Between acts Doddy liked a pint to quench his thirst. However, because he was so famous, Ken couldn't simply walk into the nearby pub without causing a bit if a sensation. I used to
go for his bevvy regularly. Once off stage I used to pop into the pub in my costume, which caused a bit of a
stir. Pints in hand, I would return to the theatre and see Ken sat in his dressing room reading one of the many books on comedy
that he regularly devoured. Or, more usually, counting out the spoils
of his Diddy Men franchise. Like Ebenezer Scrooge, tickling sticks,
colouring books, dolls of Doddy - you name it - Ken flogged the lot to a legion of fans... and raked in a veritable fortune.
Ken retained two women who would
stand in the foyer taking in thousands of pounds during the interval
when the kids were all fired up on Doddy and his jam-butty mines.
Over
the run of the show, whenever I would return with his pint, I would regularly see
wads of cash stuffed into bags which would later go in the boot of
his nearby Jag.
Doing
the maths, I reckon Old Ken, who was then in his fifties, was probably pulling in about two thousand
quid a day minimum - six days a week.
And with matinees
the takings would leap to phenomenal levels.
Ken's stipend
never went to the production company which looked the other way. They
knew that this wasn't really Dick Whittington, but the Ken Dodd Show.
Dodd was without doubt one of the most thrilling entertainers on the
stage and had so much onstage charisma that he could light a city
with it.
However, the mask of comedy slipped on one occasion during that drive back to Liverpool.
The
Lift to Knotty Ash
The
trains weren't running out of Birmingham. I couldn't get
home. However a former Bluebell dancer and singer was also appearing alongside Doddy
under the stage name Sybie Jones. “Anne” (her real name) was also
Ken's girlfriend. They seemed really close. They had been together for
a couple of years. A really nice woman, Anne was then in her late
thirties. She came in for a bit of stick due to her being cast in
the pantomime as the Fairy of the Bells. But as nice as the fairy in
the production she was, Anne was ten times nicer off the stage too...
When she heard that I couldn't get home for Christmas,
she would have none of it... and ordered Ken to give me a lift.
I didn't hold out much
hope because, whilst they lived in the other direction of the M62, my
home was closer to the centre and out of their way.
There
were also two Kens, the lightning-fast comedian, and the more
staid and conservative loner.
Ken like most stars I had met, was
naturally protective of his privacy... and Anne his great and loving protector. However, to my great surprise and relief, Doddy said: “Annie says you need a lift. Ok, kid!” (He used to call me Kid as I was in my early
twenties.)
Immediately
after the curtain came down the colouring books and tickling sticks
had been sold and the cash was firmly in the boot of Ken's Jag. Anne
was behind the wheel. Ken had recently been banned from driving due
to drink-driving. However, before we headed for the motorway he had arranged to stop off for midnight mass at a nearby church.
No
matter where Doddy was appearing he did this every year and it was
set-in-stone. Unfortunately lovely Anne got lost in Birmingham's then
notorious one-way traffic system and with every turn of the wheel
gone was the comic genius - and in his place was a very
dark and moody Ken.
And as the clock ticked, and that midnight Christmas mass looked ever
doubtful, Ken started to criticise Anne's driving. The king of quaint colloquialisms turned the air blue with four-letter invective.
Finally, having enough of this, Anne slammed her foot on the brake. Nearly sending Ken through the
windscreen, she stormed off in tears telling him to drive and giving
a few expletives back.
Doddy
looked at me; What's up with her – daft cow!”
He
jumped in the driver's seat and took off after Anne, telling her to
get back in the f-ing car. People looking on in amazement mouthing: 'Isn't that..?.'
Coaxed
back, Anne remonstrated. She told him he couldn't drive: "You're banned!"
Ken would have none if it... He was headed for
midnight mass and nothing was going to stop him.
Unfortunately
as he steered this way and that through the city centre he was
getting even more lost, and with mounting tight-lipped anger the devil had emerged.
Suddenly
Doddy pulled up alongside this man, wound the window down and said “'Scuse me mate, do you know where the church is?”
This
guy looks in the window and started to say. “Ermm... ermmm.' His eyes went wide. He started to stutter: '”Hold on
hold you you''re you're - Oh my god. You're you're... you're... hold
on..”
--With
that Ken floored the accelerator: 'Forget it!”he said. Leaving the man staring open mouthed and thinking.. I'm sure that was Ken Dodd.
When
we finally arrived at the church we were late. Ken was really, as he
might put it "discomknockerated".
We rushed into the congregation.
The Priest was in full flow and
blessing his flock. However... murmurs were going all around the
church “Doddy!” “It's Doddy!”
The priest, seeing Ken Dodd, stopped making the sign of the cross and rushed down the
aisle. The king of the Diddy Men had blessed one little church with his royal “plumtiousness”.
Doddy knelt. He placed his
tongue out, and took holy communion. Ken,
who had turned the air in the car blue, now looked as if butter
wouldn't melt in his mouth. He looked incredibly serene. And what was that? There was a halo around his head. It was from the flickering candles. A true master, he had somehow managed to find the limes, even in church.
Ken Dodd was upstaging God!
During
the journey back to Liverpool, Ken started to have a bit go
at my naive ambitions about acting. Anne told him off. But Doddy
explained: 'You have to work hard if you want to make a success.
That's all I'm saying, kid. It's the non-stop honing of your craft,
falling down and' pickin' yerself up, that's the main thing. And even
then you have to be lucky. Do that, Kid, and you're set.”
So
said the man who had an instinctive timing and stage presence that
electrified millions. I wasn't about to disagree.
The
drive back to Knotty Ash should have taken just under
two and a half hours. However, even though it was in the opposite
direction, Doddy, who must have been absolutely knackered after his
gargantuan performance and the drive, dropped me near my house.
“Toxteth...hmmm OK” he had demurred.
I
waived as they headed back to Knotty Ash after telling me where to
meet on Boxing Day for the lift back to the show.
It
was early morning. As I knocked at my mum's door she was waiting up
for me.
"Ken
Dodd just dropped me off,” I said chuffed.
"Yeas,
sure,” she said.
She
was supposed to say 'Did he?' Then I could respond: 'No Doddy.'
Mum wasn't falling for that one, "Ken Dodd... in Toxteth?"
But, anyway...
As for that dosh in the back of his car.... where did it end up?
Before his death Ken's house was raided in a search for his missing millions. Three
hundred and thirty six thousand pounds was found in a suitcase. The rest was apparently secreted in 20 offshore accounts.
But TheBigRetort can reveal where Doddy's millions lay buried... in a jam-butty mine in Knotty Ash.
Kenneth Arthur Dodd OBE was born 8th
November 1927. He died on the 11th
March 2018, the undisputed King of Comedy.
How tattyfilarious.
Copyright (c) TheBigRetort