Hancock's Half Hour

Hancock’s Half Hour

Titlescreen of the 1957 series 2 TV episode "The Alpine Holiday", featuring a diagramatic illustration of the show's title; the "Hancock" musical motif (composed by Wally Stott), a cartoon of the tuba player, Tony Hancock reading the script and a broadcast clock showing the start and length of the episode.
Genre Comedy
Running time 30 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language(s) English
Home station BBC
TV adaptations Hancock's Half Hour (1956–1960)
Hancock (1961)
Starring Tony Hancock
Sid James
Bill Kerr
Kenneth Williams
Hattie Jacques
Moira Lister
Andrée Melly
Writer(s) Ray Galton and Alan Simpson
Producer(s) Dennis Main Wilson
Tom Ronald
(radio)
Duncan Wood
(television)
Air dates 2 November 1954 to 30 June 1961
No. of series 6
(radio)
7
(television)
No. of episodes 37/63 exist
(television)

Hancock's Half Hour is a BBC radio comedy, and later television comedy series, broadcast from 1954-61 written by Ray Galton and Alan Simpson. The series starred Tony Hancock, with Sid James; the radio version also co-starred, at various times, Moira Lister, Andrée Melly, Hattie Jacques, Bill Kerr and Kenneth Williams. The final television series, renamed simply Hancock, starred Hancock alone.

Comedian Tony Hancock starred in the show, playing an exaggerated and much poorer version of his own character and lifestyle, Anthony Aloysius St John Hancock, a down-at-heel comedian living at the dilapidated 23 Railway Cuttings in East Cheam.

The series was influential in the development of the situation comedy, with its move away from radio variety towards a focus on character development.

The radio version was produced by Dennis Main Wilson for most of its run. After Main Wilson departed for his television career, his role was taken by Tom Ronald. The television series was produced by Duncan Wood. The distinctive tuba-based theme tune was composed by Wally Stott.

Radio series

Development

The radio series broke with the variety tradition which was then dominant in British radio comedy, highlighting a new genre: the sitcom or situation comedy. Instead of the traditional variety mix of sketches, guest stars and musical interludes, the show's humour derived from characters and situations developed in a half-hour storyline. This then relatively novel format, of what was in effect a single sketch each week lasting the entire half-hour (though in the radio version James and the others sometimes played different roles), was reflected in the show's title, which aptly described the series as Hancock's "half-hour".

Roger Wilmut, in his 1978 biography of Tony Hancock as a performer, credits two British radio comedy shows, already running in 1954, with establishing an uninterrupted 30-minute sitcom format: A Life of Bliss, written by Godfrey Harrison and starring George Cole, and Life with the Lyons, a programme heavily based on the US tradition of sitcoms; he therefore dismisses the notion that Galton and Simpson invented the genre.

The comedy gradually shifted to observation, with a less strong emphasis on a narrative. The playlet "Look Back in Hunger" (spoofing John Osborne's Look Back in Anger) in the episode "The East Cheam Drama Festival" from the fifth series, showed that writers Galton and Simpson were in touch with developments in the British theatre, in the use of sighs and silent pauses, something Osborne's style had in common with the plays of Harold Pinter, whose work began to emerge towards the end of the series' run. In addition, the measured pacing of the episodes was unusual in an era of fast-talking radio comedians, such as Ted Ray, who typically used a machine-gun style of delivery to fill every single second of airtime.

Setting

Hancock's character had various addresses, but by the third radio series he had arrived at 23 Railway Cuttings, East Cheam. Sometimes this was portrayed as a council house, but occasionally there was a private landlord. In a few early episodes Hancock owned the house, and later this became the norm.

The house changed to accommodate the cast: in some episodes it appeared to be a two-bedroom terraced house, with Kerr as Hancock's lodger; but in series four and five it had at least three bedrooms, as Miss Pugh was also resident in some episodes. In others she 'came round' each day, presumably from her own domicile. Railway Cuttings and East Cheam were fictitious, but Cheam is a real town in Surrey, located to the west of Sutton. The whole area is smart and expensive, and by creating 'Railway Cuttings, East Cheam' Galton and Simpson created an address for a snob who wanted to live in a 'posh' area, but could only afford the 'cheap end' (which in reality does not exist). In those days recordings of the radio shows were not commercially available, so the audience had to rely entirely on memory for details of who lived where or who did what in the show.

Commissioning of series in the UK were then closer to the American practice with extensive runs not unknown, but in this case, with only two writers. Continuity in the idiom was yet to develop, and details changed to suit each episode. The domestic situation varied, but Hancock usually portrayed a 'resting' or hopeless down-at-heel actor and/or comedian (though some episodes showed him having runs of success, while some episodes depict him pursuing professional careers as fantasies), James was always on-the-fiddle in some way, Kerr gradually became dim and virtually unemployable (although he had started out as a fast-talking American-style Australian), and Hancock's 'secretary', Miss Pugh, had such a loose job description that in one celebrated episode she had cooked the Sunday lunch.

At times the scripts would reflect topical realities of British life, such as the reintroduction of petrol rationing from November 1956 to March 1957 (during the Suez Crisis) in 'The Stolen Petrol' and a strike by members of the trade union ASLEF (Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen) from 28 May to 14 June 1955 which involved a railway strike in 'The Rail Strike'. With the notable exception of Drop the Dead Donkey decades later, sitcoms rarely contained such topical references.

Cast

Among the well-known actors who appeared in the series were Hugh Lloyd, Dick Emery, Warren Mitchell, John Le Mesurier and Richard Wattis. Also appearing were Pat Coombs, Rolf Harris, Burt Kwouk, credited as 'Burd Kwouk', and Anne Reid.

Episodes of the radio series were included in 20 underground radio stations of the BBC's Wartime Broadcasting Service (WTBS), designed to provide information and morale-boosting broadcasts for 100 days after a nuclear attack.[1]

Television version

Tony Hancock (right) and Sidney James

The television version began in 1956 under the same name and with the same writers, produced for the BBC by Duncan Wood. The television and radio versions alternated until 1959, when the final radio series and the fifth television series were both broadcast during the autumn season. Only Sid James transferred from the radio series, although Kenneth Williams and Hattie Jacques each made a couple of appearances. The television version drew on a stock company of actors, who played different supporting characters in each episode. Semi-regulars included Liz Fraser, John Le Mesurier, Hugh Lloyd, Arthur Mullard and John Vyvyan.

The final television series, broadcast in 1961, was retitled Hancock, as it was shortened from a half-hour to 25 minutes. For this final series Sid James was no longer in the cast, as Hancock had become frustrated with the format. Some of the most celebrated episodes of the TV series were produced in this final series, including "The Blood Donor", "The Radio Ham", "The Bedsitter" and "The Bowmans". Hancock's character was relocated to Earl's Court for this series.

Some episodes of the radio series were wiped, and telerecordings of some episodes from the third and fourth television series were destroyed. No episodes are known to survive from the first series of the TV show. The surviving radio episodes, which sometimes exist only in edited versions that have been cut for overseas sale to commercial radio stations, were released as CD box sets between 2000 and 2003 (see below).

In a list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000, voted for by industry professionals, Hancock's Half Hour was placed 24th. In 1962, the show became the first imported programme to win a Jacob's Award following its transmission on Telefís Éireann, the Republic of Ireland's national TV station.[2]

In 1956 and 1957 Hancock had starred in two series of a sketch show made by Associated-Rediffusion for ITV television, which were broadcast either side of his first television series on the BBC.

In 1972 a Norwegian TV show called Fleksnes Fataliteter aired for the first time. It was based on scripts from Hancock's Half Hour. The show became trilingual, as it usually starred both Swedish and Danish actors, and was broadcast in Sweden and Denmark as well as Norway. Around this time the BBC recorded an unbroadcast pilot for an aborted series called Bunclarke With an E,[3] based on "The Economy Drive" script, with Arthur Lowe and James Beck, who died shortly afterwards, in the Hancock and James roles.

Radio series episodes

Most of the radio episodes were recorded between one day and three weeks in advance of broadcast, except for Series 6 which was mostly recorded during a three-week period in June 1959 in order to avoid clashing with the recording of Series 5 of the television show.

Galton and Simpson never gave titles to any of their Hancock scripts, for radio or television; this was usually left to the girl who filed the scripts at their office, who gave them names that were a reminder of what the script was about. So when Roger Wilmut came to write his book Tony Hancock – Artiste (first published 1978) he took the liberty of inventing titles where necessary and these titles, a combination of the file names and Wilmut's own, have become the accepted ones ever since, with the approval of Galton and Simpson and the BBC.

The regular cast members generally played "themselves", in that the characters were called by the actor's real name. However, there were exceptions:

These performers are present in the series as indicated below. Two wiped episodes of the radio series—"The Blackboard Jungle" (series 3) and "The New Secretary" (series 4)—were recovered in 2002 from off-air home recordings made by listener Vic Rogers.

Series 1

  1. The First Night Party
  2. The Diamond Ring
  3. The Idol
  4. The Boxing Champion
  5. The Hancock Festival
  6. The New Car
  7. The Department Store Santa
  8. Christmas at Aldershot
  9. The Christmas Eve Party
  10. Cinderella Hancock
  11. A Trip To France
  12. The Monte Carlo Rally
  13. A House on the Cliff
  14. The Sheikh
  15. The Marriage Bureau
  16. The End of the Series

Episodes 2, 5, 7, 8, 9 and 15 no longer exist. (However, in April 2014 the BBC re-recorded "The Hancock Festival", selected by and recorded in the presence of Galton and Simpson, with Kevin McNally as Tony Hancock. The episode aired in November 2014, the 60th anniversary of its first airing.)

Episodes 5 and 15 feature the only Hancock guest appearances by Spike Milligan and Peter Sellers respectively.

Three of Hancock's co-stars in the first series were born in South Africa.

Series 2

  1. A Holiday in France
  2. The Crown Jewels
  3. The Racecourse
  4. A Visit To Swansea
  5. The Holiday Camp
  6. The Chef That Died of Shame
  7. Prime Minister Hancock
  8. The Rail Strike
  9. The Television Set
  10. The Three Sons
  11. The Marrow Contest
  12. The Matador

Episodes 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 10 and 12 (more than half the series, including all four of Harry Secombe's guest appearances) no longer exist. (However, in April 2014 the BBC re-recorded "The Matador", selected by and recorded in the presence of Galton and Simpson, with Kevin McNally as Tony Hancock. The episode to be aired to celebrate the 60th anniversary of its first airing.)

Shortly before the series was due to be recorded Hancock walked out on a theatre performance suffering from "nervous exhaustion" and flew to Rome. Harry Secombe was brought in at short notice to replace Hancock and starred in the first three episodes, and made a guest appearance in the fourth. Hancock himself returned for the fourth episode and completed the series as scheduled.

The original script for episode 12 of the series, "The Counterfeit", which was about a political crisis, was rejected because of the events occurring in Suez at that time. (The script has been published in Richard Webbers' book 50 Years of Hancock's Half Hour in 2004.)

Series 3

  1. The Pet Dog
  2. The Jewel Robbery
  3. The Bequest
  4. The New Neighbour
  5. The Winter Holiday
  6. The Blackboard Jungle
  7. The Red Planet
  8. The Diet
  9. A Visit To Russia
  10. The Trial of Father Christmas
  11. Cinderella Hancock (a new production of the 10th of the 1st series)
  12. The New Year Resolutions
  13. Hancock's Hair
  14. The Student Prince
  15. The Breakfast Cereal
  16. How Hancock Won The War
  17. The Newspaper
  18. The Greyhound Track
  19. The Conjurer
  20. The Test Match

Episodes 4, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 15 and 17 no longer exist. Only a short extract from episode 12 survives; this plus episodes 8 and 16 only survive in poor sound quality. (However, in April 2014 the BBC re-recorded "The New Neighbour", "The Breakfast Cereal" and "The Newspaper", selected by and recorded in the presence of Galton and Simpson, with Kevin McNally as Tony Hancock. The episodes are to be aired to celebrate the 60th anniversary of their first airing.) On 21 July 2015 the BBC re-recorded "The Red Planet" and "How Hancock Won The War" as part of the second series of "The Missing Hancocks" to be broadcast by Radio 4 later in the year. It was also announced by producer Neil Pearson that the Missing Hancocks will run for 4 series and re-record all of the missing episodes.

Series 4

  1. Back From Holiday
  2. The Bolshoi Ballet
  3. Sid James's Dad
  4. The Income Tax Demand
  5. The New Secretary
  6. Michelangelo 'Ancock
  7. Anna and the King of Siam
  8. Cyrano De Hancock
  9. The Stolen Petrol
  10. The Expresso Bar
  11. Hancock's Happy Christmas
  12. The Diary
  13. The 13th of the Series
  14. Almost A Gentleman
  15. The Old School Reunion
  16. The Wild Man of the Woods
  17. Agricultural 'Ancock
  18. Hancock in the Police
  19. The Emigrant
  20. The Last of the McHancocks

All episodes still exist.

Series 5

  1. The New Radio Series
  2. The Scandal Magazine
  3. The Male Suffragettes
  4. The Insurance Policy
  5. The Publicity Photograph
  6. The Unexploded Bomb
  7. Hancock's School
  8. Around the World in Eighty Days
  9. The Americans Hit Town
  10. The Election Candidate
  11. Hancock's Car
  12. The East Cheam Drama Festival
  13. The Foreign Legion
  14. Sunday Afternoon at Home
  15. The Grappling Game
  16. The Junkman
  17. Hancock's War
  18. The Prize Money
  19. The Threatening Letters
  20. The Sleepless Night

All episodes still exist.

Welcome to London was broadcast live on 3 August 1958 on the BBC Light Programme from the London Coliseum to commemorate the Cardiff British Empire and Commonwealth Games. It features a nine-minute sketch with Hancock, James and Kerr.[4] A recording of the whole 90-minute programme was discovered in the collection of Bob Monkhouse after his death. The Hancock sketch has been broadcast on BBC Radio 4 Extra.[5]

Christmas Special

"Bill and Father Christmas"

This episode still exists.

Special remake series for BBC Transcription Services

  1. The 13th of the Month (remake of 'The 13th of the series', 13th of 4th series) The script was re-written so that the plot did not hinge on it being the 13th of a series as broadcast.
  2. The New Secretary (remake of 5th of 4th series) Hattie Jacques's arrival is presented in flashback, so the show can be placed anywhere in a series.
  3. The Ballet Visit (remake of 'The Bolshoi Ballet' 2nd of 4th series) Ballet company changed to The Covent Garden Ballet, to avoid topical reference to 1956 visit to London by the Bolshoi Ballet.
  4. The Election Candidate (remake of 10th of 5th series) Hancock now stands for the local Independent party instead of the East Cheam Liberal party as he did in the original.

These episodes are remakes for overseas sales, rewritten to remove any topical or UK-specific references.

All episodes still exist, for many years the TS version of "The New Secretary" was the only version known to exist until an off-air audio recording of the original version was found in 2002.

Series 6

  1. The Smugglers
  2. The Childhood Sweetheart
  3. The Last Bus Home
  4. The Picnic
  5. The Gourmet
  6. The Elopement
  7. Fred's Pie Stall
  8. The Waxwork
  9. Sid's Mystery Tours
  10. The Fete
  11. The Poetry Society
  12. Hancock in Hospital (a.k.a. Visiting Day)
  13. The Christmas Club
  14. The Impersonator (a.k.a.The Impressionist)

All episodes still exist.

Television series episodes

Sid James was a regular in series 1–6. (He does not appear in episodes 1 and 2 of series 2.)
Kenneth Williams appeared in every episode of series 2, playing a variety of characters.
Hattie Jacques appeared throughout series 2, in all episodes except the first, playing a variety of characters.
Patricia Hayes appeared very occasionally in series 4–6 as Mrs Cravatte, Hancock's maid.

Series 1

  1. The First TV Show
  2. The Artist
  3. The Dancer
  4. The Bequest (based on radio programme, 3rd of 3rd series)
  5. The Radio Show
  6. The Chef That Died of Shame (a re-make of radio programme, 6th of 2nd series)

No recordings exist.

Series 2

  1. The Alpine Holiday
  2. Lady Chatterley's Revenge
  3. The Russian Prince
  4. The New Neighbour (a re-make of radio programme, 4th of 3rd series)
  5. The Pianist
  6. The Auction

Episode 1 exists on a telerecording.

Series 3

  1. The Continental Holiday
  2. The Great Detective
  3. The Amusement Arcade
  4. A Holiday in Scotland
  5. Air Steward Hancock, The Last of the Many
  6. The Regimental Reunion
  7. The Adopted Family
  8. The Elocution Teacher (postponed from 18/11/57 when telerecording of The Alpine Holiday was shown instead)
  9. The Lawyer: The Crown v James S: Hancock QC Defending
  10. Competitions:How to Win Money and Influence People
  11. There's an Airfield at the Bottom of My Garden
  12. Hancock's 43 Minutes – The East Cheam Repertory Company (A Special show from the Television Theatre)

Episodes 5, 9, 10, 11 and 12 exist on telerecordings.

Series 4

  1. Ericson the Viking
  2. Underpaid!, Or, Grandad's S.O.S.
  3. The Set That Failed
  4. The New Nose
  5. The Flight of the Red Shadow
  6. The Horror Serial
  7. The Italian Maid
  8. Matrimony – Almost
  9. The Beauty Contest
  10. The Wrong Man
  11. The Oak Tree
  12. The Knighthood
  13. The Servants

Series 5

  1. The Economy Drive
  2. The Two Murderers
  3. Lord Byron Lived Here
  4. Twelve Angry Men
  5. The Train Journey
  6. The Cruise (features Hattie Jacques)
  7. The Big Night
  8. The Tycoon
  9. Spanish Interlude
  10. Football Pools

The entire series exists on telerecordings.

Series 6

  1. The Cold
  2. The Missing Page
  3. The Emigrant (based on radio show of same name)
  4. The Reunion Party
  5. Sid in Love
  6. The Baby Sitters
  7. The Ladies Man
  8. The Photographer
  9. The East Cheam Centenary
  10. The Poison Pen Letters

The entire series exists as telerecordings. Also a trailer made for Australian TX of this series exists.

Series 7

  1. The Bedsitter (a.k.a. Hancock Alone)
  2. The Bowmans
  3. The Radio Ham (a.k.a. Mayday)
  4. The Lift (a.k.a. Going Down)
  5. The Blood Donor
  6. The Succession – Son and Heir

The entire series exists on telerecordings.

One script for Hancock's Half Hour/Hancock was not used "The Diplomat". (published in Richard Webbers' book 50 years of Hancock's Half Hour in 2004).

Chronological listing of Hancock's radio and television broadcasts, 1954–1961

Information on series dates taken from the book Tony Hancock: Artiste (1978) by Roger Wilmut, Eyre Methuen ISBN 0-413-38680-5 (subsequent reprints in 1983 and 1986 contain additional details). Information on wiped radio episodes taken from the CD box sets (BBC Worldwide, 2000–2003).

Commercial releases

Four episodes of the TV series were re-recorded and released on LP format, two by Pye on the 1961 album Hancock ("The Blood Donor" and "The Radio Ham") and two by Decca on the 1965 album It's Hancock ("The Missing Page" and "The Reunion Party"), which was reissued as The World of Tony Hancock in 1975. BBC Records released an LP titled Hancock featuring the original TV soundtracks of two episodes, "The Lift" and "Twelve Angry Men." The episode "The Lift" was taken from the separate magnetic soundtrack of the telerecording, with the opening non-dialogue sequence omitted and one extra line of dialogue added: "Watch that door button... Oh my God!" as recorded by Hugh Lloyd on 24/08/76 and edited in. "Twelve Angry Men" was from the optical soundtrack of the telerecording, with theme and incidental music omitted, a few lines of dialogue edited out and pauses shortened.

The LP credits the theme music to Angela Morley, even though the music was omitted, and the episodes were recorded when she was still called Wally Stott.

There have been six LPs released of substantially complete radio episodes. The first was by Pye Records in 1960 entitled This is Hancock containing "The Wild Man of The Woods" and "Sunday Afternoon At Home." The other five were by BBC Records, released as Hancock's Half Hour: "The Poetry Society" and "Sid's Mystery Tours", released in 1980; "The Americans Hit Town" and "The Unexploded Bomb" in 1981; "The Scandal Magazine" and "The Last of the McHancocks" in 1982; "The Sleepless Night" and "Fred's Pie Stall" in 1983; and finally "Hancocks War" and "The Christmas Club" in 1984. These five LPs were also released on audio cassette at the same time. Also, a number of comedy-themed LPs, EPs and 7-inch singles have been released over the years which have featured short extracts from various radio episodes.

The radio series of Hancock's Half Hour was first released on cassette by the BBC as part of their Radio Collection series of audio cassettes in the late 1980s. The first three volumes were re-issues of the five LPs from the 1980s plus the LP of television soundtracks from 1976. Because only 10 volumes were made with four episodes each, and because a number of episodes were later returned from homemade off-air recordings by listeners, a release of the radio series was never completed on cassette. In 2000, the episodes still remaining from Series 1 of the radio series were released as a box set on CD. Series 2–6 followed throughout the next three years. The series has also been given three compilation CDs.

The television series of Hancock's Half Hour was first released on VHS/Betamax in 1985 under BBC Enterprises (now Worldwide) in an incomplete form. A Laserdisc of Volume One was also issued under catalogue number BBCL 7004. Six videos were released, each containing three episodes and were mainly drawn from the last three series. The next video release was not to be for another nine years, and that was "The Very Best of Hancock," a compilation including all episodes from the final series but excluding the last, "The Succession: Son and Heir." In 1996, a video was released containing the first three remaining episodes. Two later videos were released in 1997, and another featuring "The Train Journey" was released in 1999. In 1992 "Hancock: The Australian TV Series in Colour" was released, compiled from the three episodes of the 1968 Australian series completed before Hancock's death. This was released on VHS in the both UK and Australia.

The first DVD to be released was in 2001, which was a re-release of "The Very Best of Hancock" video. The next DVD was to be released in 2004, containing the first five episodes and the rarely seen "Hancock's Forty-Three Minutes." However, 2 Entertain released a box set in 2007 called The Tony Hancock Collection, containing every existing episode and new bonus features, including Hancock's interview in the Face to Face from 1960.

In June and August 2009, six off-air audio recordings of lost TV episodes from Series 4 were unearthed, though they had been knocking around the bootleg market for some time; however, two of them are very poor quality. The six episodes were: "Underpaid or Grandad's S.O.S.", "The Flight of the Red Shadow", "The Horror Serial", "Matrimony – Almost", "The Beauty Contest" and "The Wrong Man".

In 2009, the surviving radio episodes were repeated weekly on the digital network BBC Radio 7, chronologically sequenced.

References

  1. Hellen, Nicholas (11 July 1999). "Julie Andrews to sing to Brits during nuclear attack". Sunday Times.
  2. The Irish Times, "BBC wins award for Hancock series in first T.E. critic's selection", 5 December 1962
  3. Neil Clark "James Beck: the Dad’s Army star cut off in his prime", telegraph.co.uk, 6 August 2013
  4. "Radio Specials", Tony Hancock Appreciation Society
  5. John Plunkett "London 2012 Olympics: Tony Hancock show to be re-broadcast", The Guardian, 27 July 2012

External links

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