203:. His other sketches included "Running an Office", "Selling a Car", "Billiards", and "Fishing". Tate's sketches "presented him as a blustering – if basically good-humoured – incompetent, convinced that he was in charge of the situation, but never failing to increase the chaos which surrounded him." He toured with a company of six performers, at first including Tom Tweedly and Harry Beasley. He also appeared in
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In
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biplane was introduced in late 1916 and 1917, the "R.E.8" designation spoken aloud was observed to sound similar to Tate's name, so the fliers nicknamed the aeroplane "Harry Tate". After the war, "Harry Tate" settled into a meaning of "state" in cockney rhyming slang.
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389:, initially meaning "late", because of Tate's comedic routines about automotive troubles. Around mid-1915, "Harry Tate" began to serve as slang for "plate". When the
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described Tate as "the greatest of all the pre-Second World War sketch comics, and one of the few artists from before 1914 to be able to maintain his popularity in
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charity, serving as "King Rat" in 1911. He was also a keen motorist. The earliest known celebrity personalised number plate was
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The term "Harry Tate" entered the 20th century
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Kindly Leave the Stage: The Story of
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240:Historian and writer
158:Henry Tate & Sons
410:"About Harry Tate",
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641:Harry Tate's play
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322:Look Up and Laugh
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616:Harry Tate
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398:References
126:Harry Tate
104:Occupation
57:1872-07-04
32:Harry Tate
269:St Mary's
90:, England
88:Middlesex
547:Archived
273:Northolt
205:West End
201:Wal Pink
178:Dan Leno
148:Born in
130:comedian
107:Comedian
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384:cockney
246:Variety
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