A Ridge of High Laughter! The Wonderful World of Radio Fun

A Ridge of High Laughter! The Wonderful World of Radio Fun

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A Ridge of High Laughter! The Wonderful World of Radio Fun

Softcover 300 pp

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Inglés (Reino Unido) · 

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Alan Clark's latest book is a 300-page full-colour look at the 'Wonderful World of Radio Fun', the Amalgamated Press's weekly comic that ran for 1,152 issues between 1938 and 1961. The comic was filled with the stars of the wireless that helped see Britain through the war years when the nascent BBC television service was forced to shut down on 1 September 1939, only resuming transmission on 7 June 1946.

Radio Fun got off to an odd start, putting a non-radio character (Roy Wilson's 'George the Jolly Gee-Gee') on the colour front page; this lasted a few months before George was replaced by Arthur Askey from Band Waggon, where "Big-hearted" Arthur was teamed with Richard "Stinker" Murdoch. The show only ran for 52 episodes in three short series between 1938 and 1939, but was so popular that it became a film and stage show in 1940; Arthur's move from back cover to front cover reflected his popularity in Radio Fun.

Tommy Handley also began as a strip in the early 1940s, but took over the cover in around 1945, by which time Handley was firmly established as a top radio attraction, starring in ITMA (It's That Man Again). It almost never happened, as the first series had to be abandoned when war broke out. It restarted a few week's later, but in a revamped format that really took off.

Radio Fun included dozens of now forgotten stars like Sandy Powell, Duggie Wakefield and the duo Haver and Lee; but it also featured Bebe Daniels and Ben Lyon, Kenneth Horne, Petula Clark, Gracie Fields, Peter Brough, Arthur English, Benny Hill and Norman Wisdom, plus singing trio The Beverley Sisters. Listeners to Radio 4 Extra should recognise most of those names.

For adventure, readers had text stories starring Inspector Stanley "The man with a thousand secrets", who battled a remarkable criminal known as The Falcon. The Falcon eventually escaped Stanley's clutches to star in his own comic strip. Shirley Eaton, before she became James Bond's golden girl, was an adventuress, caught up in—and solving—countless crimes. 'Jane X' also began as a text series that turned into a comic strip, replacing Shirley Eaton.

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