Kenneth Williams

Actor

Popular As Kenneth Charles Williams (Ken, Kenny)

Birthday February 22, 1926

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace King's Cross, London, England

DEATH DATE 1988-4-15, Bloomsbury, London, England (62 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 5' 8" (1.73 m)

#10986 Most Popular

1923

Williams had a half-sister, Alice Patricia "Pat", born to his mother in 1923 before she had met Charles and three years before Kenneth was born.

He was educated at The Lyulph Stanley Boys' Central Council School, a state-owned Central school, in Camden Town, North London, and subsequently became apprenticed as a draughtsman to a mapmaker.

His apprenticeship was interrupted by the Blitz, and he was evacuated to the home of a bachelor veterinary surgeon in Bicester.

It provided his first experience of an educated, middle-class life.

He returned to London with a new, vowel-elongated accent.

1926

Kenneth Charles Williams (22 February 1926 – 15 April 1988) was a British actor and comedian.

He was best known for his comedy roles and in later life as a raconteur and diarist.

Kenneth Charles Williams was born on 22 February 1926 in Bingfield Street, King's Cross, London.

His parents were Charles George Williams, who managed a hairdressers in the Kings Cross area, and Louisa Alexandra ( Morgan), who worked in the salon.

Charles was a Methodist who had "a hatred of loose morals and effeminacy", according to Barry Took, Williams's biographer.

Charles thought the theatre immoral and effeminate, although his son aspired to be involved in the profession from an early age.

1935

Between 1935 and 1956, Williams lived with his parents in a flat above his father's barber shop at 57 Marchmont Street, Bloomsbury.

1944

In 1944, aged 18, he was called up to the British Army.

He became a sapper in the Royal Engineers Survey Section, doing much the same work that he did as a civilian.

When the war ended he was in Ceylon and he opted to transfer to the Combined Services Entertainment Unit, which put on revue shows.

While in that unit he met Stanley Baxter, Peter Vaughan, Peter Nichols and John Schlesinger.

Both of Williams' parents were born in London, but with a Welsh heritage extending for several generations.

1948

Williams's professional career began in 1948 in repertory theatre.

1954

Failure to become a serious dramatic actor disappointed him, but his potential as a comic performer gave him his break when he was spotted playing the Dauphin in Bernard Shaw's St Joan in the West End, in 1954 by radio producer Dennis Main Wilson.

Main Wilson was casting Hancock's Half Hour, a radio series starring Tony Hancock.

Playing mostly funny voice roles, Williams stayed in the series almost to the end, five years later.

His nasal, whiny, camp-cockney inflections (epitomised in his "Stop messing about ... !" catchphrase) became popular with listeners.

Despite the success and recognition the show brought him, Williams considered theatre, film and television to be superior forms of entertainment.

1955

In 1955 he appeared in Orson Welles's London stage production Moby Dick—Rehearsed.

The pair fell out after Williams became annoyed with Welles's habit of repeatedly changing the script.

When Hancock steered his show away from what he considered gimmicks and silly voices, Williams found he had less to do.

1960

He sustained continued success throughout the 1960s and 1970s with his regular appearances in Carry On films, and subsequently kept himself in the public eye with chat shows and other television work.

Williams was fondly regarded in the entertainment industry; in his private life, however, he suffered from depression.

He kept a series of diaries throughout his life that achieved posthumous acclaim.

1968

He was one of the main ensemble in 26 of the 31 Carry On films, and appeared in many British television programmes and radio comedies, including series with Tony Hancock and Kenneth Horne, as well as being a regular panellist on BBC Radio 4's comedy panel show Just a Minute from its second series in 1968 until his death 20 years later.

Williams grew up in Central London in a working-class family; he claimed his father spoke Cockney.

He served in the Royal Engineers during World War II, where he first became interested in becoming an entertainer.

After a short spell in repertory theatre as a serious actor, he turned to comedy and achieved national fame in Hancock's Half Hour.

Williams sometimes described himself as Welsh, noting his parents' surnames and origins in his diaries and in interviews.: In 1968, during the filming of Carry On Up the Khyber in Snowdonia National Park, Williams stated that "I always like being back in Wales. I always feel a hiraeth, it always comes back to you, once you step back into the place where you have atavistic memories."

A year later, Williams would describe a debate in Ireland when he was told he had some nerve showing his "English face in Dublin".

Williams dramatically responded with a "very slow take and riposted 'Wanna get your facts right, dear, I'm Welsh'" before rising to his feet and reciting The Bard. A Pindaric Ode by Thomas Gray.

Williams noted that this performance was cut short by applause, for which he was grateful as he did not know any more of the poem.

Two years before his death, Williams guest hosted the Wogan chatshow; drawing the audience's attention to a display of red roses, Williams commented, "It's St George's Day today and the rose is the symbol of St George, the patron saint of England. I wouldn't know anything about it. I'm not English, I'm Welsh."

before proclaiming "Mymryn bach o Gymru, Cymru fydd, Cymru sydd – Cymru am byth!"

(A little bit of Wales, Wales will be, Wales is – Wales forever!) Despite this, he disliked nationalism, and opposed devolution.