Ronnie Corbett

TV Actor

Ronnie Corbett was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom on December 4th, 1930 and is the TV Actor. At the age of 85, Ronnie Corbett biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, TV shows, and networth are available.

  Report
Date of Birth
December 4, 1930
Nationality
United Kingdom
Place of Birth
Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
Death Date
Mar 31, 2016 (age 85)
Zodiac Sign
Sagittarius
Networth
$10 Million
Profession
Aircraft Pilot, Author, Cabaret Artist, Comedian, Film Actor, Stage Actor, Television Actor, Writer
Ronnie Corbett Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 85 years old, Ronnie Corbett has this physical status:

Height
155cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Ronnie Corbett Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Ronnie Corbett Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Anne Hart ​(m. 1966)​
Children
3 (1 deceased)
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Ronnie Corbett Career

Following national service, Corbett moved to London to start his acting career. At 5 ft 1 in (1.55 m) tall, Corbett was suited to playing roles younger than his years. References to his height frequently cropped up in his self-deprecating humour. In one of his earliest stage appearances, he was billed as "Ronald Corbett" at Cromer in Take it Easy in 1956, with Graham Stark. He appeared in Crackerjack as a regular in its early days, one episode with Winifred Atwell. He had a walk-on in an early episode of the 1960s series The Saint (as "Ronald Corbett") and appeared in films including You're Only Young Twice (1952), Rockets Galore! (1957), Casino Royale (1967), Some Will, Some Won't (1970) and the film version of the farce No Sex Please, We're British (1973).

Corbett starred in the first London production of the musical The Boys from Syracuse (as Dromio of Syracuse) in 1963 at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, alongside Bob Monkhouse. In 1965 he was in cabaret at Winston's, Danny La Rue's Mayfair nightclub. David Frost saw him and asked him to appear in The Frost Report. Corbett was in the West End, playing Will Scarlett in Lionel Bart's Robin Hood musical Twang!!. It failed, leaving Corbett free to accept. It was while working at Danny La Rue's nightclub that Corbett met Anne Hart, whom he was to marry that year. The marriage lasted 49 years, until he died.

Corbett first worked with Ronnie Barker in The Frost Report (1966–67). The writers and cast were mostly Oxbridge graduates from the Footlights tradition. Corbett said he and Barker were drawn together as two grammar school or state secondary school boys, who had not gone to university. The show was a mixture of satirical monologues, sketches and music. Corbett and Barker were beginning to be thought of as a pair.

They appeared with John Cleese in one of the most repeated comedy sketches in British television: the Class sketch. Corbett's height provided a key cue for both the visual humour and satirical value of the sketch, as he "looked up" to both Cleese and Barker's characters, and he got the pay-off line: "I get a pain in the back of my neck."

Continuing under Frost, Corbett starred in No – That's Me Over Here!, a sitcom written by Frost Report writers Barry Cryer, Graham Chapman and Eric Idle (ITV 1967–70). Cryer and Chapman wrote two follow-ups: Now Look Here (BBC 1971–73) and The Prince of Denmark (BBC 1974). Corbett also appeared in Frost on Sunday (ITV 1968) and hosted The Corbett Follies (ITV 1969). Frost was also the promoter of Corbett's 1970 novelty single "It's All Going Up Up Up", a satire on inflation.

He was a subject of the television programme This Is Your Life in April 1970 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews while appearing on the Frost on Sunday programme.

Corbett's BBC television comedy show with Ronnie Barker, The Two Ronnies, ran from 1971 to 1987. Barker and Corbett performed sketches and musical numbers. Corbett presented a monologue. Sitting in a large easy chair (emphasising his small size), and usually wearing a Lyle & Scott golfing V-neck sweater, he would stretch telling a simple joke over several minutes, often allowing himself to appear to lose his train of thought.

Corbett's best-known role away from The Two Ronnies was as the 40-something Timothy Lumsden, dominated by his mother, in the sitcom Sorry! (1981–88). In 1996, he appeared on the première of the short-lived BBC game show Full Swing, hosted by Jimmy Tarbuck. Corbett played Reggie Sea Lions in the film Fierce Creatures (1997), written by his former Frost Report colleague John Cleese.

Corbett hosted the game show Small Talk and played minor parts occasionally since its end – such as Griselda in a television production of Cinderella in 2000, and reviving his armchair monologue routines for a weekly appearance in a stand-up show hosted by Ben Elton. In 2003, he appeared in advertisements for the Sky+ digital television service alongside Alice Cooper. The premise was a running gag about their being happy housemates. In December 2004, Corbett appeared on the BBC news quiz Have I Got News for You.

In 2005, Corbett teamed up again with Ronnie Barker for The Two Ronnies Sketchbook, comedy sketches from their original series with newly recorded linking material. Also in March 2005, Corbett appeared with comedian Peter Kay in the music video for the number one single "Is This the Way to Amarillo?" to raise money for Comic Relief. Corbett is remembered for accidentally falling on the treadmill that was out of shot in the green screen video; however, he found the fall funny when played back, and it was kept in the final version. He performed in Children's Party at the Palace as Mr Tibbs, the Queen's butler.

In 2006, Corbett played a hyper-realised version of himself in Extras, caught taking drugs at the BAFTA Awards. He also starred as himself in Little Britain Abroad, in which Bubbles DeVere tried successfully to seduce him. He opened the centre in Cromer, Norfolk, named after Henry Blogg. Corbett was the castaway in the BBC Radio 4 show Desert Island Discs on 21 October 2007. In 2007, he appeared in an episode of Gordon Ramsay's The F Word. He featured as a Slitheen in a Sarah Jane Adventures episode for Red Nose Day 2009. He had a television interview about his life on 7 November 2009 for Piers Morgan's Life Stories.

In February 2010, Corbett was in the John Landis thriller comedy Burke & Hare. In August 2010 he was a panellist in the BBC 1 comedy show Would I Lie to You?. In the same month, he was the star of the Good Food HD programme Ronnie Corbett's Supper Club with Rob Brydon and Steve Speirs. The show's premise was that the main guest of the programme must choose a meal as if it were their last, and Corbett would cook it for him/her and his other guest, while they chatted about the guest's past and their current/future projects. In December of the same year he starred in a one-off special, The One Ronnie.

From 2010, Corbett starred in the BBC Radio 4 sitcom When The Dog Dies. The series reunited him with Ian Davidson and Peter Vincent, the writers of Sorry! The series returned to BBC Radio Four for another three series.

Source

JLS star Oritsé Williams' former £3million home which was ravaged by fire is being redeveloped into luxury mansion with cinema, shrine and games room after it was snapped up by new owners for £500k

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 29, 2024
JLS star Oritsé Williams former home in South London which was ravaged by fire is being redeveloped into a luxury home, MailOnline can reveal. The singer made a loss of £2.5 million after selling his Croydon mansion for just £500,000 four years ago. Oritsé purchased the mansion, once owned by comedian Ronnie Corbett for more than 30 years, for £3 milllion in 2013 and five years ago a devastating fire destroyed the property in a suspected arson attack.

QUENTIN LETTS: Powell looked like a goat trotting into a minefield when he met Penny

www.dailymail.co.uk, March 8, 2024
Lucy Powell, Labour's Shadow Commons Leader, stumbled into the chaos box. Every week she takes on Penny Mordaunt. It's like watching a goat trot into a minefield. Ms Powell is just another one of banalities' nefarious peddlers. Every apology must be 'grovelling,' according to any dossier'dodgy.' Spell-checking programs are available on computers. Why has no one invented a similar device to remove hackneyed phrases from the Commons speeches of division-two duds? The little goat trotted past the DANGER warnings and neck-bell tinkling, as they do every week. And then, as always, a terrible kaboom and shards of goat meat were released in the air. Poor Ms Powell was obliterated by Ms Mordaunt.

And it's a good buy from him: Ronnie Corbett's historic farmhouse is up for auction for £2 million, according to a Robber

www.dailymail.co.uk, November 15, 2023
Ronnie Corbett (inset left) purchased the Grade II listed property from a business that was unidentified to him and linked to Danny Penet (inset right) and was unveiled in 2019 as one of the Great Train Robbers. The diminutive Scottish entertainer became a well-known local celebrity in Crowhurst during his time at Pyes Farm. He used to stop chat and joke, and he's also raised thousands of pounds for local charities, including contributing artwork to a sale for a local hospice.