Become a Member
Life

From Frankie to Borat - that's entertainment

Ahead of a new exhibition on Jews in showbusiness, we picks our top British talents

May 19, 2011 10:03
Crooner Frankie Vaughan, celebrated for his voice and his headgear

ByMichael Freedland, Michael Freedland

3 min read

1950s - FRANKIE VAUGHAN
● He was the man who wore a top hat (even in the 1950s, few did that) and dinner jacket, who gave a kick with his left leg as he asked his adoring fans to "Give Me the Moonlight". Frank Abelson became Frankie Vaughan because his grandmother told him he was her "number vorn boy". That was in Liverpool, where he sang in the choir at the Princes Road Synagogue. As the age of rock'n'roll and Elvis dawned, he showed that an old-style melody and a great voice could still be top of the pops. He was performing right until shortly before his death in 1999 - 14 years after he starred in the show Forty Second Street in the West End.

1960s - LIONEL BART

● No one had the influence on British showbusiness and its export across the Atlantic than the boy born Lionel Begleiter. Or became a bigger disappointment to himself. Bart had written pop tunes, made an impact with the mockney favourite, Fings Ain't Wot They Used T' Be, and then in 1960 (the year of his Cliff Richard hit, Living Doll) scored bigger than any British songwriter-cum-playwright since Ivor Novello, with his musical version of the Oliver Twist story. Bart, a product of the East End, wrote other big shows like Blitz and Maggie May, but Jews loved him because of the way he changed the old antisemitic image of Fagin by making him a loveable rogue. In that he was helped by the man who played the role - Ron Moody. Bart's problem was that he did not follow his own advice and start "reviewing the situation". He went broke after spending a fortune on booze and drugs following the flop of his version of the Robin Hood story, improbably called Twang.

1970s - PETER SELLERS