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Kavanagh's biography of Handley was published in 1949, the year of the comedian's death and the end of their radio show. A prolific writer, ITMA and his work for Handley constituted only a small proportion of his total oeuvre.
Kavanagh's biography of Handley was published in 1949, the year of the comedian's death and the end of their radio show. A prolific writer, ITMA and his work for Handley constituted only a small proportion of his total oeuvre.


He died in London in September 1958 at the age of 66.<ref>https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/alt.obituaries/ZN_knIYdKWE</ref>
He died in London in September 1958 at the age of 66.<ref>https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/alt.obituaries/ZN_knIYdKWE</ref> His son was the poet [[P. J. Kavanagh]] who described childhood among the ITMA characters in his autobiographical ''The Perfect Stranger'' (1966).

His son was the poet [[P. J. Kavanagh]] who described childhood among the ITMA characters in his autobiographical ''The Perfect Stranger'' (1966).


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 19:16, 15 September 2017

Ted Kavanagh (1 March 1892 – 17 September 1958) was a British radio scriptwriter and producer.[1]

Kavanagh was born in Auckland, New Zealand in 1892.[2] He initially studied medicine in Edinburgh before pursuing a career as a writer. He is best remembered as the writer of It's That Man Again (ITMA), a radio comedy series which ran for a decade from 1939 and was immensely successful, It was intentionally devised by Kavanagh, producer Francis Worsley and the comedian Tommy Handley as Handley's specific vehicle; Kavanagh had been writing for him since 1924.

Kavanagh's biography of Handley was published in 1949, the year of the comedian's death and the end of their radio show. A prolific writer, ITMA and his work for Handley constituted only a small proportion of his total oeuvre.

He died in London in September 1958 at the age of 66.[3] His son was the poet P. J. Kavanagh who described childhood among the ITMA characters in his autobiographical The Perfect Stranger (1966).

References