Jerry Desmonde


Jerry Desmonde was an English stage musical, film, and television actor principally in comedies and drama.
Sometimes credited as Jerry Desmond., he is probably best known as a straight man to Norman Wisdom, and also worked as a comedy foil to Sid Field, notably in their 1946 Golfing sketch.

Early life and career

Desmonde was born James Robert Sadler in Linthorpe, Middlesbrough, North Riding of Yorkshire, into a family of music hall performers who toured the halls in Scotland, North East England and Yorkshire.
Sadler first appeared on stage at the age of 11 and later became part of his family's act The Four Sadlers.
He built a career as a song and dance man in musical theatre and later toured parts of the United States in 1927-1928 with Beatrice Lillie and Noël Coward in the two-act revue This Year of Grace.
By 1934 he had married Peggy Duncan and they toured as a double act called Peg and Jerry, largely in Scotland.

Later career

In the 1940s, Desmonde was briefly a straight man for Scottish comedian Dave Willis and in 1942 he was invited to be straight man for stage comedian Sid Field becoming one of the most celebrated comedy teams ever to appear on stage. They appeared together on stage in three very successful revues, Strike a New Note, Strike it Again and Piccadilly Hayride at the Prince of Wales Theatre, London and in two films, London Town, an infamous flop, and in Cardboard Cavalier.
The two men next worked together on a stage play, Harvey at the Prince of Wales Theatre, from which Desmonde was ultimately sacked.In 1950 a few months later, during the play's run Field died of a heart attack.
In 1949 Desmonde appeared on television as a presenter in Rooftop Rendezvous.
He was a regular panelist and occasional guest host on the original UK version of the television panel game What's My Line?, and appeared in several TV comedies Holiday Camp with Arthur Askey,
A Flight of Fancy with Jimmy Young, then a singer working as a comedian, Spectacular
Before Your Very Eyes with Arthur Askey,
He appeared in Whack-O! and Bud in 1963 a sitcom with Bud Flanagan and other members of The Crazy Gang.
He also appeared in The Dickie Henderson Show and episodes of the ITV television series A Question of Happiness, The Plane Makers,
The Villains, No Hiding Place, The Mask of Janus, The Valliant Varneys, Pardon the Expression and Vendetta.
As a game show host he hosted ATV's Hit The Limit
and The 64,000 Question television gameshows and in October 1956 Jerry appeared on the front cover of TV Times magazine.
On radio Jerry appeared with Bob Hope on The Bob Hope Show and
the CBS radio play The Incredible History of John Shepherd,
and occasionally presented Housewives' Choice on the BBC's Light Programme.
Desmonde continued to appear on the London stage in Where's Charley?, a theatre musical production of the play Charley's Aunt with Norman Wisdom, and in the short-lived Belle
alternatively titled The Ballad of Dr Crippen a music hall musical with George Benson and Rose Hill.
Jerry Desmonde was in numerous movies from 1946 to 1965 including several comedies with Norman Wisdom, and starred in several others.
The Wisdom films usually involved the gump character in a junior position to a "straight man" superior, often played by Edward Chapman, and fighting against the unfairness wrought by some "authority figure", often played by Jerry Desmonde.

Personal life

He was married to Peggy Duncan, The stage name of Peggy Doreen Edwards and they had two children, a daughter Jacqueline and son Gerald.
After World War II Desmonde and his family settled in London and his daughter Jacqueline married clarinettist Peter Howes, the son of actor Bobby Howes and brother to actress Sally Ann Howes.
In 1967 following bouts of depression after the death of his wife the previous year, Desmonde took his own life.

Stage