For many years these two women were among the best loved entertainers in Britain.
They were Elsie and Doris Waters, better known to millions as Gert and Daisy. And they had an equally famous brother – Jack Warner, much loved as TV’s Dixon of Dock Green, a major hit in the Fifties.
The characters Gert and Daisy were created in 1930 and soon achieved success mainly on radio, but went on to be huge stage stars too, being described by one writer as “ the most successful female double-act in the history of British music hall and variety.”
They would talk about anything and everything, but especially their fictional husbands Bert and Wally.
Gert and Daisy, once described as “perhaps the most influential social satirists of the period,” were regulars on the hugely popular radio show Workers’ Playtime.
Throughout their careers they wrote almost all their own comic songs and sketches.
TV work came late and only after they were seen in a commercial and offered their own show, a sitcom which was named after them and screened in 1959.
In it they played former show business performers who ran a theatrical guest house.
But it was not the success producers had hoped for, the sisters being unaccustomed to performing material written by someone else – Ted Willis, who also wrote the Dixon series.
Only one series of six episodes was made.
22
Jan
Remembering Gert and Daisy
posted by Stuart in 1950s and have No Comments
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