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This second superb collected work of one of Britain's best-loved
comedians is an excellent companion to the sensational original,
'The Essential Spike Milligan'. Spanning his 50-year career and
incorporating a rich and varied range of material, this second
anthology is as wonderfully unmissable as the first. When Spike
Milligan died in 2002, he left behind one of the most diverse
legacies in British entertainment history - as well as a legion of
devoted fans and admirers. His themes ranged from environmental
issues to the war, from nostalgia to depression, and his prolific
output covers some of the most evocative events of the twentieth
century, in a style both twistedly comic and harrowingly honest.
The huge success of the Spike Milligan anthology, 'The Essential
Spike Milligan', has inspired a second raid on the original
brilliant source. Milligan was arguably the most one of the
prolific and mould-breaking comic writers of the twentieth century
and this second anthology gives another opportunity to sample his
finest writing. It includes more of the best from his war memoirs
and novel Puckoon, his children's stories, poetry and drawings plus
a wonderful collection from his voluminous correspondence from the
1960s onwards with such varied recipients as the House of Commons,
the Director-General of the BBC, Private Eye and British Telecom. A
compulsive read for all Milligan fans.
The complete memoirs of a man of many talents and faces -- the
late, great Spike Milligan -- affectionately recounted by his close
friend and agent for 35 years, Norma Farnes. 'What's he really
like?' Wherever I went and was introduced as Spike Milligan's
manager I waited for the inevitable question. In not far short of
thirty-six years it never altered. It wasn't one that could be
answered in a few words so I generally made do with 'Interesting'
or 'don't ask'... After chancing on an advertisement for a
secretarial position, Norma Farnes found herself initiated into the
world of Number Nine Orme Court where Spike and some of post-war's
other greatest comedy writers like Eric Sykes, Johnny Speight, Ray
Galton and Alan Simpson had formed a writers' cooperative. Soon
promoted to be his manager, Norma was working for a man with a
reputation for being brilliant and difficult in equal measure.;In
this affectionate yet true account, Norma Farnes looks at the whole
of Spike's life from his childhood and extraordinary family in
India, his ongoing battle with his restless mind, his numerous
affairs and his heartening struggles with many varied causes. She
gives a mass of wonderful anecdotes and revealing insights into
Spike and his circle, including, of course, his often fraught but
deep friendship with Peter Sellers. In Spike, Norma Farnes has
written a moving portrait of her greatest friend. Above all,
Spike's fascinating, very human character is brought to life on
every page.
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