Chris Sugden

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Sid Kipper is a very funny man. He makes lots of people laugh with his wit and stuff. (84361043).jpg

Chris Sugden (1952 – 2024) was an English humorist from Norfolk, best known for his portrayal of fictional folk singer Sid Kipper, the younger half of the Kipper Family. [1] [2] He authored books including Prewd and Prejudice: A Norfolk Exile, a satire of The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady . [3]

Contents

Early life

He was born in West Runton in 1952. Sugden initially studied pharmacy at Leicester Polytechnic before starting a PhD at the University of East Anglia.[ citation needed ]

Career

He wrote Prewd and Prejudice (1994).[ citation needed ] Written a dead-pan style, Prewd and Prejudice concerns itself with the Norfolk countryside, misconceptions about Norfolk and its self-deprecating folk. Sugden wrote that "the national papers seemed to think that it took the mickey out of country people, while the Norfolk people thought it ridiculed Londoners".[ citation needed ]

Sugden authored The Cromer-Sheringham Crab Wars[ citation needed ] and the song "Like a Rhinestone Ploughboy".[ citation needed ] He is the compiler of an (as yet) unpublished rhyming dictionary of Norfolk place-names for song-writing purposes.[ citation needed ] In 1996 he published The Ballad of Sid Kipper.[ citation needed ]

In 2006, Sugden presented a series of podcasts for Channel 4 radio called "The Kipper Country Code", as Sid Kipper.[ citation needed ]

He died on April 3, 2024.

Acceptance

Eastern Daily Press columnist Keith Skipper claimed that Sugden is "probably the county’s finest ambassador who captures the true spirit of Norfolk, teaches it tricks, then sends it to run riot across the land".[ citation needed ]

Albums

The Kipper Family (with Dick Nudds aka Henry Kipper)

Sid Kipper

Books

References

  1. "Former Student: Chris Sugden". Keswick Hall College of Education. Retrieved 21 June 2025.
  2. Skipper, Keith (1 May 2024). "Farewell to a modest Norfolk megastar". Just Regional. Retrieved 21 June 2025.
  3. Lezard, Nicholas (14 June 1994). "Paperbacks: Round Up". The Guardian . ProQuest   293542621 . Retrieved 21 June 2025.