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Intro | British ventriloquist | |
Places | United Kingdom Great Britain | |
was | Entertainer Ventriloquist | |
Work field | Entertainment Film, TV, Stage & Radio | |
Gender |
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Birth | 1915 | |
Death | 14 April 1994 (aged 79 years) |
Biography
Saveen (born Albert Edward Langford; 27 May 1914, Southwark, London, England – 14 April 1994, Worcester Park, Surrey, England) was a British ventriloquist who was the first to have a national radio series ("Midday with Daisy May") on the BBC Light Programme after the Second World War.
Among his many puppet characters were the tiny schoolgirl dummy Daisy May, a cockney boy dummy "Andy the Spiv" and two dogs (one dummy and one real). He also made frequent appearances on television in the 1950s and 1960s. His character "Daisy May" is identified as the origin of Royal Navy slang "Daisy" for a sailor named May.
Saveen had 13 puppet characters aside from Daisy May, including "Andy the Spiv", "Sonny", and a dog who used to say "Drop Dead!" in a very droll posh voice whenever Saveen spoke to him.