Billy Caryll and Hilda Mundy were a British comedy duo who performed in variety shows and films, and on BBC radio, between the early 1920s and late 1940s. They never married though they were a couple until Billie Caryll died.
Careers
Billy Caryll (born William Francis Clark; 23 December 1892 – 15 February 1953) was born in Southwark, London. In 1920, he became the comedy partner of Hilda Madeline Mundy (14 June 1893 – 14 November 1968), also from London, and together they developed a popular sketch comedy act, starting in 1921. Inspired by a minor lovers' tiff that they had had, Caryll took the role of a drunken husband and Mundy his domineering wife.[1] Many regarded Caryll as one of the best onstage "drunk" performers.[2]
For contractual reasons, Caryll and Mundy did not broadcast on the BBC until 1936,[1] but they then began appearing regularly on radio variety shows.[5] In 1938, they had their own radio show, which came to be billed as The Neemos, in which they presented their usual argumentative characters in sketches, interspersed with music, including songs by Sam Costa. The shows also featured Maurice Denham as "His Nibs" Little Reggie.[1] Caryll and Mundy also featured together in the 1937 film, Calling All Ma's, and the following year in Lassie from Lancashire.[4]
Caryll died in Sussex in 1953, aged 60, after having a leg amputated following a long illness. Mundy died in 1968, aged 75.[2]
References
^ abcAndy Foster and Steve Furst, Radio Comedy 1938-1968: A Guide to 30 Years of Wonderful Wireless, Virgin, 1996, ISBN0-86369-960-X, pp.20-21
^ abcRichard Anthony Baker, Old Time Variety: an illustrated history, Pen & Sword, 2011, ISBN978-1-78340-066-9, p.225
^Michael Kilgarriff, Grace, Beauty and Banjos: Peculiar Lives and Strange Times of Music Hall and Variety Artistes, Oberon Books, 1998, ISBN1-84002-116-0, p.65