A bronze statue of Tommy Cooper, a famous British comedian and magician, sitting on a chair with his legs crossed, wearing a suit and holding a top hat and a wand, with a cheeky grin on his face.
Thomas Frederick Cooper (19 March 1921 - 15 April 1984) was a Welsh prop comedian and magician. As an entertainer, his appearance was large and lumbering at 6 feet 4 inches & he habitually wore a red fez when performing. He served in the British Army for 7 years, before developing his conjuring skills and becoming a member of The Magic Circle. Although he spent time on tour performing his magical act, which specialised on magic tricks that appeared to fail, he rose to international prominence when his career moved into television, with programmes for London Weekend Television and Thames Television. By the end of the 1970s, Cooper was smoking and drinking heavily, which affected his career and his health, effectively ending offers to front new programmes and relegating him to performing as a guest star on other entertainment shows. On 15 April 1984, Cooper died at the age of 63 after suffering a heart attack on live television. Thomas Frederick Cooper was born on 19 March 1921 at 19, Llwyn-On Street in Caerphilly, Glamorgan. He was delivered by the woman who owned the house in which the family were lodging. His parents were Thomas H. Cooper, a Welsh recruiting sergeant in the British Army and later coal miner, and Catherine Gertrude (nee Wright), Thomas's English wife from Crediton, Devon. To change from his mining role in Caerphilly, that could have had implications for his health, his father accepted the offer of a new job and the family moved to Exeter, Devon, when Cooper was three. It was in Exeter that he acquired the West Country accent that became part of his act. As an adult and on a visit to Wales to visit the house where he was born, Cooper was asked if he considered himself to be a Welshman, to which he answered, "Well yes, my father's Welsh... and my mother's from Devon. Actually I was in Caerphilly and left here when I was about a year old, I was getting very serious with a girl", much to the amusement of the BBC interviewer and himself. When he was eight years old an aunt bought him a magic set and he spent hours perfecting the tricks. In the 1960s his brother David (born 1930) opened D. & Z. Cooper's Magic Shop at 249 High Street in Slough, Buckinghamshire. The shop later moved to Eastbourne, East Sussex and was run by David's daughter Sabrina. After leaving school, Cooper became a shipwright in Southampton, Hampshire. In 1940 he was called up as a trooper in the Royal Horse Guards, serving for seven years. He joined Montgomery's Desert Rats in Egypt. Cooper became a member of a Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes (NAAFI) entertainment party, and developed an act around his magic tricks interspersed with comedy. One evening in Cairo, during a sketch in which he was supposed to be in a costume that required a pith helmet, having forgotten the prop Cooper reached out and borrowed a fez from a passing waiter, which got huge laughs. He wore a fez when performing after that, the prop later being described as "an icon of 20th-century comedy". Cooper was demobilised after seven years of military service and took up show business on Christmas Eve 1947. He later developed a popular monologue about his military experience as "Cooper the Trooper". He worked in variety theatres around the country and at many night spots in London, performing as many as 52 shows in one week. Cooper developed his conjuring skills and became a member of The Magic Circle, but there are various stories about how and when he developed his delivery of "failed" magic tricks.
This is the statue of Thomas Frederick Cooper who was an amazing Welsh prop comedian and magician,he was a giant of a man standing six feet four inches......His trade mark was his red Fez hat and his well known catch phrase was- JUST LIKE THAT-......He was a brilliant comedian and magician being a member of the magic circle and it was so clever how he made us all laugh by making most of his tricks go terribly wrong It was so funny to watch..........He was born in the Welsh town of Caerphilly on the 19th March 1921.....He was married to his wife Gwen Cooper from 1947 to 1984 and had two children Thomas Henty and Vicky Cooper......He sadly passed away in London on the 15th of April 1984 on stage during one of his acts aged just 63.......You will never get another like him he was one of a kind,and is sadly missed by all that watch him perform on the TV....God bless Tommy RIP....
A well maintained statue of a comedy genius. I still remember being in my bedroom watching the tv when he collapsed on stage. There are some seats to the right of the statue with the furthest one having a plaque to Sir Anthony Hopkins.
The statue is really impressive. Unfortunately the car park nearby is full of drug addicts, and the traffic warden there was ticketing cars that had clearly paid for parking. Wouldn't revisit for those reasons.
In Caerphilly to visit specsavers so took a photo while I was there.
It's an iconic statue of Tommy Cooper, what's not to like about it!
Wheelchair-accessible car park
Wheelchair-accessible entrance
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Thomas Frederick Cooper (19 March 1921 - 15 April 1984) was a Welsh prop comedian and magician. As an entertainer, his appearance was large and lumbering at 6 feet 4 inches & he habitually wore a red fez when performing. He served in the British Army for 7 years, before developing his conjuring skills and becoming a member of The Magic Circle. Although he spent time on tour performing his magical act, which specialised on magic tricks that appeared to fail, he rose to international prominence when his career moved into television, with programmes for London Weekend Television and Thames Television. By the end of the 1970s, Cooper was smoking and drinking heavily, which affected his career and his health, effectively ending offers to front new programmes and relegating him to performing as a guest star on other entertainment shows. On 15 April 1984, Cooper died at the age of 63 after suffering a heart attack on live television. Thomas Frederick Cooper was born on 19 March 1921 at 19, Llwyn-On Street in Caerphilly, Glamorgan. He was delivered by the woman who owned the house in which the family were lodging. His parents were Thomas H. Cooper, a Welsh recruiting sergeant in the British Army and later coal miner, and Catherine Gertrude (nee Wright), Thomas's English wife from Crediton, Devon. To change from his mining role in Caerphilly, that could have had implications for his health, his father accepted the offer of a new job and the family moved to Exeter, Devon, when Cooper was three. It was in Exeter that he acquired the West Country accent that became part of his act. As an adult and on a visit to Wales to visit the house where he was born, Cooper was asked if he considered himself to be a Welshman, to which he answered, "Well yes, my father's Welsh... and my mother's from Devon. Actually I was in Caerphilly and left here when I was about a year old, I was getting very serious with a girl", much to the amusement of the BBC interviewer and himself. When he was eight years old an aunt bought him a magic set and he spent hours perfecting the tricks. In the 1960s his brother David (born 1930) opened D. & Z. Cooper's Magic Shop at 249 High Street in Slough, Buckinghamshire. The shop later moved to Eastbourne, East Sussex and was run by David's daughter Sabrina. After leaving school, Cooper became a shipwright in Southampton, Hampshire. In 1940 he was called up as a trooper in the Royal Horse Guards, serving for seven years. He joined Montgomery's Desert Rats in Egypt. Cooper became a member of a Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes (NAAFI) entertainment party, and developed an act around his magic tricks interspersed with comedy. One evening in Cairo, during a sketch in which he was supposed to be in a costume that required a pith helmet, having forgotten the prop Cooper reached out and borrowed a fez from a passing waiter, which got huge laughs. He wore a fez when performing after that, the prop later being described as "an icon of 20th-century comedy". Cooper was demobilised after seven years of military service and took up show business on Christmas Eve 1947. He later developed a popular monologue about his military experience as "Cooper the Trooper". He worked in variety theatres around the country and at many night spots in London, performing as many as 52 shows in one week. Cooper developed his conjuring skills and became a member of The Magic Circle, but there are various stories about how and when he developed his delivery of "failed" magic tricks.
This is the statue of Thomas Frederick Cooper who was an amazing Welsh prop comedian and magician,he was a giant of a man standing six feet four inches......His trade mark was his red Fez hat and his well known catch phrase was- JUST LIKE THAT-......He was a brilliant comedian and magician being a member of the magic circle and it was so clever how he made us all laugh by making most of his tricks go terribly wrong It was so funny to watch..........He was born in the Welsh town of Caerphilly on the 19th March 1921.....He was married to his wife Gwen Cooper from 1947 to 1984 and had two children Thomas Henty and Vicky Cooper......He sadly passed away in London on the 15th of April 1984 on stage during one of his acts aged just 63.......You will never get another like him he was one of a kind,and is sadly missed by all that watch him perform on the TV....God bless Tommy RIP....
A well maintained statue of a comedy genius. I still remember being in my bedroom watching the tv when he collapsed on stage. There are some seats to the right of the statue with the furthest one having a plaque to Sir Anthony Hopkins.
The statue is really impressive. Unfortunately the car park nearby is full of drug addicts, and the traffic warden there was ticketing cars that had clearly paid for parking. Wouldn't revisit for those reasons.
In Caerphilly to visit specsavers so took a photo while I was there.
It's an iconic statue of Tommy Cooper, what's not to like about it!