Laurel and Hardy

Laurel and Hardy’s ‘demanding’ tours took serious toll on comedy duo’s health

LAUREL AND HARDY's "demanding" tours took their toll on the comedy duo, according to their biographer, who claimed in an unearthed interview that they were "both very ill".

LAUREL AND HARDY’s “demanding” tours took their toll on the comedy duo, according to their biographer, who claimed in an unearthed interview that they were “both very ill”.

The legendary comedy duo were honoured with a dramatic retelling of their lives on BBC Two last night. Directed by Jon S. Baird, ‘Stan & Ollie’ looks at how the pair delighted audiences on both sides of the Atlantic. British actor Steve Coogan shows he has an ear for a tune in his role as Cumbria-born Stan Laurel. And, sharing the screen with him is John C. Reilly, who gets into the character of Oliver Hardy — with the help of some prosthetics.

The film shows how Laurel and Hardy’s fame in America began to dwindle as they cut ties with Hollywood.

The story, which focuses on the men’s friendship, sees them tour Britain and Ireland in the mid-Fifties.

In real life, Laurel and Hardy’s incessant tours were extremely “demanding” and took their toll on the pair’s health, according to Simon Louvish, an author with extensive knowledge of the two.

He penned the 2002 biography, ‘Stan and Ollie: The Roots of Comedy: The Double Life of Laurel and Hardy’.

In an interview with Time magazine in 2018, the year ‘Stan & Ollie’ came out, he discussed their time on the road.

Laurel and Hardy’s ‘demanding’ tours took serious toll on comedy duo's health

Laurel and Hardy’s ‘demanding’ tours took serious toll on comedy duo’s health (Image: GETTY)

Laurel and Hardy: Legendary duo

Laurel and Hardy: Legendary duo (Image: GETTY)

He said: “They embraced these demanding tours which were quite physically exhausting.”

The expert had not seen ‘Stan & Ollie’, which portrays Laurel and Hardy as having tense disagreements with one another.

Mr Louvish claimed that any animosity between the pair in real life was not because they disliked one another, but due to them being worn out.

He explained: “They were both very ill in their later years.”

Their British tour in 1953 and 1954 would be their last due to their declining health.

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