Friday 1 April 2022

I Hate That Duck

I have featured Orville, the not-so-little green duck sidekick of the late ventriloquist Keith Harris, on the blog before, but only in passing on a 2017 Christmas Cavalcade post. Today I shall go into more detail about his stellar career.

 

For those of you who don’t know, Orville was the neon-green baby duckling puppet worked by Harris from 1978 until the ventriloquist’s untimely death in April 2015. Born in Bristol (the duck, not Harris: the vent act was inspired by some green material he found backstage at a Black and White Minstrels gig in Bristol, which he passed on to his mother), Harris had already received a level of fame on stage and on TV with his orang-utan puppet Cuddles.

 

By the time of Orville’s birth, Harris was already 30 and had been working on stage since he was a teenager, winning a children’s talent show in Rhyl in 1961 before appearing in a production of Babes in the Wood In Chester in January 1962 and in pantomime, as the Timmy the Cat in Puss In Boots, later that same year. In 1963 he made his stage debut as a ventriloquist, appearing with his dummy Charlie Chat on stage in Kent during the finals of a talent competition hosted by Weekend magazine. He came second: the cash prize of £50 was presented to him by Bristol-born pianist Russ Conway.

 

Harris made his first TV appearance in 1965, on the television series Let's Laugh, and became a popular act on television variety shows. Following a spell as the host of The Black and White Minstrel Show, he also appeared several times on BBC TV's long-running show The Good Old Days. In the early 1980s, Keith, Cuddles and Orville had their own show, Cuddles and Company, which became the Keith Harris Show.

 

By the time Harris hit his third decade, he boasted a collection of well over 100 dolls, all designed by him and made by his mother, Lila, a former wardrobe mistress. As well as Cuddles and Orville, Keith’s characters included a Pakistani snake, a 10ft tall brontosaurus and a Chinese mouse. ‘My parent's home in Chester is like a zoo,’ he told The Stage. ‘but they remain as enthusiastic as me when it comes to creating new dolls. At times it's almost an obsession, but I have always held the view that originality counts for a lot in show business.’

 

Orville was a massive success, and firmly established Keith Harris as a television star. Tours and record deals followed: in January 1983 Orville’s Song hit number four on the UK singles chart, but subsequent releases would fail to have the same impact. the first of three albums, At the End of the Rainbow peaked at number 92. The others failed to chart.

 

The end of the television show coincided with a period of depression: Harris drank heavily and was arrested for drunk driving. Then his third marriage collapsed and the clubs he had invested in in Blackpool and Portugal failed, leading him to declare bankruptcy twice. However, like a number of ‘has beens’ of the period, the nostalgia boom was good to him: his career recovered and he began performing in clubs, in pantomimes and at holiday camps, in what The Stage called ‘a new era of knowing post-modern irony’.


Harris made guest appearances in a number of television shows during the 2000s including Harry Hill, Never Mind the Buzzcocks, Little Britain, Al Murray's Happy Hour, and The Weakest Link. In 2002, he was the subject of a Louis Theroux documentary When Louis Met... Keith Harris. He and Orville won the Channel 5 reality TV show The Farm in 2005, and that same year he featured in Peter Kay and Tony Christie’s (Is This the Way to) Amarillo video. His cult status was confirmed with appearances in Ashes to Ashes and Shameless and his adult show, Duck Off, was a huge hit with students.

 

In 2013 Harris had his spleen removed and underwent a course of chemotherapy after being diagnosed with cancer. Although he subsequently went back to work, the cancer returned in 2014 and he died on 28 April 2015, at the age of 67 at Blackpool Victoria Hospital.

 

I’ve been playing a fair old but from At the End of the Rainbow on The World’s Worst Records radio Show recently. In case you missed it, here are a couple of cuts for you: the pair’s cover of the James Taylor classic You’ve Got a Friend, and If Wishes Were Horses

 

Enjoy!

 

Download Friend HERE

Download Horses HERE

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