Your Memories
29.04.2008 : sandra mary bishop wrote
With "Humphs" passing it really is the end of an era. I've followed his career since the days of discovering trad.jazz and then the fantastic "bad penny blues". He was brilliant on "I'm sorry I haven't a clue" really made me laugh. I hope we shall hear some of the shows again.
29.04.2008 : Harriet Brooks wrote
With apologies to Will Rogers, but if you haven't gone to Heaven, Humph, I want to go where you went....
A hugely talented and very funny man. Thanks for everything, Humph.
30.04.2008 : Annie Parsons wrote
So saddened by the news of Humph's passing but not for long. We were lucky enough to get to see live shows, last time in Wolverhampton Grand this January. The highlights were Jeremy Hardy singing Abba's 'Thank You for the Music' topped only by Humphrey's finale trumpet solo. Vivid memories that leave you smiling to your core. I feel for the ISIHAC panel and prodution team, if this feels like a huge raggedy hole in our lives, how must they feel. Our condolences to the maestro's family and friends, love Annie & Keith
30.04.2008 : Caroline Marshall wrote
Humph was a regular visitor to the BBC Pebble Mill studios and as both researcher and producer there over several years, I had the great pleasure of looking after him on those visits. He and his band often played live on the show, always arrived on time, ready to rehearse, made pieces longer or shorter depending on what was needed and his live interviews were peppered with funny stories and anecdotes about his musical career. He was a joy to work with, a true gentleman with a great sense of humour and a fantastic trumpeter. He will be sadly missed.
30.04.2008 : Paul Leather wrote
When I heard you'd gone Humph I sat down and shed a few tears. I knew you had to go sometime, but now you have, another huge chunk of happiness has gone with you. Thanks...wherever you are...for all the laughing out loud you brought to so many of us. .....A sadder Paul Leather - Birmingham
Doyen of madcap radio comedy game and talented jazz musician
Musician and broadcaster Humphrey Lyttelton, who died on 25 April, 2008, was best known to listeners of Radio 4 for chairing the long-running game show I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue.
The self-styled “antidote to panel games” began in 1972 and was the brainchild of several satirical luminaries who concocted nonsensical games for regulars and guest comedians to take part in under Mr Lyttelton’s faux-reluctant guidance.
But despite his natural deadpan delivery, it was his previous career as a celebrated jazz musician that landed him the job – the show’s creators sensed that his ability to play the trumpet freestyle would help him cope with the chaos of the madcap radio show.
Humphrey Richard Adeane Lyttelton was born on 23 May, 1921, into an aristocratic family - his grandfather was the Lord Lyttelton, 8th Viscount Cobham - and he was schooled at Eton where his father was a housemaster.
He discovered jazz at an early age through the music of Louis Armstrong and Nat Gonella, taught himself trumpet and drums and formed his first combo at the age of 15. He served with the Grenadier Guards during the Second World War and then embarked on a career as a cartoonist.
However, by 1949 his jazz calling came to fruition - the Humphrey Lyttelton Band, formed the previous year, quickly became one of Europe's leading exponents of the New Orleans sound and EMI offered them a contract to record a string of sought-after records. His single Bad Penny Blues made British jazz history when it entered the top twenty in 1956.
Mr Lyttelton worked with many of the great jazz names of the era and even got to play on the same stage as his hero when Louis Armstrong did a series of London shows. By the start of the '60s his band had toured America and expanded their repertoire to include blues and pop numbers, angering some traditionalist fans but providing more mainstream appeal.
In 1967 he began hosting The Best of Jazz, a weekly Radio 2 show that would be his for the next 40 years. Nevertheless, he was something of an unlikely choice when I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again stars Tim Brooke-Taylor and Graeme Garden decided that an unscripted show would be a welcome relief from writing their chaotic comedy show, but their vision of a comedy equivalent of jazz earned him the seat. At first he shared hosting duties with Barry Cryer but after the first series he was given the role permanently with Cryer moving onto the panel.
Throughout his reign on I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, Mr Lyttelton (with help from "the lovely Samantha" who kept the non-existent scores) instigated and oversaw with feigned distaste a variety of bizarre rounds, including singing one song to the tune of another, composing improvised verse, reading scripts in an incongruous accent and, most famously, the game of wits with no rules, Mornington Crescent.
'Humph', as he came to be known, was distinctive for his dry and scornful tone. The scripts were written for him, but when he deviated he would usually bring the house down.
"They're like big concerts, recorded in very big theatres," he once said of the taping of I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue episodes. "It's hard to get tickets. Sometimes I can't get in."
He was rewarded with a Sony Gold Award for services to broadcasing in 1993 amd a lifetime achievement award in the Post Office British Jazz Awards in 2000, followed a year later by a similar accolade from the BBC Jazz Awards.
The BBC announced on 25 April that he had died peacefully aged 86 with his family by his bedside. He had been admitted into hospital earlier in the week for surgery to repair an aortic aneurysm. His illness had already seen the new series of I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue cancelled.
Mark Damazer, controller of Radio 4, paid tribute to Mr Lyttelton: "He was just a colossally good broadcaster and possessed of this fantastic sense of timing. It's a very, very sad day but we should celebrate and be very grateful for how much he did because he really was one of the giants over the last 40 years, really terrific."
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