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Johnny Speight (June 2, 1920 - July 5, 1998), was a TV scriptwriter of many classic British sitcoms. His most famous creation was the controversial bigot Alf Garnett, and although many of his shows contains contain the themes of racism and sexism, they are regarded as classics.
Speight was born in Canning Town, London, England and began contributing scripts to comedy shows in 1955, starting with Great Scott - It's Maynard!. His first major series was Sykes And A... (1961), which starred Eric Sykes, Hattie Jacques and Richard Wattis. (see Sykes). Speight was one of many great writing talents on that series which also included the star Sykes, John Antrobus and Spike Milligan.
In 1965, Speight created the series Till Death Us Do Part featuring Warren Mitchell as Alf Garnett, a right-wing working class figure with a chip on his shoulder and an angry word on everything. Garnett became one of the most memorable characters in British TV history, not bad given he's such an appalling character. The series also starred Dandy Nichols as his long-suffering wife Elise. The 1971 US sitcom All In The Family was based on this series.
1969 saw the premiere of Curry and Chips, an equally controversial sitcom from LWT for the ITV channel. Despite the apparent anti political correctness, Speight's intention - like Till Death Do Us Part was to highlight discrimination, not promote it. It was a cast of stereotypes, featuring Spike Milligan as blacked-up 'Paki Paddy' Kevin O'Grady, Eric Sykes as a liberal, Kenny Lynch as black, anti-Pakistani and Norman Rossington and Geoffrey Hughes as racist Liverpudlians.
Speight's next major series was 1975's For Richer...For Poorer which featured Harry H Corbett as a left-wing answer to Alf Garnett. After a brief return of Till Death Do Us Part on ITV in 1981 as Till Death..., Alf Garnett returned with a vengeance on the BBC's In Sickness And In Health which ran from 1985 to 1992.
In 1998 Johnny Speight died of cancer, and LWT put forward a series of specials featuring Warren Mitchell as Alf Garnett, giving his thoughts on a variety of subjects. The programmes were originally shelved by ITV controller David Liddiment.