07
Mar

Charlie Drake The Worker

Author : Betting on Profit


An Extract from his most successful Series, The worker. This is part of an episode called A change is as good as a rest. This series was broadcast from 1965 to 1970. As unemployed Labourer he turns up at the Local labour Exchange(job Centre)to seek that perfect job, classic slapstick and comic situations he managed to find himself in,usually because of his disasterous attempt to do the job. The highlight of the show was for me and many others, his exchanges with Mr Pugh (Henry McGee) at the labour exchange Copyright remains with the original owners and performers etc.

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25 Responses to “Charlie Drake The Worker”

  1. TheMrgaztop Says:

    Thanks for this Sheda, What a blast from the past. Class.

    Gaz xxxxxxx

  2. terryirv Says:

    If I want to watch comedy that will have me in tears, I turn the clock back, log on to UTube, and type in “Charlie Drake”.

    A comic genius, who was light years ahead of his time. I laughed at this sketch over 40 years ago, and I am still laughing. I rest my case.

    R.I.P Charlie.

  3. markhorneyuk Says:

    Charlies memorable moments in adult panto, brilliantly funny, warning, I suggest you have wee before you watch as you may piss yourself laughing.

    Type the codes in the youtube search engine.

    OS95AX2snBg – Sinderella Live – Wrong Button
    Y6XoPn7dKvY – Sinderella Live – Pissed

  4. TheAdie02 Says:

    yes he was RIP xx

  5. jakefulton Says:

    I remember these sketches from my childhood , I thought that they were dreadful then and things have not changed . Cosmetric surgery !! . Awful !

  6. huded Says:

    Joncentre Plus, could learn a lot from this!

  7. THISREALLYBORESME Says:

    When 60’s comedians are remembered, its Peter Sellers, Hancock, Benny Hill, Harry Worth, The Ronnies, Morecome and Wise. Never does Charlie get a mention. For me, at his peak, he was better than any of them (apart from the Goons). Charlie had all of the attributes of a true great, but he also had a real “edge’, as this clip demonstrates. Sex change in the 60’s was a completely taboo subject – Homosexuality was not de-criminalised until 1967. His improvisation was unique, and led to surreal

  8. goodtimetone Says:

    he was fun to watch when i was a kid

  9. Lephirox Says:

    Brilliant!

  10. SueLocd Says:

    Classic British tele!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  11. Stopsley Says:

    Charlie Drake must be one of Britain’s finest clowns!

  12. azbluefox Says:

    I downloaded Charlie Drakes songs and sing them to my grandkids who are 3 and 4 years old. They LOVE em !!

  13. azbluefox Says:

    I downloaded Charlie Drakes songs and sing them to my grandkids who are 3 and 4 years old. They LOVE em !!

  14. azbluefox Says:

    I downloaded Charlie Drakes songs and sing them to my grandkids who are 3 and 4 years old. They LOVE em !!

  15. lerxt42 Says:

    now that you mention it

  16. bally40 Says:

    Watching this fella Charlie drake in action reminded me of another person I had just been watching in an interview about Simply Red.Does anybody think that Mick Hucknall is Charlie Drakes long,lost forgotten son?He’s the spitting image of him.

  17. kevinherbert Says:

    azbluefox: I didn’t know Australia ( or “Austraya” as our leading cricketers pronounce it) existed until I was 10…and I was living there from birth…poor education system back then…we loved Charlie Drake in Oz…his friend Jackie Clancy, was a huge radio star in mornings in Melbourne……you Poms sure are a funny crew…effortless comedic commentary…gr8 stuff…Les Dawson, N. Wisdom, A Askey, T. Cooper, even F. Howard..how kamp is he???………111 out of 10 !!!!….

  18. JIMMYBUSHIDO Says:

    cosmetric surgery !!!!
    pure brilliance
    he was probably the first comedian to ” look ” at the camera….genius

  19. ingrideliriumnietohr Says:

    Drake is a good singer, hes one of the best male artists around, anyways i found the song for download at 2010ringtones(.)c o m if anyone wants to download it!

  20. redredreds100 Says:

    I’m 54 and I remember Charlie being on tv, i remember this show, my mum and dad hated him, but i thought he was great, looking back now, I know nothing about him, but he really was a strange little man. You must also have “sungalong” to Please Mr. Custer, haha

  21. azbluefox Says:

    I’m 57 years old now. I was 9 years old when the song [My boomerang won’t come back] came out. And I will always remember it. I loved it. My friends and I went around singing it all the time. I didn’t even know Australia existed until that song. I now download and sing it with my grandkids who are 3 dn 4 years old. They think Grandpa (Me) is really funny. Thanks Charlie Drake !

  22. snaebjorn53 Says:

    Sheer comedy brilliance! 5*
    Thanks for bringing this fabulous memory back of such a funny little man. A “Proper Charlie”

    RIP little guy, you are missed by many.

  23. 117159 Says:

    I actually met Charlie in Southend, must have been around 1958 at our Sunday school, he wasn’t too proud to spend some time with the kids.
    I never did learn whether his boomerang ever came back…

  24. knausspiano Says:

    “It’s not my head I’m worrying about”. Absolutely brilliant timing, expression etc. both from Charlie and McGee. Nice little bits of so-called political incorrectness too. We all knew how to laugh then. Thanks – it was excellent.

  25. flamencoexpress Says:

    Besides anything else, this is surely one of the longest continuous sitcom acting displays on record.
    To all intents and purposes, it is a live play. And hardly a sign of a fluff in the whole thing.

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