Jim Davidson
Jim
Davidson had his first taste of entertaining at the age of 12 when
he was chosen to appear in Ralph Reader's Gang Show at the Golders
Green Hippodrome, telling gags and doing impressions.
But a year later he became
disillusioned with show business after failing the audition for the
part of the Artful Dodger in the movie ‘Oliver’.
He found his way back
to the stage when he went along to a pub in Woolwich where the regular
stand-up hadn't turned up. Persuaded by his friends, he ended up on
stage, and that was the start of a career in London's pubs and clubs.
His 1976 ‘New Faces’
win propelled him to TV, followed by his own show and a couple of
sitcoms before becoming a game show host with ‘Big Break’
and ‘The Generation Game’.
In 1997 he was named Show
Business Personality Of The Year by the Variety Club of Great Britain
Davidson is an ardent
supporter of British troops, and frequently travels abroad to entertain
them. He has made four visits to the Falkland Islands and in 1999
he travelled twice to Macedonia. In the same year he launched the
British Forces Foundation charity.
He is also a theatre producer,
backing such West End hits as ‘Buddy’ and ‘Great
Balls of Fire’, as well as a number of pantomimes throughout
the UK.
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