Nicholas Parsons

Nicholas Parsons

Date of birth: 10-10-1923
Date of death: 28-01-2020
Nicholas Parsons was born in 1923, the son of a GP in Grantham, Lincolnshire, whose patients included the parents of Margaret Thatcher. After his education at St Paul's School, London – where he excelled in Latin, Greek and rugby – Parsons started an apprenticeship as an engineer to please his family, , even though he knew acting was his true passion, and earned a mighty 49p for a 48-hour week. He briefly worked in the Clydeside shipyards before studying engineering at the University of Glasgow.

He started doing impersonations, which landed him his first professional engagement on the radio, the joined an amateur concert party, before going into repertory as an actor at Bromley in Kent.

He moved to the legendary London cabaret circuit in the Fifties, where he was resident comedian at the famous Windmill Theatre for six months; and in 1956 teamed up with comedian Arthur Haynes in 1956. Parsons played his straight man on TV for a decade until Haynes's sudden death in 1966.

He then worked with Benny Hill, being a regular on his show from 1969 to 1974, as well as working solo - most famously hosting the Anglia Television game show Sale of the Century, broadcast weekly from 1971 to 1983.

Other notable TV appearances include playing himself in the 1988 Comic Strip Presents film Mr Jolly Lives Next Door; playing a vicar in Doctor Who in 1989; and guest hosting Have I Got News for You in 2005.

Parsons made his film debut in 1947, and appeared in many British comedy films in the Fifties and Sixties. He returned to the West End stage in 1967 to star in Boeing-Boeing, and has more recently taken the role of the narrator in the The Rocky Horror Show.

Parsons will also be forever linked with the Radio 4 panel game Just a Minute, whcih he has hosted since its first broadcast on December 22, 1967. During the late Sixties he also presented a two-part programme on Radio Four called Listen To This Space, a small part of the 'satire boom' of the time.

In 1976, he was asked to stand as Liberal Party candidate for Yeovil. He refused – allowing an unknown newcomer called Paddy Ashdown to fight, and win, the seat

Between 1988 and 1991 Parsons was Rector of the University of St Andrews, and was given an honorary Doctor of Laws degree for his work there. And in 2005 he became honorary chairman of the International Quizzing Association.

He is also active in the Grand Order of Water Rats charity, and was president of the Lord's Taverners chairty in 1998-1999. He also works for the NSPCC, the Variety Club and Childline. In 2004, he was awarded OBE.

He continues to tour a one-man show, which is esecially popular on cruise ships, and in 2000 started an annual stage chat show at the Edinburgh Fringe.

His autobiography, The Straight Man - My Life In Comedy, was published in 1994.

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Have you got your Nicholas Parsons Day decorations up yet?

Radio 4 Extra dedicates Christmas Eve to the late Just A Minute chairman

Radio 4 Extra has declared Christmas Eve ‘Nicholas Parsons Day’, dedicating its full programming to him.

His friend Paul Merton will be fronting the day of documentaries, drama and comedy – including a conversation with new Just A Minute host Sue Perkins about their shared memories of being on the show.

Programming includes Parsons narrating a new musical version of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol which was recorded in 2018 but never previously broadcast. 

Steve Wright has also made a special programme for the day, looking back at the many times Parsons guested on his Radio 2 show.

Archive programmes getting another airing include:

How Pleasant To Know Mr Lear:  Parsons’  tribute to one of his favourite comic writers, the creator of The Owl and the Pussycat, Edward Lear. From 1995.

Doon The Watta: Parsons goes 'doon the watta' to the Clyde where he worked as an apprentice engineer in 1940s Glasgow. From 2010.

The Grantham Connection: Parsons travels to his first childhood home, where his father was the local GP, and the Roberts family were his patients, with a daughter who was to be better known as Margaret Thatcher. From 1994.

The Arthur Haynes Show: In his big break in entertainment, Parsons plays the straight man  to comedian Arthur Haynes. From 1962.

Listen To This Space: Parsons stars in his own comic creation, in the wake of TV’s That Was The Week That Was, one of  BBC Radio’s first radio satire shows. From 1966.

Just A Minute: A classic episode of the show Parsons chaired from 1967 to his death in 2020, with Kenneth Williams, Peter Jones, Alfred Marks and Shelia Hancock. From 1976. Plus the last episode where Perkins played the game with Parsons as host, alongside Gyles Brandreth, Andy Hamilton and Merton. From 2017.

Just a Minute’s Indian Adventure: Parsons travels to India to explore how Just A Minute inspired 'Jamming' tournaments in Indian colleges. From 2012.

Parsons would have been 100 this year, but died on January 28, 2020, aged 96.

• BBC Two is dedicating Christmas Day to Caroline Aherne. As well as the documentary, which Chortle first revealed last week, the channel will air classic episodes of The Royle Family and The Mrs Merton Show in the evening. It will also air a block of Morecambe and Wise reruns earlier in the day.

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Published: 6 Dec 2023

Just minutiae

Nicholas Parsons' book Welcome To Just A Minute!,…
2/09/2015

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