Arthur Askey
Arthur Bowden Askey (6 June 1900 – 16 November 1982) was an English comedian, actor, and singer, celebrated for his diminutive stature of 5 feet 2 inches (1.57 m), high-pitched voice, and exuberant, fast-talking style that made him a staple of British entertainment for over five decades.[1][2] Born in the Dingle area of Liverpool to Samuel Askey, a clerk, and his wife Betsy, Askey left school at age 16 and initially worked in a clerical job at Liverpool Corporation before pursuing performance.[1][3] He began his professional career in 1924 with concert parties at British seaside resorts, forming his own group called The Filberts, and married fellow performer Elizabeth May Swash in 1925, with whom he had two children.[2][1] Askey's breakthrough came in the 1930s through BBC radio, where he debuted in 1930 on programs like Music Hall and rose to national fame as the resident comedian on Band Waggon (1938–1940) alongside Richard "Stinker" Murdoch, pioneering the situation comedy format with their fictional lives in a flat on the roof of Broadcasting House.[2][4] His radio success led to a prolific film career during World War II, including hits like Charley's (Big-Hearted) Aunt (1940), The Ghost Train (1941), and Back-Room Boy (1942), where his cheeky, optimistic persona provided light relief amid wartime austerity.[2][5] In the post-war era, Askey transitioned seamlessly to television, hosting the influential variety show Before Your Very Eyes (1952–1956, 1958–1961) on BBC Television, which showcased his skills in sketches, songs, and monologues, and later serving as a panellist on ITV's New Faces (1973–1978) to discover new talent.[2] He remained active into the 1970s with stage pantomimes, radio series like Askey Galore (1957) and Does the Team Think? (from 1958), and his final film Rosie Dixon – Night Nurse (1978).[2] Askey's enduring appeal lay in his signature catchphrases—"Hello, folks!", "I thank you", and "Ay-thang-yew"—along with novelty songs such as "The Bee Song" and "The Seagull", which highlighted his whimsical humor and violin-playing ability.[2] He received the Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1969 for services to entertainment and was upgraded to Commander (CBE) in 1981, shortly before his death from complications following leg amputations due to circulatory issues.[1][5] Askey's autobiography, Before Your Very Eyes (1975), chronicled his life and career, cementing his legacy as a pioneer who bridged vaudeville, radio, and television in British comedy.[1]Early life
Childhood and family
Arthur Bowden Askey was born on 6 June 1900 at 29 Moses Street in the Dingle district of Liverpool, Lancashire, England.[6] He was the eldest child and only son of Samuel Askey, who served as company secretary for Sugar Products of Liverpool—a firm involved in syrup refining—and his wife Betsy (also known as Betty) Bowden, originally from Knutsford, Cheshire.[6][3] Six months after his birth, the family relocated to 90 Rosslyn Street in the Aigburth area of Liverpool, where Askey spent much of his early years.[6] Askey's upbringing occurred in a modest household in Liverpool's working-class districts, reflecting the industrial environment of early 20th-century Merseyside.[1] His father's role in a local manufacturing firm provided a stable but unremarkable middle-working-class existence, with the family later purchasing a home at 58 Sandhurst Street in Aigburth for £300 in 1911.[1] From a young age, Askey displayed a lively and energetic demeanor, often described as hyperactive and outgoing, traits that would later define his comedic style.[7] He was notably diminutive in stature even as a child, standing at just 5 feet 2 inches (1.58 m) in adulthood, which contributed to his distinctive physical presence.[8] During his childhood, Askey developed an early fascination with performance through exposure to local entertainment scenes, including concert parties at venues like the Olympian Gardens in Rock Ferry across the Mersey.[1] Family holidays to seaside spots such as New Brighton, Rhyl, and the Isle of Man further immersed him in variety shows and amateur theatricals, sparking his interest in the vibrant world of music hall and pierrot troupes prevalent in the region.[1] These experiences in Liverpool's cultural undercurrents, amid street performers and community gatherings, laid the groundwork for his innate showmanship without formal training.[1]Education and early influences
Arthur Askey attended St. Michael's Council School in Liverpool from 1905 to 1911, followed by the Liverpool Institute for Boys from 1911 to 1916, where he completed his secondary education at the age of 16.[9][1] During his school years, Askey developed an early interest in performance, though specific details of his involvement in school activities remain limited in historical records. In 1918, at the age of 18, Askey enlisted in the British Army and served as a private in the Royal Welch Fusiliers, specifically a Bantam Battalion suited to his short stature of 5 feet 2 inches.[10][11] His military service during World War I provided his initial exposure to entertaining audiences, as he performed in army concert parties to boost troop morale, an experience that ignited his passion for comedy and stagecraft.[7][12] Following the war's end in 1919, Askey returned to civilian life and took up employment as a clerk in the Education Department of Liverpool Corporation, a position he held until 1924.[9][13] While working this clerical role, he continued to nurture his performing talents through participation in local amateur dramatics and by organizing his own concert parties in his spare time, which allowed him to refine his comedic timing and singing abilities before turning professional.[14][7]Professional career
Radio work
Arthur Askey began his radio career in the early 1930s, appearing in BBC revue shows such as Music Hall starting in 1930 and gaining a regular spot in the occasional series Eight Bells from April 1935.[2][15] These early broadcasts showcased his cheerful patter and novelty songs, transitioning his music hall style to the medium while establishing him as a familiar voice on the BBC National Programme.[15] Askey's breakthrough came with Band Waggon, the BBC's first regular radio comedy series, which premiered on 5 January 1938 and ran for three series totaling 55 episodes until 2 December 1939, with a brief revival in 1947.[16] Co-starring Richard "Stinker" Murdoch as his straight-man foil, the show was set in a fictional flat atop Broadcasting House, where the duo portrayed hapless residents amid comedic chaos; Askey served as the resident comedian and co-writer, dominating sketches that blended his high-energy persona with Murdoch's deadpan delivery.[2][16] The program introduced Askey's iconic catchphrases, including "Hello, playmates!" and "I thank you!" (often delivered as "Ay thang yew"), which became staples of British comedy through weekly repetition.[2][16] Innovations included live rooftop broadcasts from BBC Maida Vale studios—such as Askey humorously "piloting" a cinema organ through the roof—and a roped-off stage corner for exaggerated sound effects like the signature "Bandwaggon crash," fostering audience interaction and imaginative listener engagement in an era when BBC comedy was typically limited to short sketches or monologues.[16] The format mixed these elements with songs, including Askey's nonsense tunes like "The Bee Song," and variety acts, running weekly for 45 to 60 minutes on Wednesday evenings.[2][15] In the post-war period, Askey adapted his style to new scripted formats, hosting How Do You Do? on the BBC Light Programme from 20 January to 7 April 1949, a 12-episode series of 30-minute variety shows where listeners could request him to visit and perform at wealthy hotel guests' rooms, emphasizing his improvisational energy.[15][17] Later efforts included Askey Galore in 1957, co-starring his daughter Anthea Askey and magician David Nixon, which highlighted family-oriented humor in a variety format. He also became a regular panellist on the BBC radio panel game Does the Team Think? starting in the late 1950s, appearing alongside Jimmy Edwards and Ted Ray until 1976.[2] Askey's radio work significantly shaped British comedy, bridging music hall traditions to broadcasting by popularizing fast-talking, catchphrase-driven ensemble sketches that boosted wartime morale—Band Waggon's third series aired during the early months of World War II, and he performed for troops in France in 1940 before the Nazi invasion, later contributing to BBC Forces Network programs like Big's Broadcast in 1941.[15][16] The show's success even inspired brief overlaps with early film adaptations of its material, cementing Askey's role in elevating radio as a national entertainment staple.[16]Film career
Arthur Askey transitioned to cinema with his first major film, Band Waggon (1940), a direct adaptation of his popular BBC radio series of the same name, which established his screen persona through his diminutive stature, energetic antics, and cheeky humor.[18] Directed by Marcel Varnel and co-starring Richard Murdoch, the film featured Askey playing a version of himself as a radio performer who uncovers spies in a castle, blending comedy with light wartime themes.[19] This success propelled him into a series of vehicles for Gainsborough Pictures, where he often portrayed the plucky everyman in musical comedies that provided escapism during World War II.[18] Key Gainsborough productions included Charley's (Big-Hearted) Aunt (1940), an adaptation of the classic farce in which Askey cross-dresses to evade trouble at Oxford; I Thank You (1941), drawing from his catchphrase and showcasing his vaudeville roots; The Ghost Train (1941), a thriller-comedy where his character strands passengers at a haunted station, proving a significant box-office draw amid wartime rationing; King Arthur Was a Gentleman (1942), a fantastical tale of Askey as a soldier discovering Excalibur; and Bees in Paradise (1944), a whimsical island adventure incorporating his signature songs like "The Bee Song."[20][21] These films highlighted Askey's physical comedy, quick-witted banter, and musical interludes, contributing to British cinema's morale-boosting efforts during the war.[22] In the post-war era, Askey's film output shifted to lighter, more domestic fare as the popularity of comedian-led features waned with the rise of television. Notable examples include The Love Match (1955), a comedy about railway workers and football fandom, and Make Mine a Million (1959), where he played a bumbling makeup artist involved in TV advertising schemes alongside Sid James. These later works maintained his energetic style but reflected a shift toward lighter, more domestic fare in the post-war era, with sporadic appearances continuing into the 1970s, such as in The Alf Garnett Saga (1972) and his final film Rosie Dixon – Night Nurse (1978), amid a broader decline in comedian-led features with the rise of television.[20][23]Television appearances
Arthur Askey made his television debut with the variety show Before Your Very Eyes, which aired on the BBC from 1952 to 1955 before transferring to ITV for further series until 1958, comprising 31 episodes across seven series that capitalized on his energetic personality through sketches, songs, and guest appearances.[24][25] The format typically opened with Askey delivering a direct-to-camera monologue, followed by a short sketch, a commercial break, and a longer parody sketch, allowing him to adapt his rapid-fire comedy style for the visual medium while incorporating occasional flubs and audience interactions to mimic live performance intimacy.[25] In the early 1960s, Askey starred in Arthur's Treasured Volumes (ITV, 1960), a six-episode anthology series of standalone sitcom plays written by Dave Freeman, blending narrative sketches with musical interludes to showcase his versatility in shorter, home-viewing formats.[26] This was followed by The Arthur Askey Show (ITV, 1961), another six-part sitcom where he played the bumbling Arthur Pilbeam alongside co-stars like June Whitfield, incorporating domestic scenarios and light musical numbers that echoed his earlier variety roots.[27] These series marked Askey's shift toward scripted, repeatable television content, distinct from the immediacy of stage work. Askey became a fixture on the BBC's long-running music hall recreation The Good Old Days (1953–1983), making regular appearances in its mock-Victorian theatre setting at Leeds City Varieties, where he performed songs and sketches in period costume to evoke the era of his formative influences.[28] In the 1970s, he served as a panellist on ITV's talent show New Faces (1973–1978), helping to discover and critique emerging performers.) His contributions helped sustain the show's nostalgic appeal, with episodes featuring him alongside stars like Eartha Kitt and Alfred Marks.[28] Transitioning from radio and film posed challenges for Askey, particularly the demands of live broadcasts in early television, which required adapting his physical comedy—often involving exaggerated gestures and props—to unedited, real-time transmission without the safety net of retakes.[25] Despite initial difficulties in securing a fitting format, his live-wire energy suited the medium's immediacy, though he noted the ITV iterations of Before Your Very Eyes fell short of BBC production standards.[25][29] Askey's final major television role came in the variety special The Green Tie on the Little Yellow Dog (Channel 4, recorded 1982, broadcast 1983), a revue of comic monologues and songs featuring an all-star cast, marking his last professional engagement at age 82.[30]Stage performances
Arthur Askey made his professional stage debut on 31 March 1924 at the Headgate Electric Theatre in Colchester, performing in a concert party as part of a series of seaside entertainment shows.[31] After working as a clerk, he joined touring concert parties, including Fred Wilton's Entertainers at the Oval in Cliftonville from 1926 to 1930, where he honed his comedic skills in variety formats.[32] By 1930, his appearance in Powis Pinder's "Sunshine" concert party caught the attention of London producers, leading to greater opportunities in music halls and revues.[32] In the 1930s, Askey progressed to prominent music hall venues, topping bills at places like the Holborn and Finsbury Park Empires with his energetic stand-up routines featuring silly songs and quick-witted ad-libs that fostered direct rapport with audiences.[32] A key milestone came in 1937 when he co-compered The Coronation Revue alongside George Robey, showcasing his versatility in revue-style comedy sketches and musical numbers.[32] These live performances emphasized his physical comedy and improvisational style, relying on unscripted interactions that broke down barriers between performer and crowd, establishing the foundation of his career in theatre before his rise in broadcasting.[15] During World War II, Askey contributed to troop morale through concert parties and variety tours, performing for British forces in makeshift venues to provide escapism and uplift spirits amid wartime hardships.[33] His diminutive stature (5 feet 2 inches) and boisterous energy made him a natural for morale-boosting shows, where he adapted his routines to engage soldiers directly.[5] Post-war, Askey became a staple of British pantomime, frequently playing dame roles that capitalized on his small frame and cheeky persona, such as Big Hearted Martha in productions like Robinson Crusoe at the London Palladium in 1957.[32] He also portrayed characters like Buttons in Cinderella, leveraging his height for humorous physical gags and audience sing-alongs in family-oriented revivals during the 1950s, including Mother Goose variants that highlighted his enduring appeal in live theatre.[34] These pantomimes, often at major venues like the Streatham Hill Theatre, featured his signature ad-libs and rapport-building, keeping variety traditions alive into the 1970s.[35][2]Musical recordings
Arthur Askey began his recording career in the late 1930s with a series of 78 rpm singles for His Master's Voice (HMV), focusing on novelty comedy songs that showcased his high-pitched voice and whimsical style. His debut hit, "The Bee Song," released in November 1938 as HMV BD 552, originated from his BBC radio series Band Waggon and quickly became a bestseller, capturing the public's imagination with its playful lyrics about a bee's daily routine.[36][15] Other early HMV releases included "The Worm" and "Knitting" in 1939 (BD 739), blending humorous narratives with simple melodies influenced by Askey's classical vocal training in light opera.[37][15] During World War II, Askey's recordings shifted toward morale-boosting wartime themes, with HMV issuing tracks like "What a Nice Lot of Nazis They Are" and "The Thing-Ummy-Bob" in January 1942 (BD 989), the latter a satirical nod to an unnamed invention that would "win the war." Although specific Decca 78 rpm releases from this era are scarce, Askey's HMV output during the conflict, including "She Couldn't Say No" in 1941, reflected his role in entertaining troops and civilians through cheeky, uplifting novelty numbers often tied to his radio broadcasts.[15][38] Post-war, Askey continued releasing singles in the 1950s, such as revivals and new comedy tunes like reissues of his earlier hits, maintaining his signature blend of vaudeville humor and operatic phrasing derived from his early stage training. By the 1960s, compilations emerged, including HMV's Hello Playmates EP (7EG-8294, 1957) and later collections like Big Hearted Arthur Askey and His Silly Little Songs (Music for Pleasure MFP 1177, 1967), which gathered his radio-derived tracks for broader audiences.[39][40] Over his career, Askey produced more than 20 singles, achieving commercial success through their lighthearted appeal and frequent reissues on formats like LPs and CDs, ensuring enduring popularity for songs such as "The Bee Song," which remains a staple in British comedy anthologies.[41][42]Public persona and satire
Private Eye parodies
Private Eye, the influential British satirical magazine launched in 1961, frequently targeted Arthur Askey in its pages during the 1960s and 1970s as part of a broader wave of irreverent humor that lampooned establishment figures and veteran entertainers amid the cultural upheavals of the "swinging '60s."[43] This era's satire, exemplified by Private Eye and shows like That Was the Week That Was, contrasted the old-school variety style of performers like Askey with emerging modern, youth-oriented comedy, portraying him as a persistent symbol of pre-war entertainment whose energetic persona and physical traits—such as his short stature—made him ripe for exaggeration.[14] A hallmark of these parodies was a long-running gag suggesting that Askey and Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother were the same individual, as they had "never been seen in the same room together."[14] This joke played on Askey's diminutive height of 5 feet 2 inches, his longevity in the public eye, and his frequent portrayals as pantomime dames in drag, implying an almost timeless, shape-shifting endurance in British culture.[44] The quip appeared regularly throughout the 1970s, underscoring Private Eye's style of absurd, conspiratorial humor that highlighted Askey's outdated yet indefatigable showbusiness persistence.[14] These satirical depictions reflected the magazine's role in skewering the old guard of British comedy, including figures like Askey alongside George Formby and Max Miller, as society shifted toward edgier, anti-authoritarian laughs.[43] By exaggerating Askey's catchphrases like "Hello, playmates!" and his relentless energy, the parodies cemented his image as a lovable anachronism, contributing to Private Eye's reputation for witty, culturally pointed critique.[14]Cultural impact
Arthur Askey played a pivotal role in popularizing catchphrases within British mass media, embedding phrases like "Hello playmates!" and "I thank you" into everyday conversation during the 1930s and 1940s through his radio and film work.[33] These elements of his improvisational style influenced subsequent comedians, who adopted similar quick-witted banter and audience engagement in their variety sketches to evoke a sense of communal humor.[45] Askey's approach helped normalize catchphrase-driven comedy as a staple of British entertainment, bridging personal quips with national familiarity.[7] Askey's career exemplified the transition from traditional music hall performances to modern broadcasting, beginning as a concert party comic in 1924 before achieving stardom via the BBC's Band Waggon in 1938.[46] This shift preserved the variety traditions of live patter, songs, and physical comedy amid the rise of radio, sustaining them through World War II broadcasts and into the postwar era when television further amplified such formats.[47] His enduring presence in these media ensured that music hall's energetic, audience-focused ethos remained central to British cultural output.[48] Askey's diminutive stature of 5 feet 2 inches and distinctive horn-rimmed glasses became iconic symbols of plucky British humor, often self-deprecatingly highlighted in his routines to emphasize resilience and cheekiness.[8] Contemporary press and shows frequently referenced these traits, portraying him as the quintessential everyman comic whose physicality underscored themes of underdog triumph in wartime and peacetime sketches.[49] During World War II, Askey contributed significantly to wartime entertainment by boosting troop morale through radio programs like Band Waggon, which continued broadcasting, and films such as The Ghost Train (1941).[50] He also participated in ENSA (Entertainments National Service Association) troop tours and concert parties across Britain, delivering live performances that provided levity and solidarity to soldiers and civilians alike.[51] These efforts helped maintain national spirits during the conflict, with Askey's upbeat style offering a counterpoint to the era's hardships.[33]Recognition
Honours and awards
Arthur Askey received the Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1969 Birthday Honours, recognising his contributions to entertainment as a comedian. In 1981, he was advanced to Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the New Year Honours for his services as an entertainer, an accolade bestowed just months before his death. These imperial honours highlighted Askey's sustained impact on British comedy and variety performance, cementing his reputation as a national institution whose career spanned radio, film, television, and stage from the 1920s onward.Legacy
Arthur Askey is widely regarded as one of the last great music hall entertainers, whose high-energy stand-up style and variety performances influenced subsequent revivalists in British comedy.[47] His rapid delivery of one-liners and improvisational flair particularly inspired fellow Liverpool comedian Ken Dodd, whom Dodd himself cited as a boyhood hero whose act resembled "a fireworks display going off."[52] This connection highlights Askey's role in bridging the music hall tradition with post-war stand-up, maintaining its optimistic and accessible essence amid evolving comedic forms. Posthumously, Askey has received nods in popular culture, such as in Adam and the Ants' 1979 song "Friends" from their album Dirk Wears White Sox, where frontman Adam Ant lists him among an eclectic array of celebrity acquaintances, underscoring his cultural footprint in punk-era Britain.[53] More recently, in 2025, an auction of Askey's personal collection—featuring over 220 lots including scripts, awards, scrapbooks, photographs, and memorabilia from his 60-year career—achieved over £57,000, exceeding pre-auction estimates of up to £50,000 and sparking global interest among collectors and comedy enthusiasts.[54][48][55][56] Askey's legacy also reveals gaps in contemporary scholarship and media coverage. While a dedicated 21st-century biography, I Thank You: The Arthur Askey Story by Anthony Slide (2020), provides the first book-length examination of his life and career, recent documentaries remain scarce, limiting deeper explorations of his techniques for modern audiences.[57] Similarly, discussions of digital revivals are underdeveloped; although clips of his performances, such as excerpts from Band Waggon (1938) and standalone routines, are readily available on YouTube with millions of cumulative views, their role in introducing his work to younger generations receives little analytical attention.[58] His enduring appeal lies in the family-friendly, optimistic humor that contrasted with the era's more satirical edges and continues to resonate against today's often edgier comedy landscape, offering a model of light-hearted resilience that Slide describes as accessible and resilient.[20] This timeless quality, rooted in Askey's diminutive persona and catchphrases like "Hello, playmates!", sustains interest in his contributions as a foundational figure in British entertainment.[59]Personal life
Marriage and family
Arthur Askey married Elizabeth May Swash on 23 March 1925 at St Michael's Church in Toxteth Park, Liverpool, where he listed his occupation as professional entertainer.[60] Their marriage lasted nearly 49 years until Elizabeth's death in 1974.[61] The couple shared a happy partnership, providing Askey with a stable retreat from his demanding showbusiness career after the birth of their daughter in 1933.[47] The Askeys' only child, Anthea Shirley Askey, was born on 2 March 1933 in Golders Green, north London.[62] Anthea followed her parents into the entertainment industry, becoming an actress who frequently appeared alongside her father in television and stage productions, reflecting the family's close bond and shared interests in performance.[63] Notable joint appearances included the BBC series Before Your Very Eyes (1956) and various pantomimes, where their familial dynamic added warmth to the family-oriented entertainment of the era.[64] Despite Askey's public fame, the family maintained a private domestic life in London's suburban areas, prioritizing a quiet home environment away from industry gossip and spotlight.[65] This emphasis on family privacy underscored the supportive role their home played in sustaining Askey's long career, with Elizabeth and Anthea offering personal encouragement amid his professional commitments.[47]Health issues and death
In the late 1970s, Askey suffered a heart attack that necessitated hospitalization and a period of recovery.[66] By the early 1980s, he developed severe circulation problems leading to gangrene, which caused swelling, blisters, and tissue death in his legs.[67] These complications led to the amputation of his legs in 1982, with the first occurring in July while he was being treated for the condition at St Thomas' Hospital in London; afterward, he was confined to a wheelchair.[67][5][68] Askey died at St Thomas' Hospital on 16 November 1982, at the age of 82.[5] His funeral took place at Putney Vale Crematorium in London.[69]Filmography
Films
Arthur Askey's film career began in 1937 and continued sporadically into the 1970s, with many of his early works produced during World War II as light-hearted entertainment for British audiences. The following is a chronological list of his feature film appearances:- Calling All Stars (1937): Askey made his film debut as a performer in this musical revue; directed by Oswald Mitchell.[70]
- Band Waggon (1940): Askey starred as a fictionalized version of himself alongside Richard Murdoch, in this adaptation of the popular BBC radio series; directed by Marcel Varnel.[19]
- Charley's (Big-Hearted) Aunt (1940): Askey played the lead role of Arthur Linden, a young Oxford student who impersonates his friend's wealthy aunt in drag to chaperone a visit; directed by Walter Forde.[71]
- I Thank You (1941): Askey portrayed Arthur, an out-of-work entertainer posing as a butler to fund a music hall show; directed by Marcel Varnel.[72]
- The Ghost Train (1941): Askey appeared as Tommy Gander, a music hall performer whose antics lead to a group being stranded at a haunted station; directed by Walter Forde.[73]
- Back-Room Boy (1942): Askey starred as Arthur Pilbeam, a timid weatherman sent to a remote lighthouse who encounters spies; directed by Herbert Mason.[74]
- King Arthur Was a Gentleman (1942): Askey starred as Arthur King, a soldier who discovers what he believes is Excalibur and dreams of knighthood; directed by Marcel Varnel.[75]
- Miss London Ltd. (1943): Askey played Arthur Bowman, a talent agent involved in an escort service mix-up; directed by Val Guest.[76]
- Bees in Paradise (1944): Askey portrayed Arthur Tucker, one of four airmen shipwrecked on a women-only island ruled by a bee-worshipping queen; directed by Val Guest.[77]
- The Love Match (1955): Askey starred as Bill Brown, a railway worker scheming to win a football pools prize; directed by David Paltenghi.
- Ramsbottom Rides Again (1956): Askey played Bill Ramsbottom, a publican who inherits a Canadian saloon and faces Western adventures; directed by John Baxter.[78]
- Make Mine a Million (1959): Askey appeared as Arthur Ashton, a TV makeup artist who helps promote a soap brand through unauthorized broadcasts; directed by Lance Comfort.[79]
- Friends and Neighbours (1959): Askey played Albert Grimshaw, a mild-mannered husband whose family hosts Russian visitors, leading to cultural clashes during the Cold War; directed by Gordon Parry.[80]
- The Alf Garnett Saga (1972): Askey made a cameo appearance as himself in this satirical film based on the Till Death Us Do Part series; directed by Bob Kellett.[81]
- Rosie Dixon – Night Nurse (1978): Askey appeared as Sir Archibald Steele, the lecherous headmaster in this sex comedy; directed by Justin Cartwright.[82]