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Will Hay

 
Actor: Will Hay
 
  • Born: 1888 in Stockton-on-Tees, England, UK
  • Died: Apr 18, 1949 in London, England, UK
  • Occupation: Actor, Writer, Director
  • Active: '30s-'40s
  • Major Genres: Comedy
  • Career Highlights: My Learned Friend, Good Morning, Boys, Oh, Mr. Porter!
  • First Major Screen Credit: Dandy Dick (1935)

Biography

With his supercilious sniff, ill-fitting pince-nez and overall air of pompous ineptitude, Will Hay was one of the great British character comedians of his time. A former bookkeeper, Hay began his music-hall career in 1909, performing a sketch in which he impersonated a seedy, incompetent schoolmaster. He would continue to play this character, or variations thereof, for the rest of his professional life; his familiar catchphrase "Good Morning, Boys" served as the title of Ray Seaton and Roy Martin's 1978 biography of Hay. In films from 1934, Hay generally shared the screen with his two favorite foils, rotund Graham Moffatt and toothless Moore Marriott. His best film was Oh, Mr. Porter (1937), in which he played a bumbling stationmaster who manages to round up a nest of smugglers. Hay collaborated on the screenplays of most of his films, and co-directed his last two efforts, The Goose Steps Out (1942) and My Learned Friend (1943). These final films weren't quite as successful as Hay's earlier vehicles, possibly because of his ill-advised decision to divest himself of stooges Moffatt and Marriot. When he wasn't convulsing audiences, Will Hay was a serious student of astronomy; in 1935 he published a book on the subject, Through My Telescope. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Will Hay
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Will Hay

A publicity shot for the film
The Ghost of St. Michael's.
Born William Thomson Hay
6 December 1888(1888-12-06)
Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, England
Died 18 April 1949 (aged 60)
Chelsea, London, England
Cause of death Stroke
Resting place Streatham Park Cemetery, London
Occupation Comedian, comic actor, director, astronomer
Spouse(s) Gladys Perkins (m. 1907 sep 1935)
Children Gladys Elspeth Hay (b. 1909)
William E. Hay (b. 1913)
Joan A. Hay (b. 1917)
Parents William R. Hay
Elizabeth

William Thomson Hay (6 December 188818 April 1949) was an English comedian, actor, film director and amateur astronomer.

He was born in Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, England to William R. Hay and his wife Elizabeth but moved to Suffolk at an early age.[1][2]

Contents

Film career

He was trained as an engineer and joined a firm of engineers but at the age of 21 he gave up that profession for acting. He had a relatively brief screen career: by the time he made his first film he was in his mid-40s and an established music hall artist, and his last role came less than a decade later. But between 1934 and 1943 he was a prolific and popular film comedian. He was credited on several films as a writer or co-ordinator, and was arguably the dominant "author" of all the films in which he appeared, in that they were built around his persona and depended on the character and routines he had developed over years on the stage.

He worked at the British film studios of Elstree, then Gainsborough, then Ealing; the Gainsborough period was the most consistently successful, particularly when he worked with the team of Marcel Varnel (director), Val Guest and Marriott Edgar (writers), and Moore Marriott and Graham Moffatt (supporting cast) - as on the railway film Oh, Mr Porter! (1937), his most fondly remembered picture with its catchphrase, 'The next train's gone!', spoken by Marriott as the decrepit old deputy stationmaster. Hay decided to break up the partnership with Moffatt and Marriott and was never quite the same again. He brought in Claude Hulbert as his side-kick for The Ghost of St. Michael's (1941). The Goose Steps Out for Ealing (1942) was an effective anti-Nazi piece of slapstick, and, finally, My Learned Friend (1943), again with Hulbert, was a masterpiece of black comedy, which some regard as his best.

Radio career

The half hour weekly Will Hay Programme began in August 1944, and was broadcast live from the Paris Cinema, which still exists in a basement just off Piccadilly Circus. There, St. Michael's schoolmaster Dr. Muffin (referred to by his students as Old Crumpet) barely kept a kind of order from his desk, perched slightly higher from his unruly students, Charles Hawtrey who played the cheeky Smart (later to go on to the Carry On films), John Clark, a child actor who played the annoying swot D'arcy Minor (later to gain fame as Just William), and an air force recruit, Billy Nichols, who on his days off played the really dumb schoolboy, Beckett. The series lasted about four months, and was prematurely cancelled, owing, it was said, to a dispute with the BBC over scripts. But it found a continuing life on the music hall stage, at the top of the bill at London's Victoria Palace.

The cast was brought together one last time for an all variety anticipatory celebration at midnight May 4, 1945 for the Royal Family and many military notables at a private function at the Life Guards barracks in Windsor, which featured the leading comics of the day. The war in Europe ended just four days later. This may also have been Will Hay's last performance prior to his illness, and his son Will Hay, Jr. carried on his father's act for a while.

Private life

Aside from his day job as a comedian, Hay was a dedicated and respected amateur astronomer. His personal observatory sat in his garden in Mill Hill, the dome very visible from the main Hendon Road. He became a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1932. He is noted for having discovered a white spot on the planet Saturn in 1933 [3]; the spot lasted for a few months and then faded. He also measured the positions of comets with a micrometer he built himself, and designed and built a blink comparator. He wrote the book Through My Telescope in 1935. At his death, his telescopes were bequeathed to University College, London, and are still used for teaching astronomy.

He was also one of Britain's first private pilots and gave flying lessons to Amy Johnson. He was a polyglot and before entering the acting profession full time, was an accomplished translator - fluent in French, German, Latin, Italian, Norwegian and Afrikaans.

As a favourite trick for his friends, he would write rapidly seeming nonsense on a blackboard, look at it thoughtfully for a minute with a puzzled expression, then turn the blackboard upside down and there would be a perfectly written statement of some kind. And he could take someone's dictation, and repeat the trick.

He married Gladys Perkins in 1907 [4] but legally separated on the 18th of November 1935. They had two daughters and a son, Gladys Elspeth Hay (b. 1909) [5], William E. Hay (b. 1913)[6], Joan A. Hay (b. 1917) [7].

In 1947 he had a stroke which left him physically crippled. He died at his home in Chelsea, London after a further stroke in 1949 and is buried in Streatham Park Cemetery, London SW16.[8]

Filmography

See also

  • Will Hay by Graham Rinaldi with foreword by Ken Dodd, Tomahawk Press, 2009

References

  1. ^ 1891 UK census: RG12/1494 f.56 p.47 & p.48 - 192 Clapham Road, Lowestoft, Suffolk
  2. ^ GRO Register of Births: MAR 1889 10a 49 STOCKTON - William Thomson Hay
  3. ^ MNRAS 94 (1933) 85
  4. ^ GRO Register of Marriages: DEC 1907 8d 287 SALFORD - William Thomson Hay = Gladys Perkins
  5. ^ GRO Register of Births: MAR 1909 8d 83 - Gladys Elspeth Hay
  6. ^ GRO Register of Births: SEP 1913 8d 120 SALFORD - William E. Hay
  7. ^ GRO Register of Births: SEP 1917 8d 64 SALFORD - Joan A. Hay
  8. ^ GRO Register of Deaths: JUN 1949 5c 251 CHELSEA - William T. Hay, aged 60

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Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Will Hay" Read more