CheapShow - Ep 262: Grumpy Sessions: The Cream Of Acting
Episode Date: December 24, 2021It's our final show for 2021, but we are going out with something a little bit special. Something a little bit different. This week, Paul & Eli take a look back on the life, the work and the ice cream... of everyone's favourite actor, Grumpy Sessions. Over the course of this deeply heart-warming episode, you will hear from the man himself, reflecting on his career and his body of work. You'll also hear from some of those people most close to him throughout his life. Their anecdotes will delight and inspire us all. They'll also be a few opportunities to hear clips from some of Grumpy's most treasured roles! This Christmas (or whatever), join CheapShow for a fascinating and moving portrait of one of Britain's best kept secrets... Mr Grumpy Sessions. The Cream of Acting! See pictures and/or videos for this episode here: https://www.thecheapshow.co.uk/ep-262-grumpy-sessions-special And if you like us, why not support us: www.patreon.com/cheapshow If you want to get involved, email us at thecheapshow@gmail.com And if you want to, follow us on Twitter @thecheapshowpod or @paulgannonshow & @elisnoid Like, Review, Share, Comment... LOVE US! Oh, and you can NOW listen to Urinevision 2021 on Bandcamp... For Free! Enjoy! https://cheapshowpodcast.bandcamp.com/album/urinevision-2021-the-album MERCH Official CheapShow Merch Shop: www.redbubble.com/people/cheapshow/shop www.cheapmag.shop Thanks also to @vorratony for the wonderful, exclusive art: www.tinyurl.com/rbcheapshow Send Us Stuff CheapShow PO BOX 1309 Harrow HA1 9QJ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, Merry Christmas.
Hello, everyone.
I'm Paul Gannon.
I'm Eli Silverman.
And today we're doing something very special for Christmas 2021, aren't we, Mr. Silverman?
Yes, it's been a hard year for a lot of people, Paul.
And this is a project we're about to introduce, which I think bring a bit of uh joy to some people you
know it's been built from love yes and it's been built from care uh we think you're going to enjoy
what we've got planned for you this week so what we have uh for you lovely listeners is a little
deep dive a little documentary we've put together which features one of our most beloved guests
and uh he he's also uh sometimes performs on the show as well.
He's been known to.
We've used his talent once or twice.
He's had a very long, quite distinguished career.
You know, a bit like that documentary,
Ten Feet From Stardom.
He's a bit like that.
He's been around famous people,
almost there, not quite making it.
He's the 12th Beatle.
He's that kind of career person, isn't he?
Wasn't that Jesus Christ?
I don't know.
No, Jesus was number 13, wasn't he?
I don't know what Jesus was.
He was number 13.
In the Beatles?
No, he had 12 disciples, so he was number 13.
And you're saying four of those were the Beatles?
Yeah, John, Paul.
No, they were the Gospels, didn't they?
And then the Beatles.
It's all getting very confusing.
And I just, I'm about to say something.
What?
I don't know, something sweary.
Don't.
This is a nice episode for Christmas,
celebrating the love, the art, and the work and history of Grumpy Sessions.
Grumpy Sessions, everybody.
So sit back, relax, and let us take you on a journey
via the words of Grumpy himself through his life and times.
Enjoy, everybody.
Enjoy. Merry Christmas.
Yes, this way.
Oh, nice. No, it's a nice little place you've got here, actually.
Well, thank you very much. Yes, I just had it done last year.
Come through.
Oh, thank you.
Come through.
Thank you. This is my living
room. Oh, it's very depressing and small. Well, you know, I like to keep things cosy.
There's only one, you know, you don't want to have to walk a mile to get to the kitchen,
do you? No, you can just reach over and grab your tea's made. It's just there. A toaster
just there as well. It's just there. No, it's very low.
Can I take a seat here?
Oh, please.
I'll just move these TV times as you've got stacked up on it.
Oh, I've got loads of those.
Yes, I love to look at them.
So I'll just take a...
So we're just going to do a little...
Leafing through the papery times, I think of it like that.
Well, we're just going to do...
Sometimes they get all crumbly.
Why?
They powder up.
You powder your TV times as well? I don't powder them, no. Sometimes they get all crumbly. Why? They powder up.
You powder your TV times as well? I don't powder them, no.
They become powder, like everything.
Hang on, let me just check the date on some of these.
Radio Times, 1983.
They're very old.
It's very powdery, that one.
Oh, it's extremely powdery.
It's very powdery.
Make yourself at home now.
How terrible of me, I'm being a terrible host.
I'm just not used to the company.
Now, would you like a beverage of some sort? I've got tea. I'm being a terrible host You know I'm just not used To the company Now
Would you like
A beverage of some sort
I've got tea
I've got some tea
I'll take a tea
Coffee's instant
I could do a ripey
No
No tea's really nice actually
I'll have a tea
I've got a
What's it
The squash
I'll have a tea
You'll have a tea
Yes
One tea
Coming up
So yeah
We just thought We'd sit down with you
And record your memories and thoughts for a bit
You know
You know what it doesn't matter
If you can't find the tea bags
It's just me and Eli
Thought it would be nice to have a little conversation with you
Get your memories down on record
Yes Mr Silverman.
I was hoping to see him.
He's unfortunately doing other interviews for this.
He's actually interviewing some people you've worked with in the past.
We've managed to track down a few of your old starlets.
Oh, no, you haven't.
Yes, no, it's going to be good times.
Right.
All right.
OK, well, then I'll just set the recording up here.
That's fine.
Here we go.
I'm just going to put that on the table.
Right, there you go.
Oh, thank you.
Oh, I didn't ask you if you wanted sugar.
No, no, I'm cutting back.
Do you want sugar?
I've got sugar.
No, I'm cutting back.
It's fine.
No, please sit down.
Okay.
So just relax.
Just an informal chat between the two of us.
Do you want this blanket?
No, no, no, I'm fine.
All right, OK.
OK, so, where do we start?
So, it says here you were born in 1943.
43 years. I tried to lie about that over you.
What do you remember about your mother and your father?
Oh, Daddy was a very distant man. He was a, he was a salesman.
He used to sell books
and hoovers,
you know.
Oh,
wow,
so a bit of everything.
He,
he did,
but you know,
he was never home.
Oh,
that's a shame.
He was never home.
He was a shadow
in the,
in the doorway.
That's how I remember him.
Slam!
Slam!
Slam.
Her mother, of course.
I remain close to her to this very
day. What, she's still alive? Wouldn't that make her
like over a hundred? No, she's
still going, just about.
Is she in this house?
No, no, no, no.
Absolutely not. I do keep her
room preserved,
but no, she's in the
home. She's in a home
very nearby. I get to see her most
days. Oh wow, that's interesting
because I honestly, I thought
with your age and her age, she must have had you quite
young then. She was, yeah.
I mean, I don't think she loved
Dad really. She just got
knocked up in the cinema.
It used to happen, you know.
You'd go to the pictures, you'd get a finger up you, but in the dark, you don't know if it's a finger or the other cinema you know it used to happen you know you'd go to the pictures you get a finger
up you but in the dark you don't know if it's a finger or the other you know and it was it turned
out to be the other turned out to be my daddy's winky all the way up daddy's other oh anyway me
and mother very close and she used to encourage me to perform from a very early age she did she
dressed you up in lots of weird costumes, I believe.
She dressed me up as an...
I've seen the pictures, actually.
As an ice cream... I seem to remember a lot.
Ice cream boy.
She'd go,
Mummy wants to lick ice cream boy's head.
Yes, yes, she used to...
Didn't you find that unusual, though?
Well, I didn't have anything to compare it to, you know.
Fair enough.
Daddy wasn't there.
He was slamming the door.
Leaving.
And I used to play in the kitchen.
And she used to pretend it was snowing by taking some flour.
Yeah.
And all the powder.
And the powder.
The powder.
We'd pretend the powdered flour was snow, you see.
Oh, okay.
We used to do little scenes.
You made it very powdery then around the room.
Very powdery. And you were dressed up as a. We used to do little scenes. You made it very powdery then around the room. Very powdery.
And you were dressed up as a little ice cream salesman.
Yes, or other characters, you know.
So, okay.
From books and stuff, I was Bar Bar the Elephant at some point.
So was it that dress-up play with your mother that led you to get the acting bug initially?
Oh, absolutely, yes.
She encouraged me
no end. Still does.
You know?
Still keeps prompting you on.
If I'm on the telly,
pop up on the telly
in the communal dining area.
Yeah, where they all sit and slowly die.
She's very proud.
In front of loose women.
She's proud and she goes, that's... That's my boy.
That's my Grumpy.
Why did she call you Grumpy?
What's your mother's name?
Your mother's father's name? Well, I know your father
was called Angry Sessions.
Angry Sessions, yes. I believe he was Dutch.
He was... Well,
he said he was Dutch.
But, you know, I think he... Well, you never met him, so you don't know. Well, I met him. But, you know, I think he...
Well, you never met him, so you don't know.
Well, I met him.
But, you know, he was gone by the time I was five or so.
Just, just...
And your mother, what was her name?
Sad Sessions.
Sad Sessions.
Sad Sessions.
Oh.
Is it kind of a...
I think you'd call her Sade.
No, but back thenade She was a smooth operator
She certainly was, very smooth
Sometimes quite powdery
When the smoothness breaks off
And the powder
Starts to form
Anyway, your sad sessions
I can't complain really
No
So when you went to school then,
was she the one who spurred you on to take part
in the school productions of plays and things like that?
Oh, absolutely.
I remember my very first acting role.
On the stage in front of, in school?
It was in school, yes.
And I was a little ice cream seller boy.
Right.
Yes.
What was the play called?
It was a nativity,
but they...
And they ran out of costumes
and said,
can you come in
with what you had
and you got to...
I had this apron thing
that looked very much,
could be converted
to an ice cream
sort of cellar thing.
So, you know...
So, at the manger,
there was Jesus Christ,
the wise men,
the animals,
and you...
Well, I was one of the three wise men.
They updated the wise men to the ice cream seller wise man.
And then there was the milkman wise man.
And then there was the Hoover salesman wise man as well.
Well, the Tupperware.
The Tupperware man, yeah.
Salesman.
Wiseman as well.
Well, the Tupperware.
The Tupperware man, yeah.
Salesman.
You know, for a small school, it was quite forward thinking.
You know, they did a lot of interesting things from what I can understand.
You went to quite a progressive school.
Yes, I mean, there was boys and girls, which was quite unusual at the time. Back then, yeah.
It would have been in the 50s, yeah.
And they had a very strange diet.
Right.
The school dinners had to be dairy.
Everything was dairy.
Everything creamy.
And that's right, it's strange,
because your school was called St. Creamy,
so there must have been a whole thing going on.
Oh, yes.
Were they associated with the local dairy factory?
Yes, they had connections with all sorts of nationwide dairy chains,
and a lot of people who worked in the industry sent their children there.
I mean, I just happened to be local.
Wow, there was...
If you like cheese, it was a great school to go to.
Did you like cheese?
I love cheese to this day.
I've got some great cheeses in at the moment.
If you want something to go with your tea...
No, I'm all right for now.
Wensleydale? No, I'm all right for now. Wensleydale?
No, I'm good for cheese.
Cheshire?
And cream and butter.
Oh, cream.
I've got clotted, single, double.
Have you ever heard of triple cream?
No.
Fucking creamy, don't you?
So from there on, you were getting small roles in the school plays and things like that.
You were a Sir Arnold de Bergerac and the school production of that, you seem to say.
Yes, with the big nose.
Yeah, what did you play in that?
Oh, I can't.
It was some kind of a cellar of ices of some sort.
Oh, okay.
I don't remember that being in the original book.
No, Ken, they just,
they tried to put in things to do with the dairy world
into their plays.
Like those bathtub musicals or whatever
that I've heard about.
Corporations put on musicals
and then, so these are all milk-based.
It was very much like that.
It was a dairy-based school.
You know,
there's a downside to that.
You have
a kind of dairy-focused
life. Well, it happened to me. My school
when I was growing up was near to the Cadbury's factory.
So our school play that year was The Crunchable.
Oh, The Crunchable.
Was that a...
About, you know, the witch trials.
But it was about who had crunchies.
I see, I see, yes.
And of course, when you left school,
one of the first projects,
I managed to find this out really randomly,
although I couldn't find any evidence
outside of the one fact was
you started a band.
Oh, yes, absolutely.
I mean, the beat phenomenon was in full swing.
It was, wasn't it?
With the Beatles.
Early 60s, you were kicking this off.
Oh, it was huge.
It was everywhere.
And I thought, how am I going to break into showbiz?
It's going to have to be in a group of some sort,
a beat group, a beat combo.
So, me and a few friends
from the school, we, you know,
we couldn't play very well, of course,
but, you know, we tried,
and we learned a few chords, as you do,
and then we formed a group.
We formed a group, the Ice Cream Men.
Right, okay.
The Ice Cream Men, because that format was very
popular in the naming at the time
you know there's something men there's something men this the that yeah the who
there's a lot of bands with the definitive definitive article yeah we were the ice cream
men um what and so a bit kind of skiffle we started that but soon you know the decade crept
up on us and it was the psychedelic was all the rage.
So we were actually one of the first groups to put a concept album down.
It was called The Melted Cornetto.
Here's the thing.
And the lead number that was a sort of motif that repeated throughout the album
was called Ice Creams Melt My Mind, you see.
And then, you know, like the LSD, I never touched that.
No.
I used to have a little drink maybe, but never that hard stuff.
Anyhow.
What if they mixed it together with some cream?
I would have lapped that shit right up, yes, probably.
But it just stayed on the tape, the whole album,
and it was never picked up.
I was going to ask you, why aren't there any...
Why is there no music online? I couldn't find anything.
We didn't get a deal.
And I think they did press some albums,
but they were all melted down and made into glocks in America. I heard.
All the strange things. They made it into
plastic guns, which is a bit
ironic with our
peace and love message, but they
take the records and they turn them
into weapons of war.
That must have been sobering.
It was sobering and I was
very disillusioned and I thought,
well, that's failed
You know, we were dropped by our manager
Squiffy Biscuit
And he said, get out
He said, get the fuck out of my office
Well, that's interesting
Because that's at this point
Harley Bennington III, your agent, came into the scene
Oh, Harley, what a lifesaver he is
Because he saw you performing at a bandstand on Aberystwyth Beach.
Yes, yes.
And he said, I'm going to make you a star.
He did.
He approached me, he saw something in me.
He saw something in me, Paul.
I can tell you, something I hadn't even seen in myself.
No, he persuaded you to push the acting, drop the music.
He did, and it wasn't too much of a stretch for me at the time
because the music was going nowhere.
It was going nowhere.
And my bandmates were getting deeper and deeper
into the drug scene of the 60s there, you know.
You don't want to get mixed in that, do you?
They went to what they called tea parties.
That's where they'd eat LSD cakes
and then they'd touch each other's genitals without powdering.
They wouldn't powder before or after.
No powdering at all?
No.
So with that in mind then He took you
He did a few short plays
Just outside the West End
You did a few touring things
Nothing amazing
A little bit of rap, yes
But it was when you were performing in a farce
Called Slap Me Daisy
In I believe it was Brighton Pier you did that
Brighton Pier, Slap Me Daisy, yes
That really brings me back
Out of interest
what did you play in that again?
I was
oh
yeah
I was
I was the ice cream maid
you know
it was very
it was not very PC
by today's standard
but there was a lot of cross dressing
and sort of farcical
and I was yes
confusion
a big
a huge breasted
ice cream
purveying maid
of some sort
you know
but it was that role
that got you seen by
Chandelier Films, who at the time were making a bunch
of, well, I'm not going to say
sex comedies, but you know, like, raunchy,
cheeky comedy films
of the 60s. Listen, I've been around
young man, I've been around,
okay? Call it what it was,
smut! Hard smut!
It was smutty. It was hard,
dirty smut. By the
time these films were getting into gear, they'd kind of changed
from innocent to a bit more cheeky, naughty,
dirty, you know. It was certainly
in that sort of period. But, you
know, I was just glad to work. Very
glad to work. So, it was at that
time, then, you got picked up by Chandelier Films, and they were
making a film called Caw, Stroof,
Blimey. And at the time, that was being played
by the comedian who was popular, Bobby Bollocks.
Bobby Bollocks, oh, yes.
And it was also your first appearance.
You know what?
Bobby Bollocks, a lot of people, I mean, of course, there's been all the talk.
But putting that aside, he was a very talented comic.
And he showed me a thing or two, I'll tell you, about how to deliver a line, yes.
Yeah, it was you, Bobby Bollocks, a few other people as well.
Janet Mammery was cast in that in her breakthrough role.
Oh, Janet Mammery, what a...
Oh, you know, I just...
I haven't spoken to Janet in years.
Well, I'll tell you what, let's take a little quick break
because we've got a clip here now from you
in that first cinema role in the British sex comedy.
Are we going to show it to me on your phone?
No, it's going to get edited
in. I can send you a link later.
On what?
On my Teesmaid? It doesn't
my Teesmaid doesn't
it doesn't have a record button.
I'll try and get it on the phone for you now.
I'd love to see it. Here's a quick clip
from Call Struth Blimey
from 1967.
Alright, well come on, come over here.
Come on, let's go up the pier and do some dodgums.
Oh, I do like being banged around by men on the pier.
Yeah, I fucking bet you do.
Right, come on, let's go up the pier and have some fun.
Here we go. Come on, love.
You are cheeky.
Would you like an ice cream before we go up the pier?
Oh, I'd love it.
Let's have a look at this one over there.
Excuse me, sir.
Do you happen to sell ice creams?
Oh, I have ice creams.
Oh, ice creams here.
Come and get your ice creams.
Oh, sir.
What would you recommend, darling?
Well, you've got a Zoom.
You could have a Cornetto.
I've got a Flake. or a salty squirrel, that's a popular one,
and I've got a twisted frozen knob-jockey biscuit flake as well.
Oh, you can't get too many of them in you.
Oh no, you wouldn't want to eat too many of them. So what can I get you?
Oh, I don't know, what would you recommend?
Well, a lot of people like a Zoom-up-em.
Oh!
Or if you'd like two fingers of fudge up your cone,
I can stick them up there, love.
Oh!
Hello, it's Eli here, and I'm here interviewing
Grumpy Sessions' long-time agent and manager,
Harley Bennington III.
Yes, that's right.
Hello.
Yes, I am Harley Bennington III, literary acting agent for the stars.
Yes, you have had a very...
A very illustrious career.
A lustrous career.
Yes, that's the word you were looking for, wasn't it?
A lustrous career.
That is me, in a nutshell. Yes, that's right. And thank you very much for talking to us. Yes, that's the word you were looking for, wasn't it? A lustrous career. That is me, in a nutshell.
Yes, that's right.
And thank you very much for talking to us.
Oh, it's a pleasure.
Do you want to talk about some of my favourite stars?
Well...
Do you want to talk about maybe Alan Smith, the Thespian Extra?
No.
Do you want to talk about, oh, maybe Catherine Wickleball?
She was very well known.
She was very Wickleball, wasn't she?
Yes, very Wickleball in her day.
Indeed, indeed. She was a very good dancer. No, it wasn't actually... She was part of known. She was very wickable. Very wickable in her day.
Very good dancer. It wasn't actually any of the more
well-known names.
If I can call you Harvey.
Is that okay?
My name is Harley.
So you can call me that.
Harley. I beg your pardon.
It's fine.
Harley.
We want to ask you about Grumpy Sessions.
Oh, I've not heard that name in a while.
No, I know.
A lot of people haven't.
Grumpy, grumpy, grumpy.
How is he?
How is the old fart?
He's very good.
He's very good.
Yes, we've been interviewing him for a short piece we're doing for my podcast, Chief Show.
Yes.
Really?
But he's a no-one.
Well, he is a no-one,
but he seems to be a no-one that appears throughout the years.
When we worked together, we did find many projects
that we both enjoyed.
They were creamy-based projects, I'll give you that.
They were mainly cream-based in some way.
Weirdly, it was just the way the fates allowed.
You know, so you'd put a shout-out,
and it'd be like ice cream.
You know, the rolls would come in,
and they were mostly ice cream, cream, milk-based rolls.
Yes, yes, that's what we're discovering.
It's kismet!
It's kismet, yes.
Now, I want to take you back, though,
to when you first noticed him performing with his group on the beach somewhere, wasn't it?
Yes, I was holidaying in Aberystwyth Beach.
It's a small little town. It's quiet.
I go there for a touch-me-nose.
It's a touch-your-nose.
Back in the days, the morals were relaxed.
A dirty weekend, sort of thing.
I'm not going to say too much more about that and what I did with Five Pigs,
but we're going to move swiftly on.
Swiftly on to when I heard the beautiful tone.
Did the pigs move swiftly on, though,
or were they severely traumatised?
I ate them.
Well, at least nothing went to waste.
Now, when you saw...
Snout to tail is always the way it goes.
When you saw Grumpy performing for the first time
in that beat, in that psychedelic
rock group or whatever,
what was it you saw in him? Because
you scooped him up and you
put him on the stage
immediately. Well, here's the thing.
Here's the thing.
I wasn't expecting to find
stardom that day, but
I heard him playing his
strange music, but there was something in his eye.
Something in his eye that I had
to, uh, I was just
attracted to. So I gave him
my card, he gave me his
card, and then when I came
back to London, we met up a couple
of, uh, bollies later, and, uh,
he was, uh, he was being offered
roles left, right, and centre.
Okay, amazing, amazing.
And you did work together for almost 20 years on a number of projects,
but then you did part ways quite acrimoniously.
Is that right?
I mean, I loved him. I loved him.
I really loved him.
He's a lovely man, a lovely vet.
He's lovely.
He's a nice person.
But he's got a thing about milk.
Oh.
For instance, I wanted to put got a thing about milk. Oh.
For instance, I wanted to put him up for the milk tray man.
Oh, he could have done that.
He said it was chocolate, it did not count.
It didn't count as it wasn't milky enough?
He did get an advert for dairy milk as well.
But again, I'm not doing chocolate.
He wouldn't do chocolate, he was not a chocolate man.
So what was the incident that finally caused you to part ways there in the early 80s?
I thought I'd capitalise on his unusual proclivity for ice cream-based performances.
And I'd heard about a story in Glasgow about this so-called quote-unquote ice cream war.
And we were developing this.
And then, as you know, creative differences.
I wanted facts, and he just wanted to offer Zooms.
It's all really...
He just wanted to offer the Zooms.
I think, yeah, I mean...
I didn't think he quite had the range for the head gangster character.
Yes, that's the thing.
He isn't known for his accent work, is he, Grumpy?
No.
And the next time you see him asking about his Scottish accent, he couldn't do it.
He couldn't do it.
He couldn't do it.
So that was it all over.
And I said things I regret, and he said things he forgets.
And one way or the other, I left him on the platform at Charing Cross Road all those years ago,
and I've never seen him since.
No, no.
Never seen him.
I'm glad. Not until this, no. Never seen him. I'm glad to know.
Not until this very day.
You saw him today?
No, you're telling me he's alive.
I didn't know he's alive.
I thought he was dead the last time.
He was shacked up with his bloody mother.
Yes, he was.
He was.
His mother's in a...
Home now.
In a home now.
Yeah, beastly woman so you're getting a bit of a name in you know in uh the british film industry for bit parts
and character work yes um but it was interesting that your next major film which is a few years
later after doing some tv and stage stuff was um one of the most popular horror films of the 1970s
a British horror film called
The Thatched Hand of Beelzebub's Gizzard
Yes, it was a sort of folk horror
they'd call it these days
it was very much around at the time
you know why I think
I have a little theory about this
because you'd go into the countryside
and before it had been filled with
normal, respectable families,
but in that time, in the sort of mid to late 70s,
it was all those hippies, all filthy, squelching around in the fields.
People thought it was devil worship.
Well, here's the thing.
And so I think that was the sort of background for this whole, what they now call...
The folk horror.
The folk horror.
And I was just quite glad to, you know, to diversify into a different genre at the time.
Yeah, because if I remember rightly, this is the first film you played which was a lead
and also not ice cream based.
No.
That must have been shocking for you.
It was quite difficult.
I had to, you know, I had a coach, a coach on that, that film.
And Harley got you that, your agent got you that.
Oh, darling, Harley.
He was so good at that time.
He had a finger in all the little pies, all the little squeaky pies.
And he, yes, he got it for me because he was very,
he was very, he used to go to the social clubs all around.
So at the time, he was very good friends with Richard Big Boy,
Biggie Big Dig Boy, Bigging Boy.
Big Boy, Bigging, Big.
Dick Bigging Boy, Riggington, Richie, Richie,
Dickington Big Boy, who directed the film.
Riggie, Dickie, Big Bong, Diggily. Big Boy, who directed the film. Ricky, Dickie, Bing, Bong, Diggly.
Big Bong, Dickie, Dickie, Boy. I can never remember
his name. Uh, Dickie Boy,
Richard, Big Boy, Dickie Boy,
Richard, Dickie, Dickie, Dickie Boy,
Dickie, Richie. Anyway.
Dickie, Dickie, Dickie, Dickie.
Calm down. Dickie, Dickie,
Big Boy. Was it a bit of a shock for you, though,
to go from, you know, ice cream men to, you know,
police detectives in this film? It was, like I say, it was a very big leap at the time, big boy. Was it a bit of a shock for you though to go from, you know, ice cream men to, you know, police detective?
It was,
like I say,
it was a very big leap at the time
but I'm glad I left.
Yeah.
Because people remember
they stopped me on the street.
How did you feel
about that film?
Because I know it was,
you know,
it's very gory
towards the end.
It's very gory.
It's not for me.
I like more gentle,
fair,
you know,
comedies and so forth
but,
you know, people still recognise me.
They go, oh, they're burning the turkey.
Oh, and I have to do the line, of course.
Yeah, so it was Harley trying to push you away from that kind of stuff then in terms of, you know, more genie roles.
He was trying to make you more edgy.
Yeah, absolutely, yes.
He wanted me to be you
know like a you know in in in thrillers yeah that was where the big money was at that time well what
we're going to do is we're going to play a clip now from that film and the clip we've got is where
well spoilers but you know it is a 40 50 year old film yes of course it's the bit where you're about
to be stuffed inside the turkey yes they lure me into the turkey I'm looking for
I'm looking for
What was it like preparing for that?
Your big death scene
The missing children of the village
And then they lure me into what I think is an underground hut
Turns out to be a huge pagan wooden turkey
It's one of the most memorable shots of the 70s
And they baste it with this huge syringe
Wooden syringe, wooden syringe,
filled with fat.
Where do you go as a performer, though, there?
We just have to think,
oh, Grumpy, it's the middle of the night.
Oh, Grumpy, and oh,
oh, Mummy's not here.
Where's the powder?
Where's the powder, George?
So you found it quite traumatising, that role.
Oh!
I'm going to presume that's a yes.
Okay, well then, we're going to play a little clip from that film now,
and hopefully it brings back some memories of quite an unusual role in your life.
Okay.
What's this?
What have you done with the children?
Officer Cartwright, you came here looking for the children.
Yes.
There are no children.
What?
You came here looking for salvation.
There is no salvation.
Let me out of here.
You, at this special time of the year, will become our living Paxo.
For you shall be inside our Turkey and the great Lord gobble gobble
will take your soul I give us props for the new year
Oh, no! Oh, golly! Get him in!
Oh, no! Oh, no! They're basting the turkey!
Now, subjects, friends, villagers, set this torch aflame and put this turkey upon our very souls.
Run for me! Golly!
Start the fire!
Oh, Jiminy,imes! Oh! Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
Oh!
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Oh!
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Oh!
Oh!
Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh! Oh!! I'm a good man to the house. a grumpy in a lot of those. a man to who was the co-star with Grumpy
in a lot of those sex comedy films he did.
Of course, there was Call Blimey Struth,
and then there was Confessions of an Ice Cream.
Oh, that was my favourite one.
Yes.
That was the best one in the trilogy.
There was Further Confessions of an Ice Cream Seller,
and then there was... Well, there was ice cream seller. And then there was...
Well, there was that one, wasn't there?
What was that one we did in the early 70s?
The...
Oh.
Are you thinking of Wet Patch?
No.
No, okay.
Anyway, thank you so much, Mammery.
Oh, no, don't you worry about it, darling.
It's nice to speak to people.
I don't get a lot of visitors these days, darling.
Oh, that's a shame.
That's a shame.
But we're all both, me and Paul, are both massive fans of your work.
Oh, and the concession of the ice cream salesman.
That was the other one.
Concession.
Concession.
So it's a pun on the kiosk.
Concessions of an ice cream.
That was the one.
Yeah.
And there was also Hot Kiosk and Hot Kiosk 2.
There was Hot Kiosk 2, the battening.
Yes.
And there's lots of, oh, we had such great fun on those films.
Yes. We reallying. Yes. There's lots of, oh, we had such great fun on those films. Yes.
We really did.
Yes.
And it really comes across
still to this day
when you're watching that.
You and Grumpy,
can you tell me
when you first met him?
Was it on the set of a film?
Well, I first met,
well, we first met
on the set of that film.
Oh, the one with
the whoops called Blimey
with Bobby Bollocks.
I don't speak to him no more. Yes,y with Bobby Bollocks I don't speak to him
no more
I don't speak to him
no more
he knows what he's done
he knows what he's done
yes
well he's got
if I see him again
I'll fucking slap his mouth
well he has a life sentence
now to consider
what he's done
for the best
yes
so anyway
but yeah
so we met on that film
and it was my first role
and they
only asked me
to get my tits out twice
oh that's good it was a classy role yeah and um you
know it's just a bit of fun bit of giggling falling over dress falls off uh stick a flake up your bum
hole you know all that kind of stuff innocent fun yes it was a more innocent time a lot of people
say um uh i don't remember too much about grumpy that day, but I do remember he was a lovely man. Well, you did develop a friendship over the years.
You were often seen together,
and a lot of people speculated that you two had a little romantic thing going on.
Was that true at all?
Oh, no.
No, bless his heart.
I love him.
I love him to death.
But always like a brother.
He's like a friend.
So it's more of a platonic friendship going on.
Oh, yeah, and he never had any designs for me like that.
He was never really a sexual man.
No.
And he wasn't with me, and I could confess anything to him.
Okay.
I told him all about Big Bob.
Right, good.
Well, it's been lovely talking to you.
Is that it?
I put some clothes on for this.
Have you?
Do you see Grumpy anymore these days?
No, I haven't.
I thought, isn't he dead?
No, no.
A lot of people we've been talking to have said that.
I thought he was dead.
No, he's still up there.
Where?
Oh, I should go see him.
I should catch up with him, shouldn't I?
Yeah.
Oh, we had such fun.
Here's the thing about Grumpy, right?
Lots of love.
Lots of excitement.
He's very passionate.
Just no screen presence.
You know what I mean? No screen no screen presence doesn't glow up that the number of times we had to change his
ice cream costume because it was he made it more drab he somehow makes stuff more drab he really
did make it we want you're gonna love this we were filming fruity nut clusters free right fruity nut
clusters through nut clusters free and he had a little role it did him a favor because he's on he was on his knees at that point in his career you know
yeah it did degenerate sort of yeah by the end of the 70s he really couldn't really get the role so
i as a little favor i called him in and said listen we're looking for an ice cream man for
this film do you have the time and he you know he was up for it so we got him in so anyway dressed
him up usual he was a concession in a cinema cinema, he had the little tray, little hat on,
looked it,
put him on set,
put the cameras on him,
looked like a dentist.
So we had to go completely,
so I put some lipstick
on him,
we put some dress,
we put some more ice creams,
more colourful ice creams
in his box.
I see.
Long story short,
the scene was cut.
Well, yes,
I know,
he's not accredited
in any of the nut clusters.
But he got paid
and that's what matters,
doesn't it darling?
We've got to protect ourselves
in this acting industry, darling. well thank you mammery so
much and you would you like to see my tits before you go i don't have the time but thank you all
right well you you remember me you tell me if you see grumpy you tell him about old janet i will
i'll say you do that for me okay i will darling all right we'll see you then bye bye so that was your big role
yes
horror film
it was a cult hit
it wasn't a box office stormer
but you know
it's on blu-ray now
high definition
lots of extra footage
people love the film now
yes they do
it was a real cult
like you say
you know
it
it
I didn't like that stuff myself.
But more importantly for me,
was that that film opened a lot of people's eyes
to the whole Grumpy phenomenon, you know?
Well, that was what I was going to say,
because it was leading into the 80s and you were getting into TV,
because films, you know,
people were making more of a career on TV than film.
Yes, TV was really exploding at the time.
You know, a lot of
people didn't have colour
televisions in their homes until that
period, you know, but they were coming thick
and fast, thick and fast.
And because
I got noticed
in the Turkey film. In that Turkey film where you
played a copper. I played a policeman
there and they, you know,
with Harley's help, I played a policeman there and they, and you know with Harley's
help, I
secured a pilot
where I was to play
Oh yes, yes, yes, yes, that's right. I was to play
a detective, you see, because of the
police thing and solving
crimes around London
Like the Sweeney kind of, yeah.
A bit like that, in the underworld
of London.
You drove a fast car.
I drove a, and also an ice cream truck.
Yeah, that was it.
You drove a fast ice cream truck.
It was a souped up.
It was Choc Ice Private Detective, wasn't it?
I was Choc Ice.
Choccy Ice Private Detective.
Was Choc Ice your first or last name?
Or was it Choc Ice?
I was Choc.
As in Charlie Charlie you see
Charlie Ice
but Chuck Ice was the
Heiss with an H
it was written down it looks like Charlie Heiss
but then you know
it was like in the thrust
and the thick of it
in the office
in the police station
you know people get nicknames
Codger, Bodger.
All right, Choc-Eyes.
Oh, Detective Choc-Eyes.
So that's how you get your nickname in the show.
Ah.
And then what, the ice cream van was just...
I don't know.
I think they liked the look of me in an ice cream van.
And I did sort of insist as well, you know, to have some...
I like ice creams.
I'm getting an idea of it, yeah.
But it was very exciting. I got to do a pilot.
You got to be an action hero.
I've seen some of the shots, you leaping over the ice cream van,
shooting and then, you know, a car chase.
Very much. I was at physical prime at that stage.
You know, I would chase them down.
Sometimes I'd have to get the ice cream van souped up.
It was very souped up.
It had a turbo thing.
You know, this was a few years before that Knight Rider,
but we had a special flake machine built in.
It wasn't a real thing.
It was a prop.
Yeah, a prop.
But it supercharged the engine in the story.
It supercharged the engine of this ice cream van.
To make it faster.
To make it go faster.
And that would be the new one, you see.
And also that.
Oh, no, I'm running out of power.
I'd say, oh, no, the villain, he's going to get away.
Oh, get the flake and supercharge the ice cream van.
Zonk, zonk, zonk.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then it, vroom, you see, vroom, would go.
High octane.
And then it would mow him down.
Wow.
It would mow, we always used to kill.
All the scripts had me killing the villains at the end.
In some kind of way, yeah.
Running them down.
And you'd say some line like,
I've got you licked, and things like that.
That was the plan, wasn't it?
Oh, yes.
I'll have you whipped for this.
Oh, yes. Oh, you'll whipped for this. Oh, yes.
Oh, you'll never eat an ice cream again in this town.
Yeah.
Oh.
Sprinkle some hundreds and thousands on that, you bastard.
Go ahead, punk.
Make my flake.
Lick my flake.
Yeah, that kind of thing.
Oh.
Well, I did have a...
Here's the thing, though.
The pilot was made, but it was never produced.
And unfortunately, what happened was, like most things,
it was sold to America.
And they turned Choc Ice, Private Detective,
into, as of course, we all know now, Magnum P.I.
Where they took it out of London, they put it on Hawaii.
They had a nice cream van.
It was a Lamborghini.
I know.
I was so disappointed with what they did.
They took the heart and soul out of that show.
They really did.
They destroyed it, really.
But it's been out of circulation for a while.
We found the clip.
We're going to play a clip for you now.
Hopefully it'll bring back some memories of you
and your failed pilot, Choc Ice, Private Detective.
Oh, how exciting.
You sit your arse down there, Tumpy.
Sit down!
Ooh, I...
Whatever.
Listen, I ain't done nothing.
I was just trying to sell my dongas down the market, yeah?
Tumpy, shut your mouth and shut your mouth and sit down and shut your mouth.
We've got a detective coming in here now.
He's going to rinse you dry and he's going to get all the information out.
So without any further ado, I'm going to give you Chockeye's private detective.
Deal with him.
Yes, hello, you. Now, who have we got here?
It says here, Tumpy Cockney. Is that your name, really?
I ain't telling you nothing.
Who are you, some kind of pumped-up ice cream?
Listen, I ain't seen nothing.
Now, you listen to me, little Tumpy, if that is your name. We've got you banged to rights on the corner of Marylebone and St. Hetherington Street,
and you were seen removing dongers through the window.
Ain't nothing to do with me, mate. I moved on from dongers.
I've got eggs. I've got all sorts of eggs now.
Big eggs, small eggs, all sorts of eggs. You ask anyone.
Yes, there's more where that came from, Tumpy, my boy, my boy.
Now, you better be remembering who your...
You better be remembering who your accomplices were in the Wentworth job,
or else you'll be in the slammer for as long as I'm selling ice
creams on the weekends, which I do.
All right, whatever! Fucking
throw me in there!
Get off me! Put him back
in the cell, Johnson!
Fuck off! Who wants a donger?
I've got eggs!
Slap and splat!
Chock eyes!
What are we going to do with him, a scum like that?
How are we going to get the information out of him?
I have my ways.
I find a lot of these villains turn when they have a cold zoom inserted up them.
You're a beast.
A beast, Choc-Eyes.
But I like the way you work.
That's right, Choc-Eyes.
So yeah, There's the clip
And sadly
Never picked up
Oh I know
So much potential
We know what happened
To the character
Of Tumpy
In real life
They got their own show
He got his own
Spin off show
And I was very bitter
Of course I've forgiven him now
Yeah
He's a very talented
Seven seasons of that
He's living in
It ran and ran
It ran and ran
But you know What I think Personally I'm not bitter About it anymore Seven seasons of that. He's living in Malta now, isn't he? It ran and ran and ran.
But you know what I think, personally.
I'm not bitter about it anymore.
But, you know, the first two or three seasons of Tumpy,
when he's poor, he's trying to sell the dongers on the street.
It was more interesting, wasn't it?
It was more interesting.
He gets married.
He wins the lottery.
And by the sixth season, he's living in Marbella.
He's a rich man.
And there's no tension. There's no drama. he's a rich man. And there's no tension.
There's no drama.
There's no struggle anymore.
Chuck Ice burnt too brightly.
Chumpy little bastard he was to me on the set as well.
When we were filming that pilot, he'd come up, he'd slap me around.
Ooh.
Ooh.
Well, that's the thing.
These days, Chumpy resides in Spain and he gets away with goddamn murder out there, apparently.
I've heard rumours, but, you know, we're not going to go into it.
Let me just say, like, you know, those dongers, he never washes them.
Oh.
Oh, no.
That's why they smell of clam.
Oh, dirty, clammy dongers.
So, that show didn't go any further.
No.
But you did get one last TV role in the 80s.
Oh, you're just reminding me of this now.
It's been a while.
Oh, this is a real highlight.
In the 80s, the BBC tried to come up with a kind of new Doctor Who,
and they had a show.
I seem to remember it was called The Protector Kids.
That's right, The Protector Kids.
They were protecting the Earth from aliens and space monsters.
And they travelled around in a...
It was almost like a phone box, that would be too obvious.
But it was more like a kind of sled, a space sled, wasn't it?
It was very, yes.
It was a very sled-like...
Luge, like a space luge kind of thing.
And they would go from planet to planet,
protecting Earth and then fighting demons and ghosts and all sorts.
And I was the master of a whole planet
of ice. That's right, yes.
I was the lord. I could control
ice. You were Ice Lord. Ice Lord.
And you know, some of this ice
was flavoured like a slushie
and some, you know,
was almost creamy.
I insisted on that.
And you could eat some of the ice
that I created for a reasonable price.
Yeah, because I seem to remember you got to have one of those beautiful villain monologues,
which we're going to play in a little moment, where you monologue.
But unfortunately, you know, your villain dies.
You're melting at the end.
I did have the one episode, and they got me.
I melted.
Yeah, yeah.
But it was a good little story, a good little adventure.
Oh, thank you.
I mean, I've seen you at the conventions. Yes, I melted. It's a good little story, a good little adventure. Thank you. I mean, I've seen you at the conventions.
Yes, I do. You weren't invited to them, but I've seen you at them.
I sort of hang around, see if anyone
likes me. Do any of the kids from Protect the Kids
recognise you now? No, they
look at me with
fear in their eyes and
they go, it's him! It's him!
And then I get arrested.
But of course, that show didn't last,
and you weren't going to be brought back anytime soon.
Well, I was hoping, because of course,
there's a lot of reincarnation,
and people, villains you thought were banished forever,
or dead, or melted.
I mean, I was melted.
They could have frozen me,
and sort of reanimated me in some way.
Yeah, shame it never went further.
Yes. But, okay, I'll tell you what, we've got a clip for it way. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Shame it never went further. Yes.
But, okay, well, I'll tell you what,
we've got a clip for it now.
And, of course, after that,
that's when I parted way with Harley Bennington.
So I'll tell you what,
we're going to play a little clip now
of that episode of Protector Kids
and hopefully bring back some very fun memories for you.
Oh, fantastic.
Here we go.
Roll the clip.
You've fallen right into my trap. Here we go, roll the clip. Ha ha ha ha!
You've fallen right into my trap!
I've captured you in my cave of ice!
Protector Kids, prepare to freeze!
Oh, you don't know nothing, Governor,
for we are Protector Kids,
and we saw through your trap,
and we have got a plan to put you back in space jail.
Stop your twittering and wittering, you.
I see all through the prism of ice.
I control the ice planets.
I transform the planets of your solar system into big balls
of flavoured ice.
Mercury will be
a gobstopper.
And then
Venus will be
a big milky cloud
of vanilla 99.
And Earth will be
a sorbet
like those ones you get at Indian restaurants
and, you know, they've carved out a grapefruit or something and put it with sorbet in.
Planet after planet will be engulfed in my icy beams
and soon the whole universe will fall to my ice cream rays
and no one, no one will ever stop me.
Well, that's what you think, Governor, because what you didn't know is that I am a transformer
child and I am going to transform into nothing but a simple household thermostat and I'm
going to warm your planet right up, Governor.
Here we go.
Oh, I'm getting the place nice and warm oh no he's turned it up
oh i've started to oh i've started to warm my ice cream razor they're not working they're
ineffective nothing oh my face is starting to ice cream that, Governor. No one can ever defeat the Protecto Kids.
Right, let's go all home, Protecto Kids,
and have some lovely fizzy sherbet.
Hooray!
And so that was it.
That was the Protecto Kids.
That was your last TV role.
Unfortunately, me and Harley,
we parted company very soon after that,
with that terrible fiasco,
with that ice cream war.
He said, I think I remember him saying
it was because you couldn't do a Scottish accent.
Oh, I could do a Scottish accent.
Oh, really?
Yes.
Why don't you do it now?
Audition.
Audition. Okay, okay, I will, okay. A little bit of role play, come on. Oh, really? Yes. Why don't you do it now? I audition. I audition for you.
Okay.
Okay.
I will.
Okay. A little bit of role play.
Go on.
All right.
I will.
Okay.
So what should I say?
So you're a Scottish ice cream man.
Yes.
And you're trying to sell me a Scottish ice cream.
Okay.
All right.
And action.
Hey, Jimmy.
I've done a job.
Would you like a zoom in your asshole?
Yeah.
You know, it probably wasn't
the best at that. I need some
time to warm up to these things.
That's fair. But anyway,
so after that, so what did you do?
Well, 89, that was that episode. What did you do
in the next 30 years?
You know, this and that, whatever I could find,
bits and pieces, odds and
bods, bits and...
Did you get any more stage work?
No, no stage work.
TV?
No, no.
Film?
Extra?
I didn't do any extra work.
Radio?
Radio is quite difficult
to break into sometimes.
Right.
So you've just
basically just been
keeping to yourself?
Mainly.
Mainly.
Okay.
Well, I'll tell you what
I think that's about
as much time as I can spare, unfortunately.
Well, you can stay.
I've got to meet with Eli now.
You can stay.
I've got to start editing all this as well.
Well, you know, it's quite early still.
You can stay and have another cup of tea.
You haven't touched your tea.
I haven't touched that.
I'm sorry.
I've just been so engrossed.
Is there something wrong with the tea?
No, I was just engrossed with that conversation.
We could watch the telly now.
Oh, hang on.
Oh, I have this week's radio.
I think my phone's ringing.
This week's Radio Times.
We could see what's on the TV.
Oh, yeah, my phone's ringing.
Sorry, I've got to...
Hello?
Yeah, no, it's Eli saying
I can't meet him.
Oh, say hello to him.
That's where I'm going to go.
And we're going to pass your love
on to Harley and Janet
because we're speaking to them
as well during this episode.
Oh, say hello to the host.
We'll say hello.
I'll just let myself out.
Yes, you know the way.
At the very least,
we hope all our listeners are going to be thinking of Grumpy this Christmas.
Oh, how nice.
Thank you.
Thank you, Paul.
That's lovely.
Thank you for your time with us today.
And you look after yourself, and we'll hopefully see you soon.
I'll try.
Thank you.
Bye-bye.
I'll let myself out.
Take care.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye, Paul.
Oh, there he goes.
Oh, well.
Here again.
The living room.
Watch some telly.
Oh, you know what?
They're putting out that documentary.
Perhaps some interest will be raised in old Grumpy Sessions.
Or maybe this is the beginning of the renaissance of Grumpy.
Oh, that's exciting, isn't it?
Grumpy, Grumpy could be back again.
I'm going to go to bed, I think.
Oh, yes, Merry Christmas, Grumpy Sessions.
Have a lovely, lovely Christmas, you.
Oh, you lovely man.
Fresh powder.