Ray Galton, writer of classic British sitcoms, dies at 88

1
Ray Galton

FILE – In this May 9, 2014 file photo, Ray Galton, left, and Alan Simpson stand in front of an English Heritage blue plaque, at the unveiling, outside 20 Queen’s Gate Place, London. Image: Justin Tallis/PA via AP, File

LONDON (AP) — Screenwriter Ray Galton, who co-wrote the landmark British comedy series “Hancock’s Half Hour” and “Steptoe and Son,” has died at 88.

Galton’s family said Saturday that he died Friday evening after a “long and heart-breaking battle with dementia.”

The London-born Galton was diagnosed with life-threatening tuberculosis as a teenager. In a sanatorium, he met another sick teen, Alan Simpson, and the pair became long-term writing partners.

Manager Tessa Le Bars called them “the fathers and creators of British sitcom.”

Galton and Simpson wrote “Hancock’s Half Hour” for popular post-war comedian Tony Hancock. Their biggest hit was “Steptoe and Son,” a sitcom about father-and-son junk dealers, which ran between 1962 and 1974. Producer Norman Lear adapted it into the U.S. sitcom “Sanford and Son.”

Simpson died last year at 87. NVG

RELATED STORIES:

Bill Daily, sidekick on hit 60s and 70s sitcoms, dies at 91

US fantasy author, legend Ursula K. Le Guin dies at 88

Read more...