Michael Flanders
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[[Call My Bluff]] (team captain) | [[Call My Bluff]] (team captain) | ||
- | [[Twenty Questions]] | + | [[Twenty Questions]] (stand-in) |
- | [[What's it All About? (2)]] (stand-in | + | [[What's it All About? (2)]] (stand-in) |
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== Biography == | == Biography == | ||
- | Presenter, singer, songwriter and raconteur whose hopes for a career on the stage were dashed when he contracted polio during a tour of duty with the Royal Navy in | + | Presenter, singer, songwriter and raconteur whose hopes for a career on the stage were dashed when he contracted polio during a tour of duty with the Royal Navy in 1943, which left him confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life. |
- | Instead he turned to radio, acting and presenting shows while also writing songs for revue with old schoolfriend Donald Swann. The success of a set of animal-themed songs they'd written for future [[My Music]] regular Ian Wallace (including their soon-to-be signature song, "The | + | Instead he turned to radio, acting and presenting shows while also writing songs for revue with old schoolfriend Donald Swann. The success of a set of animal-themed songs they'd written for future [[My Music]] regular Ian Wallace (including their soon-to-be signature song, "The Hippopotamus") convinced them they were on to something, and the songwriters turned performers for the pared-back two-man revue ''At the Drop of a Hat'', a huge success which toured the world for five years and was followed, logically enough, by ''At the Drop of Another Hat''. |
When not serenading the locals in some far-flung corner of the world, Flanders continued to host TV and radio shows, and feature as a panellist on the likes of [[Call My Bluff]] and [[The Animal Game]]. | When not serenading the locals in some far-flung corner of the world, Flanders continued to host TV and radio shows, and feature as a panellist on the likes of [[Call My Bluff]] and [[The Animal Game]]. | ||
- | He died suddenly of a brain | + | He died suddenly of a brain aneurysm in 1975, aged 53. |
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+ | == Trivia == | ||
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+ | He was probably the first, and until [[Crisis Control]] came along thirty-odd years later only, game show host in a wheelchair. | ||
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+ | Stephanie Flanders, the former BBC economic editor, is Michael's daughter. | ||
[[Category:People|Flanders, Michael]] | [[Category:People|Flanders, Michael]] |
Current revision as of 07:47, 3 January 2023
Biography
Presenter, singer, songwriter and raconteur whose hopes for a career on the stage were dashed when he contracted polio during a tour of duty with the Royal Navy in 1943, which left him confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life.
Instead he turned to radio, acting and presenting shows while also writing songs for revue with old schoolfriend Donald Swann. The success of a set of animal-themed songs they'd written for future My Music regular Ian Wallace (including their soon-to-be signature song, "The Hippopotamus") convinced them they were on to something, and the songwriters turned performers for the pared-back two-man revue At the Drop of a Hat, a huge success which toured the world for five years and was followed, logically enough, by At the Drop of Another Hat.
When not serenading the locals in some far-flung corner of the world, Flanders continued to host TV and radio shows, and feature as a panellist on the likes of Call My Bluff and The Animal Game.
He died suddenly of a brain aneurysm in 1975, aged 53.
Trivia
He was probably the first, and until Crisis Control came along thirty-odd years later only, game show host in a wheelchair.
Stephanie Flanders, the former BBC economic editor, is Michael's daughter.