Ronnie Corbett

Ronnie Corbett

Date of birth: 04-12-1930
Born in Edinburgh, the son of a master baker, Ronnie Corbett embarked on his showbiz career after a stint doing National Service with the RAF - when he was said to have been the shortest commissioned officer in the British forces, at 5 ft 1.5in.

He made various minor TV and film appearances in the Fifties, with roles such as 'Young Hooligan' in a 1953 episode of Douglas Fairbanks, Jr Presents - and was for a while the resident comic on children's show Crackerjack.

But he really made his mark on the cabaret circuit of the Sixties, where he became a regular at Winston's, Danny La Rue's ultra-fashionable Mayfair nightclub. It was here that he was spotted by David Frost who asked him to appear in satirical show he was putting together, The Frost Report.

While working on this influential show, he forged his partnership with Ronnie Barker, drawn together becausethey were only two grammar-school boys amid Oxbridge graduates. They famously appeared together in the show's classic 'I know my place’ sketch about the British class structure, alongside John Cleese.

The Frost Report only ran from 1966 to 1967, and after that Corbett appeared in several TV shows, often produced by Frost. But in 1971, he and Barker landed the show that made them both stars - reportedly after BBC producers were impressed at the way they ad libbed at a Bafta awards ceremony. The Two Ronnies - which relied on their acting skills rather than them being a traditional straight-man/funnyman double act - ran until 1987, when Barker decided to retire from showbusiness.

Outside of The Two Ronnies, Corbett also starred as Timothy Lumsden in the sitcom Sorry!, which ran from 1981 to 1988, and hosted the game show Small Talk, from 1993 to 1996.

His career as a comic was revived in 1997, when Ben Elton invited him to reprise his famously rambling Two Ronnies 'chair’ monologues for his BBC show.

In December 2004, he guest hosted Have I Got News For You; and the following year reunited with Ronnie Barker for The Two Ronnies Sketchbook, comprising sketches from their original series with new links. In 2006, he appeared as himself in Extras, in a storyline in which he was caught taking drugs at the Bafta Awards.

He was appointed a CBE in the 2012 New Year Honours

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Ronnie Corbett’s widow Anne Hart dies at 90

Former stage star was married to the comedian fo 50 years

Ronnie Corbett’s widow, Anne Hart, has died at the age of 90.

A former West End musical star, she was married to the comedian for 50 years, died  ‘peacefully, surrounded by her family’ in the early hours of Sunday at the family home in East Lothian.

Her younger daughter, actress Sophie Corbett, posted on Facebook: ‘We lost my darling Mum at one o’clock in the morning.

‘She was an amazing woman, and my sister Emma and I, and all four of her grandchildren, Tom, Tilly, Dylan, and Billy, will love and miss her forever.

‘We will be bringing her home to Abingdon, near Croydon, which is where the family lived when my dad was alive.’

Hart was a stage star who had appeared with Bud Flanagan and Chesney Allen’s comedy troupe The Crazy Gang when she met Corbett  while working in the late-night revues at Danny La Rue’s London nightclub in the 1950s.

Corbett died aged 85 in 2016, having been diagnosed with a suspected form of motor neurone disease.

Here they are appearing together on the 1970s variety show Seaside Special.

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Published: 7 Nov 2023

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