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  • Published: 6 October 2000
  • ISBN: 9780099406419
  • Imprint: Arrow
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 448
  • RRP: $27.99
Categories:

Parcel Arrived Safely

Tied with String



The heart-warming and hilarious bestselling autobiography from one of Britain's greatest stars; a man who, over the decades has excelled in opera, theatre, TV comedy shows and Andrew Lloyd Webber West End musicals.

By turns hilarious, revelatory and desperately sad, here is the autobiography of the man whose TV and stage appearances such as Hello Dolly!, Some Mothers Do `Ave 'Em and The Phantom of the Opera have made him a national institution. The story of the true identity of his father, which is behind this book's title, leads into an evocative depiction of his tender childhood years. Whilst all the men were away at war, Crawford was surrounded by loving women. For him this was an idyllic wartime childhood, but the return of the men in peacetime signalled darker times to come. Crawford's infectious enjoyment of stage work illumines his account of his early struggles to make a name for himself in the theatre business, and his early failures with girls are lifted by his abiding sense of the absurd. Both in his private life and his work as a successful actor and TV comedian, he begins a lifetime's habit of pratfalls that he would later turn to good use in the character of Frank Spencer in smash hit 1970s TV comedy show Some Mothers Do`Ave 'Em. His talent for mimicry makes the great personalities in his life come alive on the page; people he has worked with, including Benjamin Britten who taught him to sing, John Lennon - with whom he shared a villa - and Oliver Reed, Michael Winner, Barbra Steisand, Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra.

  • Published: 6 October 2000
  • ISBN: 9780099406419
  • Imprint: Arrow
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 448
  • RRP: $27.99
Categories:

About the author

Michael Crawford

Crawford began his professional career as a boy soprano in Benjamin Britten's Let's Make An Opera. He became the popular star of Not So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life and starred in The Knack. He juggled film and stage careers, appearances including Hello Dolly!, the long-running comedy No Sex Please - We're British and the 70s TV comedy Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em - which is still running around the world. He starred in, among many other things, the John Barry hit musical Billy, the 1981 hit Broadway musical Barnum and the widely acclaimed Phantom, More recently, he appeared in Andrew Lloyd Webber's The Woman in White in London's West End. His solo recording career began in 1992 and his three albums have all been huge runaway successes earning him gold and platinum discs. He has been awarded many honours including the OBE.

Praise for Parcel Arrived Safely

Compelling

Daily Mail

Entertaining... Crawford whips up the merriment from the wings

Mail on Sunday

Refreshingly candid

Express on Sunday