Kenny Everett
Known for: Acting
Kenny Everett (born Maurice James Christopher Cole; 25 December 1944 – 4 April 1995) was an English radio DJ and television comedian, known for his zany comedic style. After spells working on pirate radio and Radio Luxembourg in the mid-1960s, Everett was one of the first DJs to join newly created BBC Radio 1 in 1967, where he developed the comedic voices and characters which he later adapted for television. He was dismissed from the BBC in 1970 after making a flippant comment on air after a news item concerning a government minister's wife. He was later reinstated at the BBC, working both on local and national radio. In 1973, when commercial radio became licensed in the UK, he joined Capital Radio. In the late 1970s, transitioning to television, he made numerous comedy series, notably The Kenny Everett Video Show on ITV from 1978 to 1981, and The Kenny Everett Television Show on the BBC from 1981 to 1988, often appearing with Cleo Rocos, whose glamour and curvaceous figure were often used to comic effect. He was a highly versatile performer, able to write his own scripts and compose jingles in addition to operating advanced recording and mixing equipment. His personality made him a regular guest on chat shows and game shows such as Blankety Blank. In 2006, the British public ranked him number 45 in ITV's poll of TV's 50 Greatest Stars. Everett supported the Conservative Party under Margaret Thatcher and made a public appearance at the Young Conservatives conference in 1983. As a gay man, he was criticised for supporting a Conservative government which enacted Section 28, a clause of the Local Government Act which made it illegal for councils to promote gay rights. He was diagnosed with HIV in 1989, developed AIDS in 1993, and died in 1995. Description above from the Wikipedia article Kenny Everett, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Filmography
Series
Top of the Pops
Self- Host
1964
Series
Top of the Pops
Self - Host
1964
Series
An Audience with...
Self
1978
Series
Wogan
Self
1982
Series
Blankety Blank
1979
Series
The Goodies
Sir John Peel (uncredited)
1970
Series
The Kenny Everett Television Show
Self / Various Characters
1982
Series
Not the Nine O'Clock News
1979
Harty
Self
1983
Aspel & Company
1984
Series
The Kenny Everett Video Show
Self / Various Characters
1978
Saturday Night Clive
1989
Film
An Audience with Billy Connolly
Self - Audience Member (uncredited)
1985
The Bob Monkhouse Show
1983
That's Showbusiness
1989
Film
Freddie Mercury: The Final Act
Self (archive footage)
2022
Film
Bloodbath at the House of Death
Dr. Lukas Mandeville
1984
Nice Time
1968
Film
Dateline Diamonds
Himself
1965
Film
In the Best Possible Taste: A Tribute to Kenny Everett
Self (Archive Footage)
1995
The Kenny Everett Explosion
1970
Film
Sinéad
Self
2024
Film
Kenny Everett - The Complete Naughty Bits
Various Sid Snot, Angry of Mayfair, Captain Kremmen
2004
Film
Kenny Everett's Christmas Carol
Scrooge
1985
Film
The Kenny Everett Naughty Joke Box
Self/Various Characters
1981
Film
The World According to Kenny Everett
Self - (Archive)
2015
Film
Kremmen: The Movie
Captain Kremmen
1980
Film
The Unforgettable Kenny Everett
2000