Woodall appeared in many television series, and also in some films, in which he invariably acted as either a television newsreader, or as an announcer.[3] On television, Woodall appeared in several episodes of The Goodies, as well as Steptoe and Son, A Fine Romance and Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads?, among others. Increasingly disabled by rheumatoid arthritis from the late 1960s, Woodall's frequent appearances on The Goodies (1970–1981) would have been more frequent, but according to author Robert Ross in his book The Goodies Rule OK his contract was often marked "Artist ill".[4] In an interview with Ross, Tim Brooke-Taylor praised Woodall's professionalism in wake of his debilitating illness. "He wasn't a well man at all, but (on camera) he rose from the dead and delivered every time."
Towards the end of his life, Woodall became a committed supporter of the Arthritis and Rheumatism Council (now Arthritis Research UK) and by appearing in a Christmas television appeal for the charity in 1981, raised the sum of £72,000; at that time a record for an appeal of that kind. Woodall recounted his struggle with the illness in his autobiography Disjointed Life,[5] which he hoped would help medical professionals to understand the mental and emotional aspects of the condition.[6]
^Bill Oddie; Graeme Garden; Tim Brooke-Taylor; Robert Ross (2006). The Goodies Rule OK: The Official Story of the Cult Comedy Collective. Carlton Books Ltd. ISBN9781844421527.
^Woodall, Corbet (1980). Disjointed Life. William Heinemann Ltd. ISBN9780434877966.
^Andrews, Michael (1982). "Obituary: Corbet Woodall". rheumatology.oxfordjournals.org. Rheumatology and Rehabilitation (Oxford Journals). Retrieved 28 June 2015.[dead link]