from thefreeonline on 2nd Dec 2023 by Becky Fury at SO IT GOES John Fleming’s blog
Here, award-wining stand-up Becky Fury pays tribute to her long-time friend Tony Allen, who died yesterday morning, in London… (Photos from Becky’s collection)

Becky Fury with Tony Allen
Tony Allen was born like most people but, unlike most people, he was born on March 4th 1945, in the last months of WW2 in Hayes, Middlesex, to working-class parents.
Tony attributed much of the anarchic politicization that informed his whole potent life and oeuvre, to his upbringing.
Tony’s mum had flourished as a result of the unprecedented freedom women (on the home front) experienced during the war and after she had struggled to readjust when these freedoms were redacted. As a child Mrs Allen regaled young Tony with tales from her gilded age and also expressed her sense of injustice to him regarding its passing.
Mrs Allen was unknowingly talking to Tony about women’s liberation, (a cause he would later champion) but it would be another 20 years or so, before the experience of Mrs Allen and women like her could really be put into words because, until the counter cultural kick back of the 1960s, the language to describe the experience she was trying to describe didn’t exist.

Young Tony with his parents
Tony’s dad had also had a good war. According to Mr Allen, his time as an artilleryman in North Africa had been something of a holiday. According to Mr Allen, it had mainly involved getting a suntan or “lying by a gunner and staring at the stars” so, unintentionally Mr & Mrs Allen indoctrinated young Tony into becoming a utopian. Into a belief that other, better worlds are possible… A belief that underpinned everything Tony strived for in his art and life – as an authentic anarchist and as an authentic revolutionary, comic thinker.
After blissfully mis-spending the first part of his youth working odd jobs (“The odder the better”) and, most formatively, as a shark in the pool halls of 1950s’ Hayes, Tony became caught up in the revolutionary counter cultural movement of the 1960s.

Tony – street and pub performer/comic
He began squatting in North London and lived, until his death, in a housing cooperative in Ladbroke Grove that he and former squatters had created in a row of abandoned Georgian houses they had been gifted by the council because it was the 1970s and Why, thought the council, would anyone ever want to live in a tatty terrace in nasty old Notting Hill?
During this early and fertile period of anarchic creativity, aside from being gifted millions of pounds of real estate, Tony was also involved in the embryonic street art movement, wrote for situationist journal The International Times and founded a performance troupe called Rough Theatre. His friend and co-conspirator Tom Watson remembered an incident from this time…
We had written a kids’ play about comic book characters where a mad scientist eventually blows up the world. The explosion was simulated by a theatrical device, called a Marron.
It (usually) went bang, it was great fun, and it was a very successful show. We toured it around London play sites.

Tony Allen, anarchist
It was at this time the police were very hot on any potential terrorists who they thought might be living in squats. Both the IRA and the Angry Brigade were active – the Home Secretary’s car had recently been blown up in nearby Holland Park.
One morning, there was banging on the door at about 4am. Police were shouting “GET DRESSED!”. They were raiding London squats looking for suspects. Being a good Catholic boy I got dressed. While they were searching the house I could hear the police talking: “Hasn’t he got dressed yet?”. Tony would not put any clothes on. He’s a big chap and, to be honest, quite well endowed. He managed to make them feel very uncomfortable and unwelcome.
They seemed very interested in his diary. We realised afterwards why… It was full of entries about our play, with references to bombs that didn’t go off.
As Tony observed in an early stand up set:
“I came to Ladbroke Grove for free love and squatting, I settled for sexual politics and a licensed deri.” (A licensed deri is a licensed derelict, or squat, for those of you who aren’t au courant with counter cultural housing lingo of the 1970s.)
In keeping with his political activism, Tony also performed regularly with his Full-Frontal Anarchy Platform at Speakers’ Corner, which eventually evolved into a fledgling stand up comedy routine. As stand up comedy had not become a thing yet, he began looking for places to perform, finally hitting on the newly-founded Comedy Store in 1979. Two months later, he founded Alternative Cabaret with Alexei Sayle and together they ran a regular Alternative Cabaret Club in the back bar of the Elgin pub, Ladbroke Grove.

Tony was a resident comedian in the early days of London’s Comedy Store (1979–1980) and took over from Alexei Sayle as resident MC early in 1981, where he was described as “A tall, willowy figure who has the air of a Lenny Bruce mixed with the vulnerability of Tommy Cooper”.
According to an early article about him, Tony’s style of stand-up was not so much jokes and gags, as having ‘a funny take’ on the world and the lives and loves that go on therein.
Always the risk-taker and one to break new ground, he was always innovating. These experiments, (like all experiments) had mixed results. A 1986 fanzine noted;
”I’ve seen Tony Allen do minutes of cursing, swearing, abusing of hecklers and audience alike and equally I’ve seen him do sets of such comic brilliance as to take your breath away and send you home to your bed-sit on wings!”
In 1980, Tony Allen and Alexei Sayle were the first alternative comedians to take their solo stand-up acts to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival under the title Late Night Alternative.
Alexi Sayle joked recently that any comedian doing Edinburgh owes him and Tony royalties
Tony also appeared in an episode of BBC TV series The Young Ones – Party. Essentially as himself. He’s a party guest, the authentic anarchist who bedazzles faux radical Rik with his chat about “Blowing up pandas”. Rik misunderstands what he means by panda. Hilarity ensues.
Tony had a long list of TV credits but they aren’t listed here as Tony actively avoided becoming television famous for his entire career because, as Gil Scott-Heron will tell you, “The revolution will not be televised”.

He would most want to be remembered for being a passionate defender of stand up comedy as a risk-taking, living art form. One that is as delicate as it is Bolshy and one that can be easily stifled by the demands and production values of television… As a practitioner of stand up that uses the privilege of the platform it is given to give the audience what it didn’t know it wanted, rather than the same old, same old that it has come to accept.
He was a fearless performer and performed comedy and stand up until he became too ill to want to bother any more. In his heyday he toured solo shows (like, the obituary-appropriate The Grim Reapo Man is at The Door) and also successfully supported bands like The Clash and Killing Joke, performing his stand up set before the band headlined. He once performed a gig at Glastonbury after accidentally getting involved in a fracas involving two undercover policeman which ended with him being CS gassed. He still successfully performed his set.
An old hippy at heart, he was comfortable with his mortality and as a comedian he found solace in finding humour in everything, even his own death. As a result, his curtain call was attending (and walking out of) his own wake in August, in his stomping ground of Ladbroke Grove. A star-studded gala event, it was appropriately held in an unassuming smallish room above a pub. The sort of intimate venue which Tony loved to play as a performer. The event was humorously entitled THIS WAS YOUR LIFE.
In his last days (he was 78 and had a terminal condition; but also throat cancer) Tony was being cared for by a close friend and lover from his squatting days; Andy.
He passed away quietly in the early hours of Friday morning, in his own bed, under his own pink duvet, having discharged himself from hospital against the doctor’s orders. He was in good spirits, enlivened, by socking it, one last time, to The Man and appropriately recounted this final adventure in the format of a stand up routine to anyone who was granted audience.
Not so much an inpatient but an impatient, Tony was an anarchic spirit, revolutionary and farce of nature to the last.
You must be righteously knackered, that was quite a ride, journey well, Tony Allen.
Tony Allen
Godfather of Stand Up Comedy
4th March 1945- 1st December 2023

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Tagged as Alexei Sayle, Alternative Comedy, anarchy, Angry Brigade, Becky Fury, Comedy Store, death, Godfather, International Times, obituary, politics, stand up, The Young Ones, Tom Watson, Tony Allen, uk
One response to “A tribute to Tony Allen, oft-called The Godfather of UK Alternative Comedy ” (at original post)
catriona01 December 2, 2023 at 5:20 pmThank you for this. Tony & I were an item for a few months in the early 90s and this brought back great memories.Reply