Trevor and Simon

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Trevor Neal and Simon Hickson were a British comedy duo best known for their contributions to the BBC1 children's shows Going Live! and Live & Kicking. When they were first signed up for Going Live, the duo were instructed simply to be clean and funny but not to worry about specifically tailoring their material to children.

Although much of Trev and Simon's work for the programmes took the form of one-off sketches, it is their repertoire of regular characters for which they are best remembered. These included The Singing Corner, a 1970s-style folk duo whose catchphrase was "swing your pants!"; Ken and Eddie Kennedy, the Barbers whose insanitary salon would usually be visited by the programme's star guest each week; World Of The Strange, two cloaked characters who believed that everything - even the most banal, everyday occurrences - was due to mysterious supernatural forces; and the Sister Brothers, market traders of questionable character who would introduce a competition each week.

Trevor and Simon were absent from the 1991-1992 series of Going Live, their role as comic relief being filled by Nick Ball and James Hickish. However, Trevor and Simon returned for the final series of Going Live in 1992-1993, and continued when it became Live And Kicking, in the 1993-1994 season. Although their comeback was arguably not as successful, it did include some memorable skits including Sofa For Two For Three in which Trevor and Simon would sit at the two ends of a two-seater settee, with a celebrity guest in the middle. The sofa had been specially weakened in the middle so that the guest would sink into it, and finding themselves unable to get up would have no choice but to sit there while Trevor and Simon made fun of them. For their final series with Live & Kicking (1996-1997), Trevor and Simon's sketches were separated from the main show in a special show-within-a-show, Transmission Impossible, which was also repeated separately later in the week. This section was not so well received, though it did introduce the "Art For'em" sketch involving two pretentious artists-cum-critics, and concluding each week with the memorable catchphrase "let's roll on the floor!". Other memorable sketches were the X-Files-inspired Eggs Files, featuring Lincoln Eggs And His Close Friend, Pickling Time with Pickling Jeff (And Jobe's Here As Well!), and one based in a launderette with their catchphrase being "we don't do duvets!".

Two compilation videos were released - "Trev And Simon's Stupid Video" and "Trev and Simon's Other Video" - as was a book, "Trevor and Simon's Stupid Book". In 1990 the pair also collaborated with singer Donovan on a novelty single release of his 1968 hit Jennifer Juniper; adopting their roles as The Singing Corner, the pair made spoken interjections throughout Donovan's performance, concluding with Trevor having to explain to Simon that the singer was not in fact Jason Donovan.

Trevor and Simon opened BBC Radio 5 when it launched at 9am on 27 August 1990.

One curious fact about Trevor and Simon is that although the duo gained considerable fame from their TV appearances, few viewers actually knew which was which (in a manner reminiscent of current British TV duo Ant and Dec). A simple mnemonic is that Trevor was the Tall one, and Simon the Short one.

In 2001, Trevor and Simon performed their first live show in over three years, unleashing demonic rituals and some of history's most vile characters on audiences with "Trevor and Simon's Circus of Evil". Whilst the show was widely criticised by the media, it struck a chord with young adults with whom Trevor and Simon shared a childhood.

Trevor was a musician at the 2005 Glastonbury festival on the Sunday, playing with his band in the John Peel Tent. Simon appeared on maracas for a song.

Trevor and Simon wrote an episode for the sixth series of My Parents Are Aliens called "Dan's the Man" in 2006. They also visited the set during the filming of the episode but did not guest on the show.

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