Fred Evans (comedian) Biography, NetWorth, Height, Age, Weight, Family, Married, Son, Daughter

Fred Evans (comedian) Biography, NetWorth, Height, Age, Weight, Family, Married, Son, Daughter

Frederick William Evans (20 February 1889â€"31 August 1951) was a
British music hall and silent film comedian, who became famous around
the time of the First World War for portraying his character Pimple in
more than 200 short movies. He was described as "second only in
popularity to Chaplin in Britain at the height of his career," and as
displaying "a proto-Pythonesque humour of the absurd." Critic Barry
Anthony wrote that "in many ways the topical skits of Pimple have more
in common with The Crazy Gang, Benny Hill, the Goons, Monty Python or
topical sketch shows like French and Saunders and The Fast Show than
with the classic Hollywood silent comedies."Evans was born in London
into a family of music hall and circus performers. His grandfather,
also named Fred Evans, was a popular clown who staged harlequinades;
his uncle Will Evans was a leading music hall comedian; and his
parents were members of several touring musical troupes. He was a
childhood friend of Charlie Chaplin, and as a child performed with his
brother Joe as part of his parents' pantomime act, the Florador
Quartet. Fred and Joe then worked together and individually in music
hall, and for Sanger's Circus, before joining filmmakers Cricks and
Martin in 1910. Evans' early screen appearances were as Charley
Smiler, a disaster-prone 'dude' character dressed in frock coat,
waistcoat and spats.In 1912, Fred and Joe Evans began working at the
Ec-Ko studios in Teddington, and set up their own production company,
Folly Films. Unable to use the Charley Smiler character because of
legal threats from Cricks and Martin, Evans devised a new character,
Pimple, an accident-prone clown with a tight jacket, baggy pants, big
boots, cricket cap, and lank strands of hair around a central parting.
The films were scripted by Joe Evans. Early films were often chases;
in Pimple and the Snake (1912), Pimple tries to retrieve a snake that
has escaped from the zoo, but instead chases a lady's feather boa,
causing chaos. By 1913, the comedies were increasingly spoofs of
popular films, plays and novels. For example, a series of Lieutenant
Pimple films poked fun at the screen exploits of the swashbuckling
Lieutenant Daring, hero of more serious melodramas. Pimple's Battle of
Waterloo (1913) was a merciless parody of the recent epic film The
Battle of Waterloo, which had been characterised by location filming
and (for the period) lavish production values. Pimple's version made a
virtue of its low-budget filming in the backyard of their premises at
Eel Pie Island to ridicule the earlier production. In Pimple in The
Whip (1917), another parody, the Evans brothers used pantomime horses
and a man wearing a horse head and carrying a stick in each hand to
represent the front legs, to re-enact the original movie's thrilling
race scenes. The films also made use of jokey and punning intertitles.
Fred Evans (comedian) Biography, NetWorth, Height, Age, Weight, Family, Married, Son, Daughter


Share this

Share/Bookmark

SUBSCRIBE OUR NEWSLETTER

Join us for free and get valuable content delivered right through your inbox.



Related Post

Newer Post Older Post Home