This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2010) |
Joff Ellen (born Raymond Charles Ellen; 20 May 1915 at Myrtleford – 24 December 1999 at Leongatha), was an Australian entertainer, TV pioneer, actor and comedian.
Joff Ellen | |
---|---|
Born | Raymond Charles Ellen 20 May 1915 |
Died | 24 December 1999 | (aged 84)
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1939–1976 |
Known for | The Tarax Show, In Melbourne Tonight, Peters Club |
Spouse | Bernadette Moyna Shaw (m. 1946) |
Career
editDuring World War II he performed vaudeville acts for the troops and after the war did comedy shows on Melbourne radio station 3XY 1422, now known as Radio Hellas.
From the introduction of television in Victoria, he appeared on various children's shows as the character Joffa Boy, particularly The Tarax Show, wearing a Carlton Football Club jumper and "Bombay Bloomers" with large suspenders that he would manipulate for comic effect. His entrance song (written by resident star ventriloquist Ron Blaskett) was recorded by the show's girls choir along with musical director Margot Sheridan, and went like this:
Choir: "Who is that peeping round the corner?
It's not Jack Spratt or Little Johnny Horner."
*(Joffa then peers around the corner of the set entrance and sings the next line)*
"I'm the chap who always has a grin"
Choir: "Joffa Boy! Joffa Boy! Please come in."[1]
He would then greet the audience with "Howdy Doody, boys and girls!", and they would respond "Howdy Doody, Joffa Boy!". In addition, he developed a humorous audience greeting which became his catch-cry, "Howdy-doody, boys and girls and mums and dads and bald-headed babies".[2]
Ellen also played the naughty schoolboy role of "Conkers" in the slapstick series Take That (1957-59) for Crawford Productions, which reputedly could have been Australia's first TV sitcom.[3]
His only known film role was in Nightclub (1952), one of only a handful of films made in Melbourne in that decade, where he appeared with the artist and actor Valma Howell whom he was briefly engaged to before she died in a car crash.
He was nationally famous for his appearances with Graham Kennedy on the television show In Melbourne Tonight (IMT) and later The Graham Kennedy Show from 1958 to 1974 employing a variety mix of song-and-dance, comedy sketches and other vaudevillean skills.[4] In one of his last comedy bits, after shoving Kennedy a little too hard during horseplay, he quipped, "I'm retired now [so] don't need the money."
Influence
editIn Graham Kennedy's last television interview for his 60th birthday, he told Ray Martin that in the first few years of IMT, the comedy sketches were mainly devised by Ellen recreating old Tivoli and vaudeville shtick, rather than using new writers. Kennedy credited learning a great deal of his physical and visual comedy from Ellen, whom he respected.
Personal life
editHe retired in 1976 and lived in Tarwin Lower, Victoria with his wife, Bernadette. The couple were married for 54 years.
References
edit- ^ Blaskett, Ron. "Gerry Gee and The Tarax Show (edited excerpts from the book "You, Me and Gerry Gee" by Ron Blaskett)". tdgq.com.au. Paul Howson. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ TIPPET, GARY (25 December 1999). "TV pioneer 'Joffa Boy' Ellen dies". The Age. Nine Entertainment Co. Newspapers.com. Retrieved 25 August 2019.
- ^ TV Week 26 June 1958, pg.47
- ^ TIPPET, GARY (25 December 1999). "TV pioneer 'Joffa Boy' Ellen dies". The Age. Nine Entertainment Co. Newspapers.com. Retrieved 25 August 2019.