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Peter Brough

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Full Name
  
Peter Brough

Occupation
  
Actor, ventriloquist


Name
  
Peter Brough

Role
  
Ventriloquist

Peter Brough BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs Peter Brough amp Archie

Born
  
26 February 1916 (
1916-02-26
)
Shepherd's Bush, London, UK

Died
  
June 3, 1999, England, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Elizabeth Chantler (m. ?–1994)

Peter brough issue title is mum s the word 1943


Peter Brough (26 February 1916 – 3 June 1999) was an English radio ventriloquist who became a well-known name to audiences in the 1950s. He is associated with the puppet Archie Andrews.

Contents

Peter Brough Strange world of Archie Andrews Behind the dummy Weird

Max bygraves with peter brough archie andrews the dummy song


Radio days

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Born in Shepherd's Bush, London, Brough began his radio career in 1944 in ventriloquism but in 1950 he debuted Archie, a mischievous child who domineered his mentor. Archie's chief characteristics were his Savile Row-tailored blazers and manic eyes. Archie followed in the tradition of the American ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and his dummy Charlie McCarthy.

Peter Brough Radio listeners loved dummy Archie but I hated my 39wooden

His radio series based around the character - Educating Archie - featured in support the likes of Dick Emery, Freddie Sales, Benny Hill, Tony Hancock, Hattie Jacques, Bruce Forsyth, Harry Secombe, Max Bygraves, Beryl Reid and even a young Julie Andrews as the girlfriend of Archie; Eric Sykes was one of the series' main writers in the early 1950s. The show often averaged 15 million listeners, and a fan club had 250,000 members.

TV work

Peter Brough His Master39s Voice Telegraph

Because of the success of his radio show, Brough made his debut on television in 1956 in the BBC sitcom Here's Archie which co-starred Irene Handl and Ronald Chesney. The show was written by the latter and Ronald Wolfe, who would later team up on British sitcoms The Rag Trade and On the Buses.

Two years later, Brough was on ITV in Educating Archie, utilising the same team as before, although Marty Feldman took some of the writing credit as well. The TV appearances exposed his limitations as a ventriloquist, as his lips were frequently seen to move. In later years a critic remarked, "Ventriloquism on the radio - I could have done that."

By 1961, Brough decided to retire Archie following the death of his father, also a ventriloquist, and he then took over the family's textile and menswear business. His TV appearances were sporadic from then on. He died on 3 June 1999.

In November 2005, the original Archie Andrews doll was sold at auction in Taunton for £34,000.

Family

Brough married twice: first in 1940 to Peggy Franklin (one son, one daughter; marriage dissolved), second to Elizabeth Chantler (died 1994; one son, one daughter).

Filmography

Self
1987
Wogan (TV Series) as
Self
- Wogan's Radio Fun (1987) - Self (as Peter Brough and Archie Andrews)
1984
The Afternoon Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.3 (1984) - Self (as Peter Brough with Archie Andrews)
1961
This Is Your Life (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Eric Sykes (1979) - Self
- Max Bygraves (1961) - Self
1977
Call My Bluff (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #11.14 (1977) - Self
- Episode #11.13 (1977) - Self
1974
Just a Nimmo (TV Series) as
Self - and Archie Andrews
- Episode #1.2 (1974) - Self - and Archie Andrews
1969
Frost on Saturday (TV Series) as
Self
- Colour TV Special (1969) - Self (as Peter Brough with Archie Andrews)
1969
One Pair of Eyes (TV Series documentary) as
Self - and Archie Andrews
- Marty Feldman: No, But Seriously- (1969) - Self - and Archie Andrews
1958
Educating Archie (TV Series) as
Self
- Archie's Christmas Party (1959) - Self
- The Man with the Golden Feet (1959) - Self
- Brough and the Bald-Headed Bandit (1959) - Self
- The Day We Fooled the Fuhrer (1959) - Self
- The Case of the Missing Aunt (1959) - Self
- Don't Put Your Nephew on the Stage (1959) - Self
- The King and Archie (1959) - Self
- The Man Who Lost His Pants at Monte Carlo (1959) - Self
- The Day the Bongolis Left (1959) - Self
- The Prune Mutiny (1959) - Self
- The Man Who Couldn't Grow Up (1959) - Self
1956
Here's Archie (TV Movie) as
Self - and Archie Andrews
1955
Off the Record (TV Series) as
Self - with Archie Andrews
- Episode #1.9 (1955) - Self - with Archie Andrews
1950
Music-Hall (TV Series) as
Self - Compere / Self - and Archie Andrews
- Episode #3.9 (1951) - Self - Compere (as Peter Brough with Archie Andrews)
- Episode #2.4 (1950) - Self - and Archie Andrews
1949
Rooftop Rendezvous (TV Series) as
Self - Performer
- Episode #1.6 (1949) - Self - Performer (as Peter Brough and Archie Andrews)
1947
Saturday Night at the Palace (TV Series) as
Self - with Archie Andrews
- Episode #1.2 (1947) - Self - with Archie Andrews
1946
Variety (TV Series) as
Self - with Archie Andrews
- Episode dated 19 December 1946 (1946) - Self - with Archie Andrews
1946
Close-Up (TV Series) as
Self - with Archie Andrews
- Episode dated 17 December 1946 (1946) - Self - with Archie Andrews
1940
Cavalcade of Variety as
Self - Compére
Archive Footage
2011
The Story of Variety with Michael Grade (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Onto the Box (2011) - Self
2007
Timeshift (TV Series documentary) as
Self
- Gagging for It: TV's Hunger for Radio Comedy (2007) - Self
2006
The Story of Light Entertainment (TV Mini Series documentary) as
Self
- Variety (2006) - Self (as Peter Brough and Archie Andrews)
2006
Dawn French's Girls Who Do: Comedy (TV Series documentary) as
Self / Archie Andrews
- Episode #1.1 (2006) - Self / Archie Andrews (uncredited)
1998
Heroes of Comedy (TV Series documentary)
- Dick Emery (2002)
- Tony Hancock (1998) - (as Peter Brough & Archie Andrews)

References

Peter Brough Wikipedia