Ernie Wise
Ernie Wise

Ernie Wise

  • English
  • Comedian

Press clippings Page 5

We've seen this nasty treatment meted out to Tony Hancock, Frankie Howerd, Kenneth Williams, Tommy Cooper and many more -- and now, in a miserable distortion of the truth called Eric, Ernie And Me (BBC4), to Morecambe and Wise.

This hour-long drama was based on the life of Eddie Braben, who wrote much of the duo's material in the Seventies when they were at their peak. But according to this version, Eric & Ernie were nobodies before Braben arrived -- rotten material, no rapport, behaved like strangers on stage.

That's complete nonsense. They were a superstar double act, who had starred together in a series of films. Even the Beatles clamoured to be on their show.

Braben was a brilliant gag-writer, who took the boys to new heights. But it was wrong to claim he plucked the Andre Previn/'Andrew Preview' sketch out of the air: the raw version was penned in the Sixties by Eric & Ernie's former writers, Sid Green and Dick Hills.

The whole thing was a depressing business, obsessed with Braben's breakdowns and bouts of mental illness. Writer Neil Forsyth seemed to be reproaching us: see what agonies this poor man suffered to make us laugh.

Most scurrilous of all was the way it portrayed Eric as a manipulative, cowardly tyrant, who bullied everyone around him. That bears no relation to any description of the man that I've ever read.

Christopher Stevens, Daily Mail, 1st January 2018

For an honest depiction of Morecambe and Wise, we had an hour of cine film shot by the boys themselves, in Eric & Ernie's Home Movies (BBC2) -- though why this was aired on a different channel was not explained.

Some of the best material was the very earliest, from a Fifties panto season. We saw the duo doing slapstick routines on stage, knocking each other down and riding about (for reasons not specified) in a pram.

Other reels showed them in New York, hoping to conquer America, and touring Australia -- as well as larking about on family holidays and at home.

The tenderness that Eric felt for his children, and the attention Ernie lavished on his wife Doreen, shone through.

Because the stars were behind the lens most of the time, the really interesting moments were few, with much padding in between. And it wasn't clear why the home movies stopped in the Sixties. Is there more to come?

Christopher Stevens, Daily Mail, 1st January 2018

Because Christmas wouldn't be Christmas and all that, a double dose of E&E. First, a trawl of their archive of home movies from the 1950s and 60s, seen for the first time by Eric's surviving relatives. Then, on BBC Four, an engaging Neil Forsyth-scripted drama starring Stephen Tompkinson as Eddie Braben, the Liverpudlian co-responsible for the massive success of the duo in the 70s but who was worked to exhaustion under pressure.

David Stubbs, The Guardian, 29th December 2017

Eric, Ernie & Me, BBC4 review

It is good to see a writer getting some credit for a change. And deservedly so.

Bruce Dessau, Beyond The Joke, 29th December 2017

Eric, Ernie And Me review

It's not Christmas without Morecambe and Wise, but even you think you've seen everything the duo have done, this latest BBC Four comedy biopic offers a new perspective on their enduring partnership, through the prism of the contribution Eddie Braben made to the act.

Steve Bennett, Chortle, 29th December 2017

BBC re-writes history by faking Eric & Ernie's story

ATV/ITV made them mega TV successes and household names with Two of a Kind (1961-1968, written by Sid Green & Dick Hills) and that TV success was 'bought' by the BBC who offered them much more money and then made their shows 1968-1977 (written by Eddie Braben). The BBC bought them because they were already ratings successes and they built on that.

John Fleming, John Fleming's Blog, 29th December 2017

How a market trader helped to make Eric & Ernie

A profile of Eddie Braben.

Ben Lawrence, The Telegraph, 17th December 2017

The genius writer who brought all of us sunshine

Morecambe and Wise are our two most treasured comedians, their television career as a comedy double act will never be eclipsed.

David Stephenson, The Daily Express, 3rd December 2017

BBC to air Morecambe & Wise's home movies

BBC Two is to broadcast Eric & Ernie's Home Movies, a documentary special involving footage from Morecambe & Wise's personal collections.

British Comedy Guide, 22nd November 2017

New Morecambe & Wise documentary series for ITV3

ITV3 will broadcast Morecambe & Wise Forever, a new two-part documentary which will include recently found photos of the famous double act.

British Comedy Guide, 16th March 2017

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