A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill' A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill' A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill' A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill' A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill' A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill' A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill' A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill' A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill' A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill'

A Superb, Original, WW1 British Brodie 'Tommy' Combat Helmet. Veteran Painted With WW1 Cartoon & Theatre Character 'Old Bill'

Unlike the closure of most wars, every WW1 Tommy veteran was allowed to take home his helmet. A very few then decorated the surface with comedic scenes or regimental devices etc.

Old Bill is a fictional character created in 1914–15 by cartoonist Bruce Bairnsfather. It became a worldwide sensation. Old Bill was depicted as an elderly, pipe-smoking British "tommy" with a walrus moustache. The character achieved a great deal of popularity during World War I where it was considered a major morale booster for the British troops. Old Bill and his younger troopmate little Alphie were private infantrymen in the British Expeditionary Force.

Many claims have been put forth as being the model for "Old Bill" but the most likely appears to be Thomas Henry Rafferty, a lance corporal from Birmingham in Bairnsfather's regiment, the Royal Warwickshires, who was killed in the same action that invalided Bairnsfather in April 1915. Rafferty was featured in the Weekly Dispatch in 1917, referred to as "Old Bill," along with a photograph taken by Bairnsfather.

Bill & Alphie's, the Royal Military College of Canada on-campus cadet pub in Kingston, Ontario is named after Bruce Bairnsfather's Great War cartoon characters. Yeo Hall at the Royal Military College of Canada features sculptures of Bill and Alphie.

After the huge success of his first theatrical sketch Bairnsfatherland or the Johnson 'Ole (written in collaboration with Basil Macdonald Hastings) in the London Hippodrome revue Flying Colours in September 1916 , and with a second sketch due to open in See-Saw at the Comedy Theatre in Spring of 1917, the suggestion was made that Bruce Bairnsfather should write a full length play based around his popular character Old Bill,

The idea was taken up by Bairnsfather and, in collaboration with Capt. Arthur Eliot, he wrote a comedy-drama titled The Better 'Ole. It was made up of two acts and eight scenes (described in the programme as "Two explosions, Seven Splinters and a Short Gas Attack"): at a "Gaff" behind the lines, outside the Cafe des Oiseaux near the front, in billets behind the line, on the way back "in," in the trenches, at Headquarters, on the Leave Train and back at Old Bill's home in England.

First produced by Charles B Cochran at the Oxford Theatre, London on 4 August 1917, The Better 'Ole was an instant hit. Within a few months Cochran had sent out several touring companies, which took the play to all corners of the UK over the next 2 years. It was also produced around the world - from New York to Sydney, and Bombay to Tokyo - by several theatrical companies, and met with huge success wherever it was played.

Code: 25537

450.00 GBP