Charles Walter Bentley was born on May 14, 1907 in
Melbourne, Australia. born in Melbourne, Australia. Bentley was a comedian and
actor and starred with Jimmy Edwards in “Take It From Here” for BBC Radio.
As a boy, Bentley learned several musical instruments,
and while still in his teens was a staple on the Melbourne cabaret circuit as a
comedian and singer, his act consisting of playing a few bars of music
deliberately badly, interspersed with jokes and legitimate musical numbers. He
made his first appearance on ABC Radio in the early 1930s using his childhood
nickname “Dirty Dick” and by 1938 had become a fairly prominent personality,
notably on Wilfrid Thomas's show "Out of the Bag". In that year he
moved to London and worked for the BBC. Newly married to Peta, he returned to
Australia on the outbreak of war, and spent several years entertaining the
troops in the Pacific theatre.
By 1946, he was one of Australia's highest-paid
entertainers, and returned to Britain to try to re-establish himself in a much
larger market. He joined up with writer Denis Norden and guested on many of the
leading radio shows of the day. An appearance on Navy Mixture teamed him
successfully with Jimmy Edwards, and indirectly led to the pairing of Denis
Norden with Frank Muir, who was Edwards' writer. Muir and Norden together wrote
Take It From Here (1948–60), with Edwards and Bentley as two of the three
stars. The most memorable feature of “Take It From Here” was The Glums, with
Edwards playing the slightly seedy Pa Glum and Bentley his terminally dim son,
Ron. Interestingly, Bentley was thirteen years older than Edwards.
In 1951, during the run of “Take It From Here”, Bentley
briefly returned to Australia to star in a ten-episode radio comedy series,
“Gently Bentley”, commissioned to celebrate the silver jubilee of the ABC. In
1956, he starred in “And So To Bentley”, a sketch-format comedy show for the
BBC, co-starring Peter Sellers. The show only lasted for one series, and the
gently self-deprecating humor of Bentley was overshadowed by the charismatic
Sellers. Both these shows were also written by Muir and Norden.
In 1960 he returned to Australia to play a sheep drover
in “The Sundowners”, starring Robert Mitchum and Deborah Kerr. In 1963 he
appeared in his only Euro-western “Gunfighters of Casa Grande” as Doc Kindley.
In the late 1960s he was back on BBC radio in the short run comedy series “If
You Had a Talking Picture of Me”. In 1972 and 1974 Bentley was featured in the
movies “The Adventures of Barry McKenzie” and “Barry McKenzie Holds His Own”,
derived from the Barry McKenzie comic strip in Private Eye. By 1974 he had largely retired, but briefly returned
to the screen to appear in the 1978 season of “Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em” as Frank
Spencer's granddad, fittingly since the hapless Spencer was in many ways a
descendant of his Ron Glum character in TIFH.
From the early 1970s he lived in retirement in London
where his wife Peta died in 1988, and Bentley died from complications of Alzheimer's
Disease on August 27, 1995.
BENTLEY,
Dick (Charles Walter Bentley)
[5/14/1907, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia - 8/27/1995, London, England, U.K.
(Alzheimer’s)] - radio, TV, voice actor, musician (saxophone), singer.
Gunfighters of Casa Grande - 1963 (Doc
Kindley)
I remember this was my dad's favorite show.
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