with a Florrie Forde
show. They established a reputation and were booked by Val Parnell at the
Holborn Empire. As music hall comedians, they would often feature a mixture of
comedy and music in their act and this led to a successful recording career as
a duo and roles in film and television. Flanagan and Allen were both also
members of The Crazy Gang, appearing in the first show at the London Palladium
in 1931, and continued to work with the group, concurrently with their
double-act career.
Flanagan and Allen's songs featured the same, usually
gentle humour for which the duo were known in their live performances, and
during the Second World War reflected the experiences of ordinary people during
wartime. They recorded many songs which would encapsulate wartime era such as,
'Underneath the Arches'
which was to become their signature tune, 'Dreaming', 'Hometown' and 'Run Rabbit', 'Any Umbrellas and 'Down Forget-Me-Not Lane.”The vocals were distinctive because while Flanagan was at least a competent singer and sang the melody lines, Allen used an almost spoken delivery to provide the harmonies.
which was to become their signature tune, 'Dreaming', 'Hometown' and 'Run Rabbit', 'Any Umbrellas and 'Down Forget-Me-Not Lane.”The vocals were distinctive because while Flanagan was at least a competent singer and sang the melody lines, Allen used an almost spoken delivery to provide the harmonies.
Flanagan and Allen stopped working together with Chesney
Allen's retirement in 1945, when Allen gave up performing to become a
theatrical agent; but Flanagan continued working until his death. In 1959 he
was awarded the OBE, and received the award from the Duke of Edinburgh at
Buckingham Palace.
Flanagan's last recording was Jimmy Perry and Derek Taverner's theme for the British sitcom Dad's Army, "Who Do You Think You Are Kidding, Mr Hitler?", recorded shortly before his death for which he was paid '100 guineas' for his work. The song was a deliberate pastiche of the sort of songs Flanagan had sung during the war.
Flanagan's last recording was Jimmy Perry and Derek Taverner's theme for the British sitcom Dad's Army, "Who Do You Think You Are Kidding, Mr Hitler?", recorded shortly before his death for which he was paid '100 guineas' for his work. The song was a deliberate pastiche of the sort of songs Flanagan had sung during the war.
Bud Flanagan died from a heart attack on October 20, 1968
in London. He was cremated at the Golders Green Crematorium. (Edited from Wikipedia & East London
forum)
2 comments:
For “FLANAGAN AND ALLEN: WELL SMILE AGAIN” go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/10597377/Flanagan___Allen.rar.html
1. Underneath the Arches
2. Dreaming
3. Wanderer
4. Can't We Meet Again?
5. A Million Tears
6. Home Town
7. Music, Maestro, Please!
8. The Umbrella Man
9. Nice People
10. Run, Rabbit, Run!
11. (We're Gonna Hang Out) The Washing on the Siegfried Line
12. F.D.R. Jones
13. If a Grey-Haired Lady Says "How's Your Father?"
14. On the Outside Looking In
15. Yesterday's Dreams
16. Down Forget-Me-Not Lane
17. Rose O'Day (The Filla-Ga-Dusha Song)
18. What More Can I Say?
19. I Don't Want to Walk Without You
20. Miss You
21. Two Very Ordinary People
22. Shine on Harvest Moon
23. Flying Through the Rain
24. Round the Back of the Arches
25. We'll Smile Again
Great old music hall songs by a popular duo. Thanks Boppinbob
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