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Ken Dodd: The Biography
 
 

Ken Dodd: The Biography [Kindle Edition]

Stephen Griffin
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Review

"'A reminder of Dodd's joyful brilliance' The Mail on Sunday"

Product Description

This is the first complete biography of the last of the great British comedians, published to coincide with his 80th birthday in November 2007. A new generation of fans and comedians, including Johnny Vegas, Victoria Wood and Vic Reeves, are now rediscovering Dodd's unique talents. Dodd has a huge and fiercely loyal fanbase. On the eve of his eightieth birthday, Ken Dodd is still touring the country, performing in packed venues an average of two nights a week with his legendary four-hour sets. 'I do it because that is what I do. I do it because that is what I am,' he said, when asked why he continues with this punishing schedule. Ken Dodd's career has spanned over five decades as he went from singer to actor, and presently, most famously, comedian. He is considered the last, great, music-hall-inspired variety comic, but what drives this man whose career has been tainted by hardship? Dodd still lives in his childhood home of Knotty Ash and has never married, despite having two-long term fiances. In 1989, his strange relationship to money culminated in a trial for tax evasion, and he was also famously stalked by a mystery woman. How did this feather-duster salesman become one of the most loved, though least-lauded, British comedians of all time? Stephen Griffin interviewed friends, colleagues and fellow comedians to get inside the mind of the original Diddyman.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Hardly definitive 4 Jan 2008
By Pismotality TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
"Ken Dodd the Biography"? Slightly cheeky title, that, suggesting as it does a
definitive study. Dodd himself offered no cooperation and spoke darkly of "pirates"
who'd written about him against his will in a recently repeated edition of BBC's Arena programme
celebrating his eighty years; Michael Billington's monograph, now several decades
old, was the only book he spoke about with warmth (try your library).

Griffin's book passes the time agreeably enough but his prose doesn't have the
sparkle of a John Fisher (Funny Way to Be a Hero & Tommy Cooper), nor is there the
sense of involvement of a Graham McCann (Morecambe and Wise & Frankie
Howerd)- ie the author doesn't have a compelling enough individual style to
compensate for the lack of direct access to his subject. True, there are some insights
from sympathetic interviewees like Roy Hudd but also a fair amount of pointless
soundbites from celebrities (Anne Widdecombe?!) which don't offer much or are
quoted too briefly to be of use; Bob Monkhouse - not, in my view, a natural comic but
one who undoubtedly understood and appreciated others - is the notable exception
here.

One plus point is that Griffin does offer chapter and verse on the tax trial, which earlier
books obviously couldn't do, but overall there seems little sense of the comedian's
inner life. Dodd spoke in the Arena documentary of writing his autobiography; let's
hope he is spared to do so. Though in fairness to Griffin maybe Monkhouse's
comment that for Dodd "everything offstage is an interval" means that Dodd the person
is of less interest than the "clever, spinning Dervish of a madman that he has invested
with life" when performing.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful
By Neutral VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
I found this book so readable I was unable to put it down. It's extremely well researched, including personal interviews as well as press cuttings. I had no difficulty relating the person revealed in the book to the clown I once saw live on the stage.

Anyone looking for a different person than the one who reveals himself in his shows, or is described in this book, is pursuing a chimera. This is Ken Dodd, warts and all. Dodd himself gave up trying to analyse comedy after discovering that comedy is what makes people laugh. Amateur psychologists should do the same.

Dodd bought a house he never lived in because he prefers familiar things.
His was a life for living not for accounting. He never cared for details and he never cared to reveal his private thoughts. It's others, not Dodd himself, who suggested he never married because of parental influence - he never could get used to the idea of forming another family.

He still lives in the house where he was born, the table is still set the way his mother used to set it and the HP bottle is out as it always was. He's still the bloke from Knotty Ash, who still lives in Knotty Ash and will always live in Knotty Ash. No further explanation is required and there's no reason why Ken Dodd should be asked to provide one either.

And who can blame him given the way his private life was stripped away during his trial for tax evasion?. True to form Dodd turned disaster (he did have to pay a lot of back tax) into triumph with a lot of well received Revenue inspired material.

Griffin has got it right. Dodd has kept the old music hall tradition alive with a madcap routine which provides audiences with excellent value for money (I left his live show at 12.40 a.m. when he was still going strong having been there since 7.30.p.m)!!! An excellent read, well worth the money.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I found this to be a very interesting and informative book and well worth having for any Ken Dodd fan .
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