Razzamatazz - British Comedy


Cissie and Ada

Les Dawson's Cissie and Ada is a collection of some of the scripts I wrote for Les when I worked as his scriptwriter during the years 1978 to 1983, originally on two series of the BBC's' The Dawson Watch' and subsequently on three series of 'The Les Dawson Show'. Les was Ada of course, and Cissie was played by Roy Barraclough, who you may recall later starred as Alex Gilroy in Coronation Street. Les Dawson, British comedy's finest, was a joy to know, in real life exactly the same person you saw on your TV screens. Scriptwriting isn't the easiest of professions, especially when it comes to writing comedy scripts, but writing Cissie and Ada was easier than most because as a boy I grew up amongst women much like Cissie, and especially Ada, hair-curlered harridans who would habitually spend a good part life of their day standing on their front doorsteps commenting to each other other about the disgusting state of the curtains at number 29 over the road before going on to do a demolition job on the character of the woman at number 14 who was 'no better than she should be' and 'too thick with her lodger for my liking. Well I heard her bedsprings going at three-o-clock this morning and her husband's on regular nights." My abiding memory of Les is standing at the BBC Club bar during the hour between final rehearsal and show time with a third double scotch in his hand while the show's producer Peter Whitmore looked anxiously on, hoping against hope that Les wouldn't order another. Les ordered another. "Don't you think you've had enough, Les?" said Peter. "We've a show to do you remember." Les indicated to the barman to fuifil his order of the cup that cheers, turned to Peter, and in the manner of a great Shakespeare tragedian actor said: "I can't go on alone." Les is sadly no longer with us, and television repeats of his work are few and far between, so perhaps these Cissie and Ada scripts, which were brought wonderfully to life by Les and Roy, will go a little way towards filling the void that he left.