Archie Andrews (puppet)
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- This article is about the British ventriloquist's puppet. For the U.S. comic book character, see Archie Andrews (comics)
Archie Andrews was a ventriloquist's puppet used by ventriloquist Peter Brough in a radio and television show in the UK in the 1950s and 1960s. In its radio format it was called 'Educating Archie'. The bizarre concept of delivering a ventriloquist act, a visual humour, by radio, an audio medium, never seemed to bother anyone at the time, however. Archie was invariably dressed in a broad-striped blazer, and addressed the ventriloquist as "Brough". The television scripts were written by Marty Feldman and Ronald Chesney.
The UK radio show attracted up to 15m listeners and had a children's fan club that at one time had 250,000 members. Among future stars who appeared on the show were Tony Hancock, Max Bygraves, Harry Secombe, Benny Hill, Beryl Reid and (as a 14-year-old) Julie Andrews.
Archie went missing several times.
- In 1947, he was in Peter Brough's car when it was stolen from Lower Regent Street, London, but found two days in a garden at Paddington.
- He was left in the rack of a railway carriage at Chatham, but a railway porter sent him back by taxi in time for his show.
- In 1951, Brough was travelling to Leeds to compere the televised Northern Music Hall at the Theatre Royal, Leeds, with Archie in his suitcase. Brough went for dinner in the dining car, and whilst away the carriage in which he had been sitting was taken off the train and went on to Bradford. Unable to locate the puppet, at the venue Brough went through a revised script without the dummy. A £1000 reward was offered and he was returned.
Many Archies were made over the years. Two currently reside with puppet collector David Wilde, whilst the main Archie sold in 2005 for £34,000 at auction to Colin Burnett-Dick.