Difference between revisions of "Kenny Everett"
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− | [[File:Kenny Everett.jpg|thumb|Kenny Everett]]'''Kenny Everett''' ( | + | [[File:Kenny Everett.jpg|thumb|Kenny Everett]]'''Kenny Everett''' (1944–1995) was a comedian, radio DJ and television entertainer, best known for his career as a radio DJ and for ''The Kenny Everett Video Show''. |
− | + | He was born in [[Seaforth]], [[Lancashire]] on Christmas Day 1944 into a Catholic family. His birth name was Maurice James Christopher Cole.<ref name=Virgin>Colin Larkin "The Virgin Encyclopedia of Seventies Music" 1997 148 isbn 0753501546</ref> Everett attended the local secondary modern school, St Bede's Secondary Modern, now part of Sacred Heart Catholic College. He attended a junior seminary at [[Stillington]] near [[York]] with an Italian missionary order, the Verona Fathers, where he was a choirboy. | |
==Personal life== | ==Personal life== | ||
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[[Category:1944 births]] | [[Category:1944 births]] | ||
[[Category:1995 deaths]] | [[Category:1995 deaths]] | ||
+ | [[Category:AIDS-related deaths]] |
Latest revision as of 21:42, 28 May 2016
Kenny Everett (1944–1995) was a comedian, radio DJ and television entertainer, best known for his career as a radio DJ and for The Kenny Everett Video Show.He was born in Seaforth, Lancashire on Christmas Day 1944 into a Catholic family. His birth name was Maurice James Christopher Cole.[1] Everett attended the local secondary modern school, St Bede's Secondary Modern, now part of Sacred Heart Catholic College. He attended a junior seminary at Stillington near York with an Italian missionary order, the Verona Fathers, where he was a choirboy.
Personal life
Everett married the singer Lee "Lady Lee" Middleton in 1969. By 1979 they had separated, and in the mid-1980s, he publicly acknowledged his homosexuality.
Everett was diagnosed as HIV positive in 1989, and he made his condition known to the public in 1993.[2] He died from an AIDS-related illness, in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, on 4 April 1995, aged 50. After a Roman Catholic requiem mass, Everett was cremated at Mortlake Crematorium.[3]
References
- This article is a stub. You can help the UK LGBT History Project by expanding it.
- ↑ Colin Larkin "The Virgin Encyclopedia of Seventies Music" 1997 148 isbn 0753501546
- ↑ http://books.google.com/books?id=44HpMBgEZhgC&pg=PA162 Kathy Charmaz, Glennys Howarth and Allan Kellehear "The unknown country: death in Australia, Britain, and the USA" page 162 Palgrave Macmillan 1997 isbn 0-312-16545-5
- ↑ http://books.google.com/books?id=y2MEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA19 "Transitions", "The Advocate" 16 May 1995 page 19 number 681 issn 0001-8996 Here Publishing