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Thursday 14 January 2016

''RIGHT... '', SAID FRED*

I watched the TriStar Pictures 1992 production ‘Chaplin’ again, the other night. Early in the film, Sydney Chaplin (played by Paul Rhys), who was a member of Fred Karno’s London Comedians, introduces his younger half-brother, Charlie (played by Robert Downey Jr.), to ‘The Governor’, as Fred Karno (played by John Thaw) was known. Karno says to the fledgling comedian, “You know what comedy is? It’s knowing who you are and where you come from. And… it’s got to be perfection.” Wise words.

Fred Karno was born Frederick John Westcott, in Exeter in 1866, but soon afterwards the family moved to Nottingham, where he grew up.

He began his stage career as an acrobat, and then joined a touring circus where he was required to work with other acts, including the clowns. From them he learned the skills of physical comedy and slapstick, which were to become his trademark. 

From these early beginnings he went on to become one of the greatest impresarios of the music hall age, with troupes touring all over the world. 

He turned a row of houses in Camberwell into his ‘Fun Factory’ from where an army of writers, scenery builders, props makers, etc. operated. He branched out into theatre management and produced pantomimes and reviews as well as his sketches, of which he had over eighty in his repertoire.

The great Stan Laurel was also a member of ‘Fred Karno’s Army’, and he once said, “Fred Karno didn’t teach Charlie and me all we know about comedy, he just taught us most of it. Above all he taught us to be supple and precise.”

Comedy and precision! It sounds like a contradiction of terms, does it not? Aye, there’s the rub!

Budding comedians, take note. If Fred Karno and Stan Laurel say that comedy is about precision, then that is what it’s about. And if you watch Stanley at work you will see that every action and every reaction is very precise. In my book, he’s the best that ever was, or ever will be.

Apparently, Karno also preached that laughs came when the performer didn't know what was going to happen to him but the audience did. Now there’s food for thought… and action.

“Every routine is reduced to its basic components, all the better to 'sell' the gags, both visual and spoken.” Review of Laurel and Hardy’s ‘Way Out West’ – Internet Movie Database




* The title of a song which was a Top Ten hit for Bernard Cribbins in 1962