Let's see if we can lure some of our many "silent partners" into speaking up, and what's best than a bit of a poll for that?

So, if you were to choose ONE, and only ONE comedian as a symbol representative of a decade in the history of British TV, who would they be?
Here's my very difficult pick, in fact I'm happily going to break the rule of ONE and only ONE myself pretty soon, and not just that...

The Face of the...
1950s - Spike Milligan (The Goon Show) [see note before screaming blue murder

]
1960s - Peter Cook (Not Only... But Also...)
1970s - John Cleese (Monty Python, Fawlty Towers)
1980s - Ah, here starts trouble already... have to go for an ex-aequo...
Adrian Edmondson (The Comic Strip, The Young Ones)
Rowan Atkinson (Not the 9 0'clock News, Blackadder)
1990s - Oh dear... another one...
Dawn French (The Vicar of Dibley, Murder Most Horrid)
Richard Wilson (One Foot in the Grave)
2000s - And more troubles... there's not much I like these days in "pure" comedy, it'll
have to be out of some of those "borderline" drama/comedy shows, as I was
saying somewhere else...
David Threlfall (Frank Gallagher, in Shameless)
Alun Armstrong (Brian "Memory" Lane, in New Tricks)
Note: Yes, alright, the Goons was really a radio show, but that's only because TV wasn't ready yet... the 50's was quite a short decade, from TV's point of view

Besides, the Goons, or some of them, actually made it on the cathodic tube, and I'm not talking about those weird cartoons, in the late 50's there were "A Show Called Fred" and "Son of Fred", although the "face" of those was actually Peter Sellers rather than Spike, who mostly wrote the shows but seldom, if ever, performed on them.
Still, you've got to make room for Spike Milligan somewhere, as much as you've got to make room for William Shakespeare when talking about English literature...

If you listen to many great comedians of the 60's and 70's, Spike's the one who started modern British comedy almost singlehandedly, dragging it kicking and screaming out of the clutches of Dan Leno...

However, in truth, as historical interest goes, it should probably be another ex-aequo between Spike and Tony Hancock, probably...
Any takers?
