Denis Norden, ‘It’ll Be Alright on the Night’ host , dies aged 96

Presenter had a long career as a comedy writer with Frank Muir and for David Frost

Denis Norden: the comedy writer presented the ITV bloopers show It’ll Be Alright on the Night for 29 years
Denis Norden: the comedy writer presented the ITV bloopers show It’ll Be Alright on the Night for 29 years

The TV presenter and comedy writer Denis Norden has died aged 96, his family has said.

The It'll Be Alright on the Night host died on Wednesday morning after spending "many weeks" at the Royal Free Hospital in north London, a statement from his children, Nick and Maggie Norden, said.

It added: “We’d like to say a huge thank you to all the dedicated staff and doctors who have looked after him – with much devotion. A wonderful dad, a loving grandfather and great great-grandfather – he gave his laughter-mongering to so many. He will be in our hearts forever.”

Norden presented the ITV bloopers show for 29 years, until his retirement, in 2006. After stepping down he gave a lot of attention to raising awareness of macular disease, a degenerative eye condition from which he suffered, and became a patron of the Macular Society.

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Born in Hackney, in east London, in February 1922, he trained as a manager for the Hyams brothers, owners of impressive London picture palaces. He served in the RAF in the second World War with such other future famous names as Eric Sykes and Bill Fraser, and wrote shows to entertain the troops – and get off guard duty.

Denis Norden, who hosted ITV bloopers show "It’ll Be Alright on the Night" for 29 years has died aged 96. Video: ITV

Norden met his future writing partner Frank Muir in 1947, and they created Take It from Here, the radio hit broadcast by the BBC between 1948 and 1960 starring Jimmy Edwards, Joy Nichols, June Whitfield and Dick Bentley. His small-screen career kicked off in 1951 with Here's Television, the BBC sketch show starring Sid James and Ian Carmichael.

Norden and Muir amicably parted ways in 1964 after a series of successes, and he wrote material for The Frost Report, hosted by the late Sir David Frost. He became established as a television presenter in the 1970s, hosting Looks Familiar, the nostalgic chatshow, before It'll be Alright on the Night hit the airwaves in 1977. Its popularity saw ITV commission the spin-off Denis Norden's Laughter File, with both running until his retirement. – PA