William Edgar (Bill) Oddie, OBE, BA, MA (Cantab.), born July 7 1941 in Rochdale, Lancashire), is a comedy writer and performer, author, and talented composer and musician. A birdwatcher since his childhood in Birmingham, Oddie has now established a reputation for himself as an ornithologist, conservationist and television presenter on wildlife issues. Some of his books are illustrated with his own paintings and drawings. His programmes for the BBC include Springwatch with Bill Oddie, How to Watch Wildlife, Wild in Your Garden, Birding with Bill Oddie and Britain Goes Wild with Bill Oddie.
He supports Ipswich Town but also follows Rochdale A.F.C..
His first television appearance was in Bernard Braden's Braden Beat in 1964. Subsequently, he was a key member of the performers in the cult BBC radio series I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again (ISIRTA; 1965), where many of his compositions were featured. Some were released on the album Distinctly Oddie (Polydor, 1967). He was possibly one of the first performers to parody a rock song, arranging the traditional Yorkshire folk song "On Ilkla Moor Baht'at" in the style of Joe Cocker's hit rendition of the Beatles' "With a Little Help from My Friends" (released on John Peel's Dandelion Records in 1970 and featured in Peel's special box of most-treasured singles), and singing "Andy Pandy" in the style of a brassy soul number such as Wilson Pickett or Geno Washington might perform. In many shows he would do short impressions of Hughie Green.
In one song on I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again, Oddie performed What a Wonderful World with a voice fully reminiscent of Louis Armstrong. During the course of the song, the rest of the cast attributed the gravelly quality of his voice to a bad cold. In the background, during the rest of the song, it is possible to hear the cast call for a doctor, the arrival of the doctor and his decision that Oddie should go into hospital, the trip to hospital in an ambulance, and the operation extracting his tonsils. After this, the sound of his voice changed to a sound closer to that of Harry Secombe. He thanked the cast for curing him.
On television Oddie was co-writer and performer in the comedy series Twice a Fortnight with Graeme Garden, Terry Jones, Michael Palin and Jonathan Lynn. Later, he was co-writer and performer in the comedy series Broaden Your Mind with Tim Brooke-Taylor and Graeme Garden, for which Oddie became a cast member for the second series). Bill, Tim and Graeme then co-wrote and appeared in their television comedy series The Goodies.
Oddie was a member of 1970s BBC TV trio The Goodies, in which he starred with ISIRTA colleagues Graeme Garden and Tim Brooke-Taylor (also veterans of Cambridge Footlights). He portrayed the rebel, to Brooke-Taylor's conservative and Garden's boffin, with long hair and a poster of Che Guevara in his corner. The Goodies also released records, including "Father Christmas Do Not Touch Me"/"The In-Betweenies", "Do The Funky Gibbon", and "Black Pudding Bertha", which were hit singles in 1974-5. They reformed, briefly, in 2005, for a successful 13-date tour of Australia. Tim, Bill and Graeme also voiced characters on the 1983 animated children's programme Bananaman 1983, in which Oddie voiced the characters of "Crow", "Chief O'Reilly", "Doctor Gloom", "Eric" and "the Weatherman".
Oddie co-wrote many of the episodes of the television comedy series Doctor in the House with Graeme Garden (who is a qualified doctor). Bill and Graeme wrote most of the episodes for the first season of the "Doctor in the House". Also, Bill and Graeme wrote all of the episodes for the second season of .the "Doctor in the House" television series.
Bill Oddie has occasionally appeared on the BBC Radio 4 panel game I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, on which Garden and Brooke-Taylor are regular panellists.
In 1982 Garden and Oddie wrote, but did not perform in, a 6-part science fiction sitcom called Astronauts for Central and ITV. The show was set in an international space station in the near future.
Bill Oddie was the compere of a daytime BBC gameshow, "History Hunt" (2003); and has featured in a Doctor Who audio drama, and he also appeared as the hapless window cleaner in one of the two films made of Eric Sykes' comedy story The Plank, and also appeared in a 2-part episode of the comedy television series Married with Children.
In the fictional world of comedy character Alan Partridge, Oddie is an unseen presence in Alan's life, bothering him with prank phone calls, and buying him gifts like dressing gowns.
He plays the drums and saxophone and appeared as Cousin Kevin in a production of The Who's rock opera Tommy at the Rainbow Theatre, Finsbury Park, London on 9 December 1972. He has also contributed vocals to a Rick Wakeman album, "Criminal Record".
Bill Oddie took part in the English National Opera production of the Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera The Mikado, in which he appeared in the role of the "Lord High Executioner", taking over the role from Eric Idle.
During the early 1990s, Bill Oddie was a DJ for London based jazz station, 102.2 Jazz FM. Oddie on his show would play jazz tracks on his Sunday morning show. Oddie was dismissed after criticising the management on air after they told him he was playing too much jazz on his show. *
He has hosted a number of very successful nature programmes for the BBC, many produced by Stephen Moss, including:
Most of the recent series have been produced by Stephen Moss.
Oddie is married to Laura Beaumont, with whom he has worked on a variety of projects for children, including film scripts, drama and comedy series, puppet shows and books. They have a daughter, Rosie, and live in London. He has two daughters from his first marriage (to Jean Hart), Bonnie and the actress Kate Hardie, and a grandson, Lyle.
In 2001, Oddie became the third person to turn down the "red book" and decline to appear on This Is Your Life. He relented some time later.
On 16 October 2003, Oddie was made an OBE for his service to Wildlife Conservation in a ceremony at Buckingham Palace. He played down the event, choosing to wear a camouflage shirt and crumpled jacket to receive his medal.
In June 2004, Oddie and Johnny Morris were jointly profiled in the first of a three part BBC Two series, The Way We Went Wild, about television wildlife presenters.
In May 2005, he received the British Naturalists' Association's Peter Scott Memorial Award, from BNA president David Bellamy, "in recognition of his great contribution to our understanding of natural history and conservation".
(incomplete list)
Bill Oddie also co-wrote the following books with the other members of The Goodies
| I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again | |
|---|---|
| Tim Brooke-Taylor — John Cleese — Graeme Garden — David Hatch — Jo Kendall — Bill Oddie | |
| Twice a Fortnight | |
| Graeme Garden — Terry Jones — Jonathan Lynn — Bill Oddie — Michael Palin |
1941 births | Living people | Alumni of Pembroke College, Cambridge | English comedians | British comedy writers | British illustrators | British nature writers | British ornithologists | British radio actors | British radio writers | British television actors | British television presenters | British television writers | British voice actors | Cambridge Footlights | People with bipolar disorder | Doctor Who actors | Natives of Lancashire | Officers of the Order of the British Empire | Rochdale
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