Willie Rushton

Willie Rushton (August 18 1937 - December 11 1996) was a British cartoonist, satirist, comedian, actor and performer. As well as co-founding Private Eye (along with his Shrewsbury School peers Christopher Booker, Paul Foot, and Richard Ingrams), originally acting as its layout artist and serving as one of its cartoonists until his death, he found fame in That Was The Week That Was and other television programmes with David Frost. Towards the end of his life he appeared as a guest on countless TV shows of varying quality, including Through the Keyhole. He was a founding team member in the long-running BBC Radio 4 radio panel comedy game show I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue. He also illustrated Auberon Waugh's "Way Of The World" column in The Daily Telegraph from 1990 until his death. Whilst working for Private Eye, in 1963, he contested the Kinross & West Perthshire by-election (where Sir Alec Douglas-Home was elected in order to become Prime Minister) as an independent candidate; he received some 45 votes. He is honoured by a blue plaque at Mornington Crescent tube station.

External links

Rushton, Willie Rushton, Willie Rushton, Willie Rushton, Willie

 

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