Skiles and Henderson

Skiles and Henderson was a long-running American stand-up comedy act consisting of Bill Skiles (William Al Skiles, July 5, 1931 - May 16, 2011)[1] and Pete Henderson (April 28, 1938 - March 1, 2018). With Henderson as the straight man and Skiles as the joker, they performed live and on many popular television shows. Their act began in 1958 at Disneyland, and they continued to perform together until 2010. Skiles died on May 16, 2011 and Henderson died on March 1, 2018.

Performance style

Bill Skiles acted as the "frenzied, jabbering, sound-effecting clown to the straight man Pete Henderson".[2] The act consisted mainly of improvised humor featuring sound effects and a variety of antics by Skiles, interfering with Henderson's attempts to tell a story.[1]

History

The two men met in 1953 in Orange County, California. Their act started in 1958 at Disneyland as a song-and-dance act featuring musical instruments made by Skiles' father.[2] Turning more towards comedy, in 1960 they had their professional debut at the Golden Nugget Las Vegas.[1]

The duo played at nightclubs, showrooms and corporate events, and as a supporting act they toured with the New Christy Minstrels[1] and The Carpenters. They made television appearances with Ed Sullivan, Dean Martin, Rowan and Martin, Bob Hope, Johnny Carson, Mike Douglas, David Frost and Merv Griffin.[1][2]

Skiles and Henderson last performed in Arizona in March 2010.[2] Skiles died on May 16, 2011 at the age of 79 at his home in St Cloud, Florida.[1]

gollark: Philosophy is mostly weird semantics games I think.
gollark: I invoke `execve(2)` and counter³claim it.
gollark: I invoke divine right of kings (it's not like they had any more right to than me) and COUNTERCLAIM it.
gollark: I guess so.
gollark: Based on the Wikipedia article on Pfizer, the P is silent, if I'm reading this right.

References

  1. Elaine Woo, Bill Skiles, half of Skiles and Henderson comedy team, dies at 79, Los Angeles Times, May 20, 2011
  2. Dennis Hevesi, Bill Skiles, was in comic duo, New York Times, May 20, 2011
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