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Twice Brightly
1974 novel by Harry Secombe From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Twice Brightly is a comic novel by Harry Secombe, fictionalising his experiences as a recently demobbed Welsh serviceman and army comic returning from the battlefields of North Africa and Italy and struggling to make a living in the British Variety Theatres after the Second World War. The lead character is a Welsh comic called Larry Gower, Secombe's alter ego. The title is a pun on the phrase "twice nightly". Upon release in 1974 the book was the first novel of his to be published.[1]
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Plot summary
For young servicemen who had spent six years fighting fascism, postwar Britain was a drab, oppressive place. For a young and untried army comic keen on the Marx brothers and Jimmy Cagney, a Yorkshire Variety theatre in February was a vision of Hell itself.
Film, TV or theatrical adaptations
It was dramatised as a 60-minute Radio 4 radio play by Harry's son David Secombe in 2006, first broadcast that year and repeated on Saturday 19 May 2007. This ended with Gower as a success, leaving for London to take part in "Crazy People", a play by his fellow ex-soldier and comic Jim Moriarty - this is a fictionalisation of the initial stages of the Goon Show, and Moriarty (deriving his name from the Goon character Count Jim Moriarty) is a fictionalised Spike Milligan.
Cast
- Larry Gower (Secombe's alter ego)...... Christian Patterson
- Wally ...... Dominic Frisby
- Tom ...... Philip Jackson
- Julie ...... Becky Hindley
- April ...... Katy Secombe (Harry's daughter)
- June ...... Ella Smith
- Joe ...... Gerard McDermott
- Jim ...... John Cummins
- Mrs Ma Rogers, landlady ...... Carolyn Pickles
- Hubert ...... Geoffrey Beevers
- Director Steven Canny
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Reviews
The novel became the first ever known book be reviewed in print by a member of the British royal family, with the then Prince Charles giving the work a positive review in the weekly comic magazine Punch in 1974.[2]
References
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