Beryl Vertue surrounded by, from left, Eric Sykes, Ray Galton, Spike Milligan and Alan Simpson at 9 Orme Court, Bayswater, London W2.
Simpson, left, and Galton in 2010, with the Olympia SM3 portable typewriter they used at Orme Place. In the middle is comedian Sid James's widow Valerie.
This was the time of classic British comedy shows on radio and TV, such as Hancock’s Half Hour and Steptoe and Son. Vertue later said she understood the power of such television when the British government asked the BBC not to air a show on which she was working – Hancock’s Half Hour – because it might keep people away from polling booths at the 1959 general election. Tony Hancock’s show had successfully moved from radio to TV, and so had Vertue.
Galton and Simpson at Orme Place.
For Vertue her involvement in radio entertainment had been an accident. She’d known the scriptwriter Alan Simpson (1929-2017) from school days, after which he contracted tuberculosis. In hospital Simpson met Ray Galton (1930-2018), who also had TB. While recuperating the pair did spots on the hospital radio system, and then became comedy writing partners for 50 years. They wrote many BBC shows together, including BBC sitcoms Hancock's Half Hour (1954–1961), Steptoe and Son (1962–74) and the first two series of Comedy Playhouse (1961-63).
Galton and Simpson at Orme Place.
Needing someone to type their scripts, in 1955 Simpson called Vertue, but it was another writer who interviewed her for the job – Spike Milligan (1918-2002). He was wearing braces but no shirt and asked her what made her laugh and what tea she preferred. She didn’t want the job, it was on the other side of London. Milligan asked how much she would want to be paid each week. She decided to “price herself out of it” by asking for £10. “That’s £2, 10 (shillings) each,” Milligan said (comedian Eric Sykes was also there). “My whole life was transformed from that day,” Vertue said later.
Pickles helps with the script for The Spy with a Cold Nose, March 1966.
From left, Eric Sykes, Pickles' owner David Corbett, Galton,
Pickles' owner Jean Corbett and Simpson.
Australian businessman Robert Stigwood bought ALS in 1967 and
made Vertue deputy chairman. She also became an executive producer for the
newly-created Associated London Films. One of the films made by ALF and scripted
by Simpson and Galton was The Spy with a Cold Nose, a spy spoof starring Eric Sykes and featuring Pickles,
a black and white collie dog known for finding the stolen soccer World Cup in 1966. Vertue goes through a script with Galton and Simpson.
Till Death Us Do Part was
reworked in the United States as All in the Family, with Carroll
O’Connor playing the Alf Garnett role as the bigoted, politically incorrect
patriarch. Steptoe and Son was adapted as Sanford and Son. Stigwood
and Vertue joined forces to make theatrical productions of Andrew Lloyd Webber
and Tim Rice’s Jesus Christ Superstar and Evita, as well as the
Ken Russell film of The Who’s 1975 rock opera Tommy. In 1979 Vertue
formed her own independent television production company Hartswood Films, and
in 1992 brought out Men Behaving Badly. Vertue’s two daughters, Sue and
Debbie Vertue, joined Hartswood as producers, as did a son-in-law, Steven
Moffat, who wrote the series Jekyll and Sherlock.Simpson, Galton and Vertue.
Beryl Frances Vertue (née Johnson) was born in Croydon, London, on April 8, 1931. After leaving Mitcham county school she began her working life as a typist in a shipping firm. She was given a Lifetime Achievement Award at the Royal Television Society Programme Awards and the Harvey Lee Award for Outstanding Contribution to Broadcasting at the BPG TV and Radio Awards, both in 2012.
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