The Tony Hancock statue was sculpted in 1996 by Bruce Williams to honour the Birmingham comedian, who is most famous for the TV and radio show Hancock's Half Hour (which ran in the 50s and 60s). I particularly remember watching the Blood Donor episode during a media studies class at 6th form, and I found his show as hilarious as any Little Britain episode. The statue always reminds of my time watching that episode at college.
It is great when Birmingham celebrates the life of some it's most famous, talented faces, and I think as a city, we need to do this more often. We're too modest, and so our city always gets seen as the runt to the rest of the UK; But we've been the home to some amazing people such as Hancock himself. So I'm very glad we have him on show to visitors.
The statue stands proudly on the island of Old Square, and makes Mr Hancock look similar to an Italian gangster at most angles from afar. But as you get closer, you realise exactly who the iconic television star is. The sculpture is in black and white, and has been created with an old fashioned newspaper 'halftone' dot method. This replicates the black and white imagery, programmes and films that Hancock has featured in, such as the full length comedy 'Orders Are Orders'. read more