13th July 2019
1st
Picture. Leslie Welch
2nd Picture. Ted Ray3rd Picture. Bob Monkhouse
4th
Picture. Leslie Welch Autograph
Leslie Welch – The Memory
Man
Now I bet this is someone that you had almost forgotten.Leslie Welch was
known as ‘The Memory Man’.
He was the star of eight Royal Command performances, 4,000 radio
appearances, 500 television shows and 12 films for Twentieth Century Fox. Yet,
one day in 1963, he suddenly stepped out of the limelight and into obscurity.
Millions of people tuned in their radios during the fifties to listen to
the warm Cockney tones of the Memory Man, as he correctly answered very
question put to him on any one of 37 sports.
Asked who won the Derby in 1900 he would stand in thought for a few
moments and then answer, ‘Golden Jubilee ridden by Herbert Jones’, and then the
weight, and the owner – and then the names of all the other runners and riders
as a bonus.
Leslie Welch was born in 1907 in
Edmonton, North London, where he went to school at Latimers. Although he
excelled at exams, his first love was always sport. While his classmates were
huddled over a copy of Comic Cuts, Leslie was engrossed in Ruffs Guide to the
Turf, or Wisden (the cricketers bible).
As some of us learn poetry, or lines for local amateur dramatics Leslie
Welch learned FA Cup winners, Derby winners and snooker champions, scores,
results, names, colours. He loved sport and he learned it all off by heart.
After gaining honours in history at school he worked in the accounts
department of the Royal Ordnance in Enfield. And there he might have remained,
as an anonymous accounts clerk, but for the war.
His talent for memorising and then being able to recall accurately the
smallest of sporting detail, was discovered almost by accident while he was
serving with the 8th Army in the Western Desert. He overheard two officers
arguing over the result of a football match; Leslie was not only able to settle
the dispute but name the two teams as well.
As news of his ability spread it was only a short time before he was
transferred to ENSA where he was able to put his civilian training in
accountancy to good use by doing the performer’s books by day and entertaining
the troops on stage by night. Knowledge of his amazing memory came to the
attention of everyone from Monty downwards.
But it was radio that brought him commercial success. After the war, he
gained a regular spot on Kaleidoscope, Variety Playhouse, In Town Tonight and
Calling All Forces where he worked
alongside stars such as Bob Monkhouse and Ted Ray.
His act was extraordinary Bob Monkhouse said ‘I remember seeing him on
stage, standing as if to attention, with his fingers flickering, perhaps
counting off the numbers of the pages. Sometimes he could recall a whole page
of Wisden, including information which he didn’t need, like the page number, or
notes in the margin’.
Along with Denis Norden, Bob Monkhouse scripted interviews with sporting
celebrities for Ted Ray. When Ted Ray asked Lester Piggott the name of his
first winner, Lester replied, ‘Napoleon’. At which point Leslie immediately
interrupted and corrected the young jockey by naming the horse as Northampton.
No matter what the sport, or how obscure the question, Leslie Welch
always had the answer. At the height of his career he played the London
Palladium, the greatest tribute to any music hall star. There was no other act
like his, nor a better-known speciality act at the time.
The continuing demands of fame and increasing number of appearances on
radio and television had its effect on his private life. By 1957 he was
beginning to miss his wife Kathleen, having already been separated from her for
three years by the war. The music hall had replaced the fighting and it was not
uncommon for Leslie to return home on the milk train just to be with his wife
for a few hours before setting out early next morning for the next engagement.
The gruelling Northern club circuit took its toll and, in 1963, Leslie
Welch turned his back on the stage and looked for a safe nine to five job. He
became a civil servant at the Holloway Road Labour Exchange in North London,
where, ironically, the staff recalled him as a rather forgetful man. It seemed
that anything outside of sport did not interest him sufficiently enough to
warrant remembrance.
Although he was beginning once again to accept some bookings for Masonic
lodges, rotary clubs and company dinners, he retired from the civil service in
1972 and settled in Ruislip, Middlesex.
On February 8, 1980 he collapsed and died a few yards from his home.
Despite his fame and his status as a household name during the 1940s and
1950s, Leslie Welch never considered himself special. He once said: ‘It is my
belief that everyone is born with a perfect memory, but by the time they are
21, thanks to the invention of pen and paper, they are only using a fifth of
it. The other four-fifths has gone dormant like a muscle not being used’.
In this age of computer databases and memory phones, Leslie Welch’s
memory act would have been even more outstanding. He read the sporting pages of
the press until he died proving, if only to himself, that his memory was
functioning as well as ever.
Most sporting memories remain as just print on the page; there will
never be another Leslie Welch to breathe life into them.
Peter
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News
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On
this day 13/07/1960 - 1965
On 13/07/1960 the number one single was Good Timin' - Jimmy Jones and the number one
album was South Pacific Soundtrack. The top rated TV show
was Rawhide (ITV) and the box office smash was Psycho. A pound of today's money was worth £13.68 and
Burnley were on the way to becoming the Season's Division 1 champions.
On 13/07/1961 the number one single was Runaway - Del Shannon and the number one
album was South Pacific Soundtrack. The top rated TV show
was Harpers West One (ATV) and the box office smash was One Hundred and One Dalmations. A pound of today's
money was worth £13.25 and Tottenham Hotspur were on the way to becoming the
Season's Division 1 champions.
On 13/07/1962 the number one single was I Can't Stop Loving You - Ray Charles and the number one
album was West Side Story Soundtrack. The top rated TV show was Coronation Street (Granada) and the box office
smash was Lawrence of Arabia.
On 13/07/1963 the number one single was I Like It - Gerry & the Pacemakers and the number one
album was Please Please Me - The Beatles. The top rated TV show was Coronation Street (Granada) and the box office
smash was The Great Escape. A pound of today's money was worth £12.64 and Everton
were on the way to becoming the Season's Division 1 champions. The big news
story of the week was UK Ministry of Defence proposed.
13/07/1964 the number one single was It's All
Over Now - Rolling Stones and the number one album was Rolling Stones - The
Rolling Stones. The top rated TV show was Labour Party Political Broadcast (all
channels) and the box office smash was Dr Strangelove. A pound of today's
money was worth £12.24 and Liverpool were on the way to becoming the Season's
Division 1 champions.
On 13/07/1965 the number one single was Crying in the Chapel - Elvis Presley and the number one
album was The Sound of Music Soundtrack. The top rated TV show was Coronation Street (Granada) and the box office
smash was The Sound of Music. A pound of today's money was worth £11.69 and
Manchester United were on the way to becoming the Season's Division 1
champions. The big news story of the week was Mont Blanc Tunnel officially
opened.
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