Max Wall

Comedian

Max Wall was born in Brixton, England, United Kingdom on March 12th, 1908 and is the Comedian. At the age of 82, Max Wall biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, and networth are available.

Date of Birth
March 12, 1908
Nationality
United Kingdom
Place of Birth
Brixton, England, United Kingdom
Death Date
May 21, 1990 (age 82)
Zodiac Sign
Pisces
Profession
Actor, Comedian, Film Actor, Stage Actor, Television Actor
Max Wall Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 82 years old, Max Wall physical status not available right now. We will update Max Wall's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

Height
Not Available
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Max Wall Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Max Wall Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Not Available
Children
5
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Max Wall Career

Career

Wall auditioned for a part with a touring theatre company, and made his stage début at the age of 14 as Jack in Mother Goose with a travelling pantomime company in Devon and Cornwall featuring George Lacey. In 1925 he was a speciality dancer in the London Revue at the Lyceum. He became determined not to rely on his father's name, so abbreviated Maxwell to Max, and his stepfather's name Wallace, to Wall.

He is best remembered for his ludicrously attired and hilariously strutting Professor Wallofski. John Cleese has acknowledged Wall's influence on his own "Ministry of Silly Walks" sketch for Monty Python's Flying Circus. After appearing in many musicals and stage comedies in the 1930s, Wall's career went into decline, and he was reduced to working in obscure nightclubs. He then joined the Royal Air Force during World War II and served for three years until he was invalided out in 1943.

Wall married dancer Marion Pola and the couple had five children. In an interview with the family in the mid-1950s, Tit-Bits magazine wrote: "The kind of private jokes you find in all the nicest families flourish with the Walls. After Max and his wife, Marion, had their first son, Michael, it seemed kind of natural to make a corner in names beginning with ‘M’, and there are now Melvyn (aged nine), Martin (nearly five) and the four-month-old twins Meredith and Maxine. ... In the same way, because the Walls, like other couples married during the war, were eventually thrilled when they found a house with four walls of their own, they decided to call it just that, only Martin arrived and made it ‘Five Walls’."

In a rare outing to the musical stage he played Hines in the original London production of The Pajama Game, which opened at the London Coliseum in October 1955 and ran for 588 performances. In that year he began an affair with Jennifer Chimes, the 1955 Miss Great Britain. He divorced his wife and married Jennifer in 1956. The relationship attracted widespread press condemnation. In 1957 Wall experienced mental health issues that affected his work. Jennifer and Max divorced in 1962.

In 1966, he appeared as Père Ubu in Jarry's Ubu Roi, and in 1972 he toured with Mott the Hoople on their "Rock n' Roll Circus Tour", gaining a new audience. Wall re-emerged during the 1970s when producers and directors rediscovered his comic talents, along with the expressive power of his tragic clown face and the distinctive sad falling cadences of his voice. He secured television appearances and, having attracted Samuel Beckett's attention, he won parts in Waiting for Godot in 1979 and Krapp's Last Tape in 1984. His straight acting gained him this review in 1974: "Max Wall makes Olivier look like an amateur in The Entertainer at Greenwich Theatre...".

He also appeared in Crossroads (as Walter Soper, 1982 to 1983), Coronation Street (as Harry Payne, 1978) and what was then Emmerdale Farm (as Arthur Braithwaite, 1978). He played ex-con Ernie Dodds in Minder in 1982, with George Cole.

But the stage renaissance was offset by domestic sadness. His children were estranged from him and the taxman lost patience and declared him bankrupt.

Wall played one of the inventors in the 1968 film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and in 1977 he was seen as King Bruno the Questionable in Terry Gilliam's film Jabberwocky. In the 1970s and 80s, Wall occasionally performed a one-man stage show, Aspects of Max Wall, in which he recaptured the humour of old-time music hall theatre.

On 1 April 1977, Wall's version of Ian Dury's song "England's Glory" (which featured in Dury's stage show Apples) was issued on Stiff Records (BUY 12), backed with "Dream Tobacco" and given away with the album Hits Greatest Stiffs. Wall also appeared onstage with Dury at the Hammersmith Odeon in 1978, but was poorly received, and said "They only want the walk".

In 1981, Wall played "Ernie", a central character in the Minder TV series episode "The Birdman of Wormwood Scrubs".

Between 1982 and 1984 he appeared as Tombs in the BBC Two adaptation of Jane based on the Daily Mirror comic-strip character and filmed with similar "comic-strip frames". In the second series his place in the castlist was upgraded to second, after Glynis Barber. He also appeared in Thames Televisions 1978 12 part series, Born and Bred, as retired music hall legend Tommy Tonsley, trying with various degrees of success, to keep his huge south London family in line. Unfortunately, this little gem is largely forgotten and there are no plans to release a DVD or re-show on TV.

His last film appearance was in 1989 in the 12-minute film A Fear of Silence, a dark tale of a man who drives a stranger to a confession of murder by answering only "yes" or "no" to his questions; those two words, repeated, were his only dialogue. The film won a gold award in the New York Film and TV Festival.

Source

In a Turkish moped crash, a father and his son, ten, were killed as a result of a 'final errand' before heading home to Ireland

www.dailymail.co.uk, July 19, 2023
An Irishman and his ten-year-old son, who died in a moped crash in Turkey, were 'carrying out a final errand' before returning to Ireland after being knocked down and killed. On Monday afternoon, Eoin Fitzpatrick, 36, and his son Dylan died after a bus crashed into them in Alanya's tourist district. Eoin's other son, a 15-year-old boy, remains in Turkey with his father and her children. The boy's mother is currently on her way to Turkey to help with the repatriation of her child and former partner's bodies. On the D-400 highway in the Kargicak District, which was traveling from Alanya to Mersin, the father and son's moped collided with a bus, according to Turkish media.

As the 'absolute gem' adolescent is laid to rest, tragically the Irish student's beloved dogs join mourners

www.dailymail.co.uk, July 12, 2023
According to Monsignor Ciarán O'Carroll, Andrew O'Donnell (inset), an 18-year-old with a "kind spirit" and a "sense of humour" that could lighten the darkest of days, was bid farewell by a grieving congregation at the Church of the Sacred Heart in Donnybrook, Dublin, this morning. Bebhinn, Andrew's mother, was seen clutching the parish priest in an anglishing embrace outside the church, while Marnie and Maisie, Andrew's two dogs, waited patiently in tow. (left). O'Carroll said the room was packed with mourners gathering to pay their respects to the young man whose "untimely death had left all of us shocked and sad." Friends of Andrew's funeral Mass (right) brought elements of his life, including sports paraphernalia, a Kanye West album, and a dog lead, a touching tribute to his admiration for his golden retrievers. O'Donnell's funeral Mass took place two days after his friend Max Wall, 18, was laid to rest at the same church.

'He was a power of nature,' the parents of an Irish student who died on a Greek holiday island.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, July 10, 2023
Max Wall, 18, tragically died within hours after finding out that his missing schoolmate Andrew O'Donnell, 18, had been discovered dead after a night out. Niall, a boy from south Dublin, told mourners at a funeral service in Donnybrook on Monday that he was "robbed of a promising future." Max was full of life... He had a burning desire to see the world and experience as much of it as he could.' Max was an amazing brother to Charlie, and they were some of the best friends ever.' "We will love him forever," he said.'