![]() | ![]() Manning was a singer and compere before entering comedy ![]() |
He shot to fame in the 1970s on ITV programme The
Comedians, having already developed a career in music as a vocalist and
a compere.
His website branded him "one of the most outrageous and successful comedians of our time".
Manchester-based Manning denied being racist, once remarking: "I tell jokes. You never take a joke seriously."
However, in 2002, he was banned from performing in the
Dorset seaside town of Weymouth, where councillors were worried that
his act would breach laws on race.
Until his dying day, he didn't understand what all the fuss was about
He died in North Manchester General Hospital at 1510 BST on Monday.
Last month a tribute to him was paid at the recording of
a proposed TV show entitled This Was Your Life, in front of an audience
of 600 friends and fans.
He told them: "I'm going to be with you for a long time yet!"
'Gags galore'
HAVE YOUR SAY
Like him or loathe him there was no way of ignoring him
His biographer, Jonathan Margolis, last saw him six weeks ago, and said he was "the last of the joke-tellers".
"I think he'll inevitably become famous for this
question of whether he a racist comedian - and it's a funny thing
because it's some way down the list of things he was," he told the BBC
News website.
"He was a man of his age - and as people of his age went, he was relatively un-racist.
"Until his dying day, he didn't understand what all the fuss was about."
Writer and broadcaster Barry Cryer said: "The thing
about Bernard was that he looked funny, he sounded funny and he had
excellent timing. It was just what he actually said that could be
worrying."
Comedian Roy Walker, who met Manning when he started on
the club circuit in Manchester nearly 40 years ago, told the BBC he was
"devastated".
"I found him hilarious and extremely charitable," he said.
"I went to his birthday party last year. I was sat at
the table with loads of comedians, and his schoolfriends - Jewish,
Asian - I thought it fantastic that he could stay friends with the
people he grew up with," Walker said.
"He whipped out gags galore and made sure everybody got a laugh," fellow comedian Frank Carson told the BBC News website.
He was more successful than any of the comedians that have been on television in the last 15 years
"He was a wonderful man. If I had to write his gravestone I'd put: 'Here lies Bernard Manning, comedian, who died 76 years old.'
"Underneath that I'd put: 'What a pity, he had a booking next week.'"
Carson added: "He's gone but he'll never be forgotten. He was one of the most generous men on earth."
Another comedian, Stan Boardman, said that all he did "was take the mickey", which was "the British sense of humour".
"Right up until last week he was still cracking the jokes and pulling the audience in.
"Because he wasn't on television very much doesn't mean he wasn't still successful.
"He was more successful than any of the comedians that have been on television in the last 15 years."
Film director Michael Winner, who paid for Manning to perform at a party, described Manning as "the funniest man in the world".
"He was the last of the comedians who put the PC brigade
behind him. He took no notice of them and just got on with the job of
being funny," he said.
I didn't think he was very funny. The best people to tell jokes about the blacks are the blacks themselves. (Lenny Henry used to do it). It's the same with Jewish jokes. Many Jews send themselves up rotten and it works but for someone else to do it in public doesn't sound so good.