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BIOGRAPHY: Willie Rushton |
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 The Others: Humphrey Lyttelton Graeme Garden Tim Brooke-Taylor Barry Cryer
Clued-up panellist
Comedian and satirist Willie Rushton joined the ISIHAC panel in 1974. He became an entrenched regular and much-loved Clue panellist until his untimely death in December 1996, just two days after recording his final show.
Big on the Beeb
His career at the Âé¶¹Éç as an actor, writer, lyricist and satirist spanned more than 30 years. It started when Ned Sherrin discovered him doing an impression of Prime Minister Macmillan in a fringe review show, and made him a regular on the cutting-edge television satire That Was The Week That Was.
A firm favourite
Over the ensuing decades, Willie became a favourite on panel games, in satire shows and as Jackanory's voice for the tales of Winnie The Pooh. In later years, he is best remembered by radio fans as a cricket lover on Trivia Test Match and for his razor-sharp puns in I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue. Barry Cryer's fondest memories of the past three decades all involve Willie, whose "off the wall" sense of humour was an essential element in the success of the long-running panel game.
Irreplacable
To this day, nobody has been brought in to replace Willie. Over the past few years, Tim Brooke-Taylor has been partnered by a host of talented comedians, including Stephen Fry, Paul Merton, Tony Hawks, Andy Hamilton, Linda Smith, Phill Jupitus, Sandi Toksvig and Jeremy Hardy.
He is greatly missed.
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