- Born
- Died
- Height5′ 10″ (1.78 m)
- 'Eric Sykes' started as a radio scriptwriter but he soon found he could perform as well as write. The slight handicap of being very hard of hearing doesn't interfere with his wonderful comic timing. The spectacles he wears have no lenses but contain a bone conducting hearing aid.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Steve Crook <steve@brainstorm.co.uk>
- After leaving school he had various jobs including, house painter, grocer, joiner, junior clerk in a cotton mill, then at the out break of WWII joined the RAF as a wireless operator and was demobbed in 1946. He got a big break when a draft script he submitted for the radio show Variety Bandbox was accepted. He went on to write for The Goon Show and appeared at the London Palladium. In 1959 the BBC gave him his own show then in 1967 he wrote, directed and acted in the short film 'The Plank'. He was married to Edith, a Canadian, and had 3 daughters and a son and lived in Weybridge.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Tonyman 5
- SpouseEdith Eleanore Milbrandt(February 14, 1952 - July 4, 2012) (his death, 4 children)
- Horn-rimmed glasses.
- He is often quoted as saying that although Monty Python was brilliant it marked the start of a decline in comedy.
- His treatment of Hattie Jacques in their last few years working together was so bad that her sons banned him from attending her funeral and memorial service.
- He is the father of three daughters: Kathy Sykes (born in 1952), Susan Stronge (born in 1953) and Julie Sykes (born in 1958), and one son, David Kurt Sykes (born in 1959).
- He was awarded the OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) in the 1986 Queen's Birthday Honours List for his services to drama.
- He was enormously successful on 70s TV, teamed with Hattie Jacques playing his heavyset but timid sister in a number of settings, particularly with the series, Sykes (1972).
- I'm proud of being a vaudevillian, the last of my line. A lot of people think my entertainment is candy-floss. Well, entertainment is too aggressive these days, all 'in your face'.
- If comedians want to make a social comment they can go to the House of Commons. I don't swear or do anything suggestive, and I've held onto that belief because when you're on stage you're a role model.
- It's a load of crap to say that comedians want to play Hamlet. A good comedian has more Hamlet in him than any straight actor.
- I was trying to create the act that didn't have one word in it, the complete mime act, and I'm still trying.
- If you understand comedy, you understand life. Drama, death, tragedy - everybody has these. But with humor you've got all these, and the antidote. You have found the answer. It doesn't follow that because you are a good comedy writer, you're a happy fellow. I've got one of the most miserable faces in the world. I am only happy when I am working. If I'm not working, I get screwed up because my time is going, my life is slipping by.
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