(ranging from ageing music-hall performers to a younger breed of actors, comedians and musicians) to make them feel able to pass on such a raw and unconventional talent, and so Howard was forced to try his luck elsewhere.
He ended up as just another regular soldier in the Royal Artillery â his fatherâs old regiment â and was posted to Shoeburyness Barracks, near Southend-on-Sea, in Essex. It was there that, within a matter of days, âThe Actorâ acquired a new nickname: âThe Unknown Quantityâ.6
The name was first spluttered in exasperation by the latest authority figure to loom large in Frank Howardâs life: a loud and irascible little man called Sergeant-Major Alfred Tonks. Howard â a gangling, slouching, stammering and startlingly uncoordinated creature in crumpled khaki â managed to make his Sergeant-Major angry, distressed, amused and confused in broadly equal measure.
He always struggled to look half-smart, made a shocking mess of stripping down his rifle, never seemed to know when he was supposed to march quick or slow, mixed up âstanding at easeâ with âstanding easyâ, and was often a positive menace on the parade ground. âFrank just couldnât get it together,â one of his former comrades recalled. âWhen the sarge shouted âRight wheel!â once, Frank actually headed off to the left. And when the order came to âMark time!â â guess who bumped into my back and sent me sprawling into the bloke in front? Right first time.â7
As if intent upon making matters even worse, Howard sometimes also failed to fight the urge to answer back. On one particular occasion, straight after Sergeant-Major Tonks had shrieked out his standard sequence of critical clichés â âYou âorrible shower!â â young Private Howard actually had the temerity to mutter in response: âSpeak up!â It was âmerely a nervous reflexâ, he later explained, but it was more than enough to spark another noisy rant from his ruddy-cheeked tormentor.8
The only thing that saved him from spending one long spell after another stuck in the glasshouse was the fact that Tonks, though clearly impatient to hammer this risibly unconventional soldier into some kind of vaguely acceptable shape, could never quite decide whether he was dealing with a âtruculent rebelâ or merely a useless idiot.9 He settled for thinking of Howard as his âUnknown Quantityâ â partly because the act of classifying the unclassifiable made him feel as if he was restoring at least the semblance of order to his environment, and partly because he was probably quite relieved to leave the true nature and extent of that âquantityâ undiscovered.
Once the trauma of basic training was finally over, Howard was transferred away from Tonks â no doubt much to their mutual relief â and into B Battery in another section of the barracks. Accorded the rank of Gunner, Frank began busying himself with the business of providing a proper form of defence for an area of Essex surrounding Shoeburyness.
His thoughts, however, were seldom far removed from the much more pleasant world of show business. As soon as he started to settle, he found that all of the old âpassionâ and âfireâ that had recently been âdamped down by the practicalities of circumstanceâ now suddenly âburned hot againâ.10Hearing that some of his fellow garrison personnel were putting on a concert each Sunday night in the local YMCA, he eagerly sought out the Entertainments Officer and offered his services as a stand-up comic. The out-of-his-depth officer, who had been anxiously patrolling the corridors asking anyone and everyone he encountered if they might just possibly be able to âdo anythingâ, accepted the offer without hesitation. Frank Howard the performer was free to make his comeback.
When he stepped on to the stage the following Sunday, however, he was more than slightly surprised to hear himself introduced by the compère as âGunner Frankie Howard of B Battery.â He did a quick double-take: âFrankie Howard?â He had never allowed anyone to call him âFrankieâ before â âI didnât like Frankie a bit; it seemed positively babyishâ â but, once the show was over, he soon came to find that it had caught on, and, in time, he would reluctantly become resigned to the fact that the name was destined to stick (âA pity, reallyâ).11
The performance itself had gone down rather well. Most of his four-minute spot was filled with the kind of tried and tested material that had been blatantly âborrowedâ from professional comedians â most notably Max Miller â but he did manage to make at least one elderly gag sound vaguely original:
I was at a dance the other night in Southend. At the NAAFI. And this girl was there. Very nice, she was. Yes. So after the dance I said to her: âMay I see you home?â And she said: âOh, er, yes. Thank you very much!â So I said: âWhere do you live?â She said: âI live on a farm. Itâs not very far from here. Itâs about a half-an-hour walk.â So I said: âOh, right, thatâs fine.â Then she said: âThe only thing is, you see, Iâve got a couple of packages to pick up, from my uncle, to take back home to the farm. Would you mind?â So I said: âNo, no, weâll call in. What are they, by the way, these packages?â She said: âTwo ducks.â I said: âDucks?â She said: âOh, itâs all right. Theyâre not dead. Theyâre alive. But they wonât flap. Theyâre all sort of bound up a bit.â So we went down to this uncle, and he gave her these two ducks. So I â the perfect gentleman â said: âPlease, let me. Iâll carry them.â So I put one under each arm. And then off we traipsed, down this lane and across this field. Pitch dark it was. And all of a sudden this girl fell back against a hedge and went: âOoo-aaa-eee!â I said: âWhat the hellâs wrong with you?â She said: âIâm frightened!â I said: âWhat on earth are you frightened of ?â And she said: âIâm frightened of you!â I said: âFrightened of me?â She said: âYes. Iâm frightened that youâre going to try and make love to me!â I said: âHow the hell can I make love to you with a duck under each arm?â So she said: âWell, I could hold âem for you, couldnât I?â
He also sang the song, in his own inimitable style, for which he would later be infamous â âThree Little Fishesâ:
Down in the meadow in a little bitty pool
Lived three little fishes and their mommy fishy too. âSwim!â said the mommy fishy, âSwim if you can!â So they swam and they swam right over the dam.
Each subsequent verse was disrupted with comic interjections, and each chorus became an excuse for a quite extraordinary array of high-decibel shrieks and yelps:
There was Tom: âBoop-boop-dittem-datten-wattem, choo!â
And there was Dick: âBoop-boop-dittem-datten-wattem, chooo!â And there was Cecil: âBaa-oop-boop-dit-tem-dat-ten-wat-tem, choooo!â (Oh, he was a snob! He was dying to get into an aquarium!) And they swam and they swam right over the dam â¦12
Snobbish Cecil, needless to say, met with a particularly grisly end.
It was the same routine that he had performed so many times before, but, on this particular occasion, it really seemed to work. There were relatively few noticeable stammers or stumbles, and plenty of well-rehearsed cues for laughs; compared to most of the others taking part, Howard looked as if he knew what he was doing â even when he was pretending not to know what he was supposed to do. His audience, though captive, was genuinely appreciative. He left them calling for more.
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