Denny Willis
Dennis (Denny) Willis (1920 – March 17, 1995) was a Scottish comedian.
Willis was born as the son of theatre maker Dave Willis, who performed sketches in theatres in Scotland in the 1930s. Willis added many of his father's ideas to his own repertoire. In 1962, Willis had his own television show on ATV, the Denny Willis Show. In the 1970s he performed in variety in Scarborough. In 1941, Willis became father of daughter Bobbie Willis, who, just like her father and grandfather before her, became a comedian.
Willis is probably best remembered for the act "The Fox Has Left Its Lair", which he performed as Denny Willis and the Quorn Quartet, touring along various theatres in the United Kingdom and elsewhere.
"The Fox Has Left Its Lair" was written by Douglas Furber (words) and Peggy Connor (music); it was originally a novelty item performed by Jack Buchanan in the Charlot Revue of 1925.[1] Willis changed some of the lyrics and the order of the verses to suit the act. The original lyrics are as follows:
With each new verse, repeat the previous verses and the chorus.
- There was a fox who left his lair; a red fox, a dead fox.
- With a yoicks, tally-ho, yo ho! With a yoicks tally-ho yo ho!
- The huntsman, huntsman blows his horn, a gold horn, a cream horn.
- Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha, Funny, funny.
- The babes come bounding out of school, chubby, grubby.
- All for the Lady Gwendoline, bonny, bony.
- Behold the bold Sir Geoffrey, dandy, bandy.
- The wedding bells ring out on high, ding dong, sing song.
- Sir Geoffrey cried "Egad I will woo her, boo her."
Alternative lines in the Denny Willis version include:
- The hunting huntsman blows his horn...
- Old grandpa with his wooden leg, limping, limping.
- Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha, silly, billy.
- The children running home from school, he's barmy, he's barmy.
- All for the Lady Gwendoline, she's charming, she's charming.
References
External links
- Comedy Tribute UK/Denny Willis at the Wayback Machine (archived October 27, 2009)
- "The Fox Has Left Its Lair" on YouTube (recorded at a television show of Dutch broadcaster VARA)