Jimmy Cricket was once the star of TV’s This Is Your Life – but it nearly never happened.
In the popular primetime programme, the host would pop in unexpectedly on a special guest.
The celebrity would then be transported to a television studio and be taken through their life with the assistance of the ‘big red book’ and the help of friends and family.
This Is Your Life was originally broadcast live and alternated between on the BBC and on ITV over the years.
It was on 29 September 1987 when famous funnyman Jimmy was surprised by presenter Eamonn Andrews on a central London building site.
Jimmy has been recalling the whole experience, which included an amazing coincidence, in his latest Saturday column in the Lancashire Evening Post.
“It happened in the late 1980s but I can still remember it to this day… I’d just come up from the underground and as I stepped out into one of London’s busiest thoroughfares, Oxford Circus, who should I see in front of my eyes but my sister-in-law Evelyn strolling along with her husband Barry by her side.
What made it even more surprising was that Evelyn had emigrated to Australia 15 years before.
Bigger surprise
We exchanged a few pleasantries and Evelyn then mentioned that she’d be up to see her sister May in Rochdale in the coming days.
The object of my visit to London was to promote a book I’d just written called Letters From My Mammy.
So the next morning my agent/manager Phyllis Rounce and I were driven to a building site where the publishers had arranged for me to have some publicity shots taken.
Little did I know that another even bigger surprise was in store for me.
As our car approached this building site, whom should I see but Evelyn again, and beside her a man wearing a black and white donkey jacket, with a yellow tin hat on his head, carrying a big red book under his arm.
And as we drew closer, it became clear that the man was none other than a famous television personality of that era called Eamonn Andrews.
As I stepped out of the car, he greeted me with his soft Irish dulcet tones: “Last night you saw your sister-in-Law Evelyn in the street in London, but tonight Jimmy Cricket, This is your life.
Melodious singing
It had all started many years before, in the summer of 1972, when in my mid-20s, I got job as a Pontin Bluecoat at their holiday camp in Middleton Towers near Morecambe.
Three young sisters – May, Margaret and Evelyn – also worked there as waitresses, and, as they too came from Belfast, I struck up an instant rapport with them.
After they’d finished their dining room duties, May and Margaret would get up in the Sundowner Bar and, under the name The Tweedie Sisters, regale the holidaymakers with their melodious singing.
I was bowled over by the reception the girls got and as I harboured a burning desire to be a full-time comic myself, I hatched a plan that when the season finished at the camp, we would all head off to seek our fame and fortune.
As Manchester was the nearest area with a thriving club scene, we decided to try our luck there.
Evelyn, the eldest sister, was crucial to the project because she was the only one of us who could actually drive.
Recklessness of youth!
I remember one particular night when we were all coming back from a gig and our clapped-out banger broke down.
Two policemen got out of their patrol car to help us, when they saw us pushing it.
When we eventually did get it to go and they waved us off, we all gave a mighty sigh of relief… little did our boys in blue realise that our vehicle was neither taxed nor insured.
Oh the recklessness of youth! It was around this time that Evelyn decided to emigrate to Oz.
Back to This Is Your Life… because of the surprise meet-up in Oxford Circus the night before, the programme itself was very nearly cancelled.
What saved the day was the fact that May had been told her sister wouldn’t be able to come over from Australia.
So, just before the end of the show when Eamonn enquired about Evelyn, I was able to turn the tables and tell her the good news.
Then on came Evelyn for an emotional reunion with her sisters.
Affinity
The only sad bit was that Eamonn himself passed away peacefully in hospital a few weeks later.
It was said he actually watched the show shortly before his death and I have felt an affinity with him ever since.
The programme can be seen on my website – see link below.
The site also contains a fuller version of these events in my autobiography Memoirs of an Irish Comedian.”
The paperback version of Jimmy’s autobiography costs £11.99 at online retailer Amazon.
It is also available via eBook and audio formats.
Signed copies (£13.99 including postage and packing) can be purchased on this website here.
It is also on sale at Jimmy’s live gigs for £10 where he will sign it.
One pound from the sale of every book goes to Mary’s Meals.
Also read: Jimmy Cricket’s signed autobiographies now available by post!
Watch: Jimmy Cricket on TV’s This Is Your Life
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