Stanley Boardman (born 7 December 1937)[citation needed] is an English comedian.
Early life and career
Boardman was evacuated with his family to Wrexham during the Second World War, and after the family returned to their Merseyside home mistakenly thinking the area had escaped the German bombs, his elder brother Tommy was killed in a bombing raid.[1]
Boardman had been a keen footballer in his youth and was an apprentice at Liverpool F.C. He signed for Tranmere Rovers as a teenager.[2]
Boardman's comedic style has led to controversy several times; after telling racist jokes at a Leeds United Player of the Year Award dinner in 2002 (months after two Leeds players had been arrested for assaulting an Asian student), the club withheld his fee, describing his act as "inappropriate and unacceptable", banning him from performing at the club in future.[7][8] This led to a planned appearance at a Leicester City event being cancelled.[7]
Other appearances
Boardman appeared in the 2000 gangster film set in Liverpool, Going Off Big Time.[9]
Fellow comedian Peter Kay wrote about him in his second autobiography Saturday Night Peter; in it he describes his early days on the comedy circuit and being on the bill with Boardman who at the time had the nickname Stan "The German Fokker" Boardman.
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Sayid, Ruki (2 May 2002), "LEEDS RACE OUTRAGE; EXCLUSIVE Club hires Stan Boardman for awards dinner and he says: 'I could murder an Indian' ..then tells Asian: 'F*** off back to your curry house'", Daily Mirror