Elton Hayes Comic Strip


 

Occasionally a rare item will appear that has connections to Walt Disney's Story of Robin Hood (1952). This is a comic strip featuring Elton Hayes ' telling a story.' The item is not dated and only one page survives, it seems to have been printed c.1940's.

How many actors that played the role of Alan-a-Dale in a Robin Hood production were real minstrels? I can only think of one. Elton Hayes (1915-2001).

Elton was a  fascinating person and one of many people involved in The Story of Robin Hood that I would have loved to have met. One person that did meet him was Sallie Walrond and in her book, 'Trot on: Sixty Years of Horses' she says:

When Elton Hayes came to live at Thorne Lodge I was delighted to meet him. He was a gentleman in every sense of the word, incredibly wise and with a kind but quick sense of humour and bright as a button right up until his death. I remember as a child listening to him on the radio singing The Owl and the Pussycat and seeing him as the minstrel Allan-a-Dale in a favourite Robin Hood starring Richard Todd.

(Trot On: Sixty Years of Horses by Sallie Walrond and Anne Grimshaw, Kenilworth Press, 2004) 


Elton Hayes


Below is an article about Elton from 1954:

Elton Hayes has been singing to a small guitar ever since he bought a sixpenny ukulele as a school boy. The smooth easy manner in which he sings those old English ballads and folk songs has come with many years of training in the theatre.

Elton was born in Bletchley, Buckinghamshire, but spent most of his school days in Leicester. His parents were both in the entertainment business - his father was in the circus and his mother was a singer.

It was natural that Elton should want to follow in his parents footsteps. He toured the country with them, and while they performed on stage, he would sit in the wings watching, and learning how show business worked.

He soon mastered the sixpenny ukulele which he bought with his pocket money, and by the time he was ten years old he could play nearly every stringed instrument.

But Elton wanted to be a straight actor. However fate turned his career in other directions. He became interested in old English folk songs and ballads.

When the war started in 1939 Elton joined the army and became a gunner in the Royal Artillery. He was posted overseas in India and decided to take his guitar with him. He was also given a commission.

While in India he became seriously ill with rheumatic fever. This was a tragedy for Elton. for his fingers began to stiffen.

One day he remembered his guitar. He took it from its case and began strumming it. And soon, after  many hours of painful effort his fingers grew more supple. He could play again. His courage had brought him through.

In 1946 Elton returned to Britain and appeared on In Town Tonight. This was a beginning. For, like thousands of other ex-serviceman, he found that he had to begin building a career again.

Just how successful he has been can be judged from the number of programmes he has appeared in on radio and television.

He has had a record spot on nearly every major radio station on the Continent and the BBC. He has appeared in his own show on television and was a permanent member of Eric Barker's Just Fancy. And of course he makes gramophone records.

When the film Robin Hood  was made in this country, the producers did not have to search far for the man to play the strolling minstrel - Elton Hayes was a  natural choice."



After suffering a stroke in 1995, Hayes had to give up the farm he owned and moved to live with friends, who cared for him until his death. He married in 1942, Betty Inman, who died in 1982. There is much more on the life of Elton Hayes on this site including his discography. Just click on the label for Elton Hayes.




2 comments:

Clement Glen said...

Elton Hayes 1915-2001

Mike Giddens said...

I loved this guy, certainly the best Alan a Dale. and so talented, I too would love to have met him. I have much of his work on disc, and of course the movie, my favorite Robin Hood Richard Todd.