Comedian revue producer and writer, musician, songwriter, singer, film actor, dancer, sketch writer, artist.
OVERVIEW
One of Australia's most popular variety and revusical comedians of the 1920s, George Wallace went on to establish an equally impressive film and radio career during the 1930s and 1940s. Although only 5'5" (1.63m) tall, Wallace was renowned for his extraordinary versatility. As a physical comedian, his particular specialities were dancing and falling down (whether as a comic boxer, a drunk, or a Wild West cowboy, for example), but he could also sing, play several instruments (including piano, guitar, saxophone, and drums), perform lightning sketches, paint stage scenery, write songs and revusical libretti, direct, and act. His comedic style may have been less sophisticated than his main rivals for the 'mob' (Jim Gerald, Nat Phillips, and Roy Rene) but his appeal lay in presenting a more innocent type of persona and taking full advantage of his expressive eyes and his country sayings.
DETAILED BIOGRAPHY
George Wallace's decision to undertake a career in the entertainment industry was undoubtedly influenced by his family background. His grandfather was the Irish-born comic Pipeclay Wallace, who appeared on the Australian variety stage during the late 1800s, and while his father, Broncho Wallace (also born George Stevenson Wallace) started out as a painter, he ended up working in minstrel shows as a comic and equilibrist. While little is known of Broncho Wallace's career, it has been established that he initially presented a solo act and later worked in partnership with another variety performer, George Scott, around the turn of the century. His first appearance at the Royal Standard Theatre, Sydney, occurred in mid-October 1887, where he presented his 'famous equilibrium act' (Sydney Morning Herald 15 October 1887, p.2). One of his other recorded appearances was with Frank Smith at Queen's Hall, Sydney, ca. November 1905. Ross Thorne, citing the Stage magazine, also draws attention to Broncho Wallace's record six-night season in Wellington, NSW (sometime prior to May 1908), which was staged under a marquee seating 3,500 people (ctd. Theatre Buildings in Australia, p.221).
1895-1918: George Wallace was born in Aberdeen, situated near Muswellbrook in the Hunter Valley district of New South Wales. Although closely aligned with country or 'bush' types throughout his forty years as a variety, film, and radio star, Wallace actually spent a good deal of his youth in Sydney, where he often busked on the Pyrmont waterfront. When his mother remarried, he moved to Manly, spending some four years employed at his stepfather's ink factory. He then travelled to North Queensland, working for a period of time as a farm hand and cane-cutter in the Mackay district. This period of his life was to have a significant influence on his later career. Although his repertoire covered a multitude of topics and his most popular sketches and revusicals included stories played out in urban and even foreign settings, it has been said that 'the dry wit of the outback nurtured his comic sense of timing' (Companion to Theatre in Australia p.628). Indeed, his stage appearance (often comprising a checked shirt, an old battered hat, and an equally worn pair of dungarees) was very much an image cultivated from his 'bush' experiences.
Wallace's first steps towards following his father and grandfather into the entertainment profession also occurred while he still in North Queensland. Isadore Brodsky in The Streets of Sydney recalls Wallace telling the story of how, aged about twenty-two and still a cane cutter, he worked his way into a troupe self-described as the 'greatest show on earth':
'The company consisted of Happy Harry Salmon, his wife and two others. It was at Walkerston in Queensland. George had a pal named Jock McFarlane who engineered the engagement by this piece of strategy. "Can any of the fellows in your show dance?" he asked Happy Harry, with George discreetly hidden. "My oath", [replied Harry]. "I know a pal here who will dance any of your crowd for a quid", was Jock's rejoinder. "Trot him out. I'll take you", declared Happy Harry. George came out of hiding, clambering onto the boards and thanks to heavy boots and a good sounding stage won the bet for his friend and a job for himself - a pound a week and keep' (p.130).
Sometime after finishing up with the Salmon troupe, Wallace decided to try to establish himself in Brisbane, settling there sometime in 1916. It was while in Brisbane that he met Margarita Edith Emma Nicholas, a barmaid who later worked with Wallace on the stage. The pair married on 3 January 1917 at the People's Evangelic Mission. Their only child, George Leonard Wallace, was born in Walkerston, near Mackay, sixteen months later, possibly while the couple were returning to visit Wallace's friends. As with his time in North Queensland, Wallace's association with Brisbane saw him accepted almost as a local in later years. Indeed, he would often be billed as 'the boy from the Valley' or 'the boy from North Queensland' whenever he toured the state. The Brisbane Courier writes of his 1925 homecoming, for example, that 'Every young man of spirit, when he fares out into the world, cherishes the ambition that when he returns to the home town his travelling companion will be success. Failure is a gloomy friend to bring back to the family. George Wallace is one of the lucky ones. Accompanied by success, he arrived back in Brisbane the other day and fulfilled the ambition that urged him out into the world years ago. It was to appear in vaudeville [at] the Brisbane Empire... and never has a first appearance aroused such a demonstration of approval' (21 September 1925, p.11).
1919-1923: After having developed a solo and double act (with his wife) that he believed had potential, Wallace decided in late 1918 to move to Sydney to take advantage of the work opportunities that the city's much expanded industry had to offer. Shortly after his arrival, he was given a start on Harry Clay's suburban circuit, having impressed the management with his acrobatic clog-dancing. His initial salary was £4 a week. Brodie Mack, for many years the Fullers' booking agent, recalls the comedian's arrival in Sydney: 'I happened to be at Harry Clay's Newtown Bridge Theatre (it's now The Hub) looking for new acts. It was his trial appearance, and he was appearing for nothing. He stopped the show. His acrobatic dance had them rolling in the aisles. Harry wasn't in the theatre to see it; he asked me afterwards how the new man went. "Don't let him get away," I replied. "You have a real comedian there" (Sydney Morning Herald 23 October 1960, p.57).
Wallace quickly became a crowd favourite as a solo performer. The husband/wife act struggled somewhat during the first few months, however, with several reviews from early 1919 indicating that the act had limited appeal. An Australian Variety critic, for example, simply says, 'The Two Wallaces - very inexperienced, bad routine and mixed up turn' (24 January 1919, n. pag.). However, the Theatre critic found things on the improve a few months later, writing, 'Princess Theatre, 8-15th March: George Wallace is a comedian with a delightfully quiet style. He gets his laughs without any forcing. His wife helps him in the patter. They wind up by introducing their son, a tiny mite, in one clever acrobatic pose' (April 1919, p.28). Although the double act did not last much longer under the close scrutiny of Harry Clay's management, Wee Georgie Wallace continued to made semi-regular appearances on the stage with his dad over the next five or so years, including feature spots with Dinks and Oncus.
As with many of Clay's other contracted performers, Wallace often appeared in revusicals, with these being presented as the second half of an entertainment bill at most of his venues. The one-act musical comedy was the most popular of all the variety theatre genres being staged in Australia during that era, and a number of Clay's leading artists had, since 1915, been given the task of writing and staging their own productions. This experience provided Wallace with the necessary training to eventually become one of Australia's most popular revusical practitioners. One of the earliest productions he appeared in, A Fireman's Troubles by Joe Rox, led the Theatre to write of Wallace's performance that 'George Wallace is a comedian with a delightfully quiet style. He gets his laughs without any forcing... Chief honours are annexed by Wallace in a clever Johnny study and by Billy Cass and Joe Rox as two impossible firemen' (April 1919, p.28).
His value as a performer even during these early days on the Clay circuit was due in part to his versatility, an aspect that factored largely in his success throughout his career. In June 1919, for example, the Theatre described Wallace's 'clever clog-dancing as... reminiscent of the days of Dan Tracey' (p.25). By the end of the year, the same magazine said of his act that 'His female impersonations have the house in shrieks all the time he's on the stage' (January 1920, p.26). Wallace was also beginning to attract the attention of Australian Variety, which records in December that '[He] is gaining applause for his smart dancing and good comic songs [and] since his opening... has made rapid strides towards success' (11 December 1919, n. pag.).
A little over a year after joining Harry Clay's organisation, George Wallace's career reached new heights when he joined forces with comedian Jack 'Dinks' Paterson to form Dinks and Oncus, an act that Katherine Brisbane notes had no equal in being so well remembered purely from appearances on Clay's circuit (Entertaining Australia, p.179). In an interview conducted shortly after Wallace's death in 1960, Paterson recalls how the partnership started: 'It began in the park opposite the old Opera House (now the Tivoli). George and I, both of us under contract to Harry Clay's suburban vaudeville circuit, were watching the crowds pack in to see Stiffy and Mo when George said suddenly, "There's the opportunity for us. Why don't we team up and become a double act, too?" We finally got the old man to give us a try. George and I never looked back' (Sydney Morning Herald 23 October 1960, p.57).
Pint-sized Wallace was in marked contrast to the extremely tall and skinny Paterson, with this factor making their partnership seem all the more ludicrous. Within a few months of teaming up, the duo found themselves in much demand, not only from audiences but also as subject matter for the industry magazines, as the following examples indicate:
'George Wallace says he has a century of the best to say that his partner, Dinky Paterson, can get a decision over Sid Godfrey in a twenty-round route, or he will have a four spar with him any night at the Gaiety just for old times sake' (Australian Variety 22 July 1920, p.21).
'Dinks and Oncus ("The Two Drunks") never once become dull. They go from laugh to laugh, and get an exceedingly good reception' (Theatre August 1920, p.9).
'Dinks and Oncus stopped the show in their inebriate sketch at the Gaiety and had to take no less than four bows before the pleased patrons would allow them to retire' (Australian Variety 17 September 1920, n. pag).
By the end of 1920, Dinks and Oncus had become Clay's biggest attraction. They specialised in the very physical acrobatic type of comedy that had made knockabout comedians Jack Kearns and Albert McKisson stars of the Australian stage during the 1890s. There was lots of falling around, 'drunken' antics, and outrageous boxing displays, which audiences loved. Charles Norman recalls the act in When Vaudeville was King: 'When George was beginning to be talked about as an excellent comic he was teamed with another comedian, a man from the First World War, Dinks Paterson. Dinks was a tall, very thin comedian with a nose that somehow got in the way of a breach loader gun, or so it seemed. But he was one of the most likable blokes you'd meet from here to the Cape. This tall and self-effacing character was a gifted funny man. He had a voice that tended to rise to falsetto when aroused in blow-up comedy situations. "What's the matter with you?" he'd call. They were a perfect foil for each other, screamingly funny and seemed destined to become a world famous comedy team' (pp.105-6).
Both men were prepared to go to almost any extent in search of a laugh. One popular skit, a crazy boxing match that required Wallace to undertake a difficult backwards somersault over the ropes, once saw Dinks being KO'd by his partner. Another show stopper was their spoof on the posing act of De Maker's models, where Dinks would appear to be holding Wallace above his head with one finger (Wallace being held in a harness from above). At one show, however, the shoulder harness broke, not only tipping him upside down but also sending him swinging wildly, pendulum-like, out above the audience. 'They couldn't let the roller curtain down for fear of cutting him in two', recalls Paterson, 'I can still see him hanging up there, yelling for help' (p.57). Typical of their routine, too, are the following lines of patter:
George Wallace: 'Yes, I'm acquainted with your wife, old man. I knew her before you married her'.
Dinks Paterson: 'Ah, that's where you had the advantage of me - I didn't'
(Australian Variety 24 June 1920, p.5).
Despite their success, their off-stage relationship was not always harmonious. Paterson recalls that although Wallace was wonderful to work with, they nevertheless had their share of arguments. Their announcement in 1921 that they were splitting up was delayed only because the act was simply too successful to abandon (Everyone's 30 November 1921, p.20). It no doubt became an even less conducive creative environment from mid-1922, when Clay began squeezing Paterson out by advertising 'Oncus and his Merry Company' (Theatre June 1922, p.17). Indeed, as Paterson recalls, the pressure to work in new routines every month as the relationship became increasingly strained meant that the act often lagged towards the end. In these instances, 'George would bring on his two year old son and that always earned us an encore' (Sydney Morning Herald 23 October 1960, p.57). According to Charles Norman, the final straw occurred as a result of a practical joke played on Trixie Ireland (Paterson's fiancée) during a performance. When Wallace tried to brush the incident off, Dinks took offence 'and as a result one of the world's best comedy acts split up' (p.106). Paterson and Ireland subsequently formed their own partnership (as Dinks and Trixie) and, following their engagement in the 1924 Christmas pantomime Cinderella (Melbourne), left to work the United Kingdom's variety circuits. They came back to Australia in 1929 and appeared on the Tivoli circuit before eventually returning to Britain, where they remained until the late 1940s (see Jack Paterson's entry for further details).
1924-1928: George Wallace is believed to have left Harry Clay's management and signed with the Fullers some time around February 1924. Ben A. Fuller, son of Sir Benjamin, recalls the night his father sent him to the Bridge Theatre to ascertain Wallace's prospects as a possible Fullers' comedian: 'We needed a show in a hurry for Dunedin [New Zealand]. My father told me, "I think that young fellow Wallace out at Newtown would go over for us. Go and have a look at him tonight." It was a Monday night but the theatre was packed - that's how popular George was. I sat in the centre stalls with Brodie Mack, when suddenly part of the stage went up in flames. One of the cloths caught alight, too. Panic was imminent. The place was wooden. People started to scream and leave their seats. I don't mind admitting I was terrified. But they rang down the act "drop" to block off the flames, and a little man came out in front. - George Wallace. George wasn't a bit concerned. He said it was "only a little fire, somebody was mucking about." He told jokes, calmed the audience and called the others back to their seats. They put out the fire and the show went on. He was a real trooper' (Sydney Morning Herald 23 October 1960, p.57).
According to Fuller, Wallace was duly signed for the Dunedin season but there were concerns over how he would fare in New Zealand, the fear being that he was too much of a dinki-di Aussie to go over with the Kiwis: 'But we were wrong,' he recalls.'The Dunedin people made him their idol. They wouldn't let him go. He stayed six months and did eight shows three times over. We were amazed. ... George was also a fine black and white artist. When the Dunedin show went on for so long the company ran out of scenery so we'd ship George the sewn canvas backdrops and he painted the scenery himself. To my knowledge he never cracked a blue joke in his life. He had a thing about smut on the stage. Never in 15 years with us was he reprimanded for saying anything off colour (Sydney Morning Herald 23 October 1960, p.57).
In mid-1924, Wallace and his newly formed revusical company played its first-ever Australian engagement at the Majestic Theatre, Newtown (August - October). The troupe went on to tour the Fullers' Australian and New Zealand circuits through to the end of the 1920s, establishing a reputation rivalled only by the companies led by Stiffy and Mo and Jim Gerald. Although hugely popular throughout the Antipodes, Wallace's stronghold of support was undoubtedly Queensland. Reporting on the comedian's return to Brisbane in 1925, for example, the Brisbane Courier records that he had given the city 'its brightest star of recent years.' 'As clever as Tom Dawson was,' suggested the paper's critic, he 'could not provoke more smiles a minute than this Valley-born boy' (12 October 1925, p.16).
In reviewing the same production the Theatre magazine went so far as to ask, 'Is it flying in the face of theatrical providence to prophesy that George Wallace will one day be Australia's greatest comedian? In a little revue last month entitled Harmony Row, this Newtown favourite put over one of the best comedy performances Fullers' Theatre has ever seen. And this includes the ever-green favourites Stiffy and Mo, who may well look to their laurels now that George Wallace has come to town. [He] has immense personality... [and] a delicious sense of humour'. Although the review notes that Wallace still lacked 'sufficiently wide experience', and hence his style of humour was still somewhat nondescript (and thus not distinct enough to be imitated), it was obviously only a matter of time before he found his own niche. 'Remember these words, and watch', concluded the critic (April 1925, p.15).
While Everyone's disagreed on the issue of Wallace's distinctiveness, writing, '[He] is decidedly individualistic, for his style is particularly his own' (11 March 1925, p.34), all the industry critics appear to have agreed that he was a major Australian comedian in the making. Everyone's noted in 1928 that as one of the country's most versatile performers and a consistent favourite for years throughout Australia and New Zealand, Wallace continued to write, produce, and star in his own shows. The magazine also draws attention to his multiple talents, reporting that on stage he played the saxophone, cornet, piano, and drums and, in addition to his singing and dancing, was an accomplished lightning sketch artist (14 November 1928, p.41).
1929-1939: By 1929, Wallace's troupe included such well-known variety performers as Jim Romaine (ex-Drew and Romaine) and husband-and-wife comedy sketch artists Bert Dudley and Evelyn Dudley. There appears to have been no reduction in interest in the company, despite the rising popularity of film. Reports indicate, for example, that their New Zealand tour of 1929 was still pulling capacity crowds fifteen weeks after it commenced. Shortly after concluding a fifteen-week season at the Melbourne Tivoli in early 1930 (possibly his first non-Fullers' engagement since joining the firm in 1924), Wallace played a season in Adelaide, followed by Sydney (returning to his old stamping ground the Bridge Theatre at Newtown), Perth, and the West Australian goldfields. After finishing up in Kalgoorlie in mid-December he and his company then travelled back to the east to open in Newcastle for Christmas.
Interestingly, a number of newspapers and magazines around the country reported in the first half of 1930 that Wallace intended travelling to Great Britain in the near future. An item published in Table Talk's 23 January issue indicates that the comedian, who had yet to travel outside Australasia, planned to take Keith Connolly and Marshall Crosby with him. In April that same year Everyone's reported that Wallace was to receive £150 a week in England when he went there. There was talk, too, of a month's holiday first. Although references to the British tour were made as late as early May, a search of Australian newspapers held in Trove for the period 1930 to 1933 indicates that Wallace never made the trip, being otherwise engaged touring Australia.
Wallace's Feature film career began in 1932 when Frank Thring signed him to Efftee Films and produce and adapt one of his most popular revusicals, His Royal Highness. Before production began, however, Thring gave him his screen debut in a seven-minute short called "George Wallace – Australia’s Premier Comedian." In it Wallace introduces "The Dance of the Wounded Wombat" ("as recently performed by the famous Russian dancer, Palmolive"), a sequence documenting his light-as-a-feather dancing and his bone-cracking pratfalls. Later that year came a two-reeler, Oh, What a Night, which the comedian is said to have directed unofficially. 1932 is remembered, however, for His Royal Highness. Despite Thring's heavy-handed direction, the film became a critical and commercial success around the country. In reviewing the Queensland premiere, the Brisbane Courier's film critic typified the critical response to Wallace's performance:
His Royal Highness is aptly described as a comedy with music as distinct from a musical comedy. The comedy is there in full measure, and although the few musical numbers introduced are tuneful they are not the essential features. The fun is almost exclusively created by George Wallace... [his] facility of expression and his whimsical drolleries, as well as clever dancing, eminently lend themselves to the screen work ("Regent Theatre." 3 October 1932, p.15.)
While agreeing that Wallace dominated the film (and that his comic talent was unquestioned), the Age's film critic suggested that such a dominance was part of the overall weakness of the film, as were the frequent shots in which parts of the performers' heads were lost from view ("Picture Theatres: Hoyts De Luxe - His Royal Highness" 31 October 1932, p.8).
The second of Wallace's films, Harmony Row, was released in 1933, attracting similar plaudits to the first. Costing £11,000 pounds, it also co-starred several members of his old revusical troupe, notably Marshall Crosby and Nell Fleming, along with well-known ex-pantomime dame Dan Thomas.
In between his film commitments, Wallace continued to take on stage work. In 1932, for example, he also joined Frank Neil's Musical Comedy Revue Company, appearing in Pleasure Bound at Sydney's Criterion Theatre (3 September). The following year he accepted a cameo role in the stage musical Collits' Inn, while also contributing additional material to the libretto (including some lyrics). Although his performance as Dandy Dick was roundly applauded by audiences, at least one critic found his antics inappropriate at times and suggested that he would be more effective if he kept within his part. Wallace's long-time onstage partner, Marshall Crosby, was also engaged for the production (taking on the role of Pierce Collits, owner of the inn and father of the heroine, Mary). Comedian/actor John V. Dobbie, who later starred opposite Wallace in several of his films, was also in the cast.
In 1934, Wallace again returned to the stage, appearing as one of the principals in the Dudley Glass musical The Beloved Vagabond. Following the Australian debut in Melbourne, the Argus theatre critic wrote of Wallace's performance that '[His] Asticot is an amusing fellow - a curious blending of Australia and Montmartre, if such a fusion is comprehensible. He is adapting himself quickly and successfully to the requirements of the musical comedy stage, which is of course very difficult from the variety stage. His best number is "Napoleon the Oneth"' (23 April 1934, p.12). The Age critic similarly notes the incongruous nature of Wallace's acting and the brilliance of his burlesque work in the Napoleon scene (16 April 1934, p.12). The Sydney season, staged later in August, saw the Sydney Morning Herald report that the comedian had never been funnier, particularly in the Paris roof-tops scene. '[It] introduced some of Mr Wallace's cleverest fooling,' wrote the paper's theatre critic. 'The incident in which he represented Napoleon, with Mr John Dobbie as Wellington, were densely packed with comic ingenuity. Like Miss Moncrieff Mr Wallace has achieved greater success by being more reposeful and natural, and giving up a too obvious repertoire of stage tricks and stage inflections' (25 August 1934, p.16).
Although Wallace continued to appear on the stage throughout the 1930s, his career during that decade is chiefly remembered for the films he starred in. A Ticket in Tatts (1934), his final Efftee production, saw him cast as a disaster-prone stablehand whose whistle can make one of the horses run faster. He was slated to appear alongside Frank Harvey, Claude Flemming, and Campbell Copelin in another Thring film, Sheepmates (based on the novel by the same name, by William Hatfield, but although a few scenes were shot on a cattle station in Central Australia in late 1934, the film was never completed (Celluloid Heroes CD-Rom 1996, 1930-1939, p.18).
Following F. W. Thring's death in 1936, Wallace signed with Cinesound Productions, releasing Let George Do It, the first of his two comedies with director Ken G. Hall. Co-starring Letty Craydon, Joe Valli, and Alec Kellaway, the film is memorable not only for a high-speed water chase but also for a vastly improved screen performance by its star, the result of Hall's much tighter direction (Celluloid Heroes CD-Rom 1996, 1930-1939, p.43). Wallace's second film with Cinesound, Gone to the Dogs (also 1938), saw him again cast as an 'accident-prone' character, this time as a zookeeper. A review of the Brisbane premiere, which screened at the Tivoli Roof Garden, records, 'It is probably the most laughable film that Australian studios have produced. The film makes no pretensions to sophistication or depth. It is clowning plus clowning plus clowning, but it is good clowning. In fact if the laughter at the world premiere can be taken as a guide, George Wallace and John Dobbie have succeeded in being more consistently funny from an Australian audience's point of view than Laurel and Hardy, who probably are more famous' (Brisbane Courier 21 August 1939, p.4). Both films made a profit for Cinesound and were released in England, with Wallace generally garnering positive reviews for his performances.
1940-1960: When not required in a film production Wallace continued to tour his live shows, mostly on the Tivoli circuit. During World War Two, he briefly teamed up with English singer/comedian Jenny Howard, possibly the first time he'd partnered a woman in a comic duo since his first wife. Then at the height of her fame, Howard was brought back to Australia for a ten-week tour by Tivoli director Wallace Parnell (she had first toured the country back in the 1920s). Howard's appeal is said to have been the result of her ability to switch back and forwards from sentimental songs to broad farce, with both performance styles managing to bring tears to eyes of many a patron. Touring under the title The Crazy Show, Wallace and Howard headlined a troupe that also included Bob Dyer and Gloria Dawn (then aged only twelve). It was during the war, too, that he wrote his most famous and best-remembered song, 'A Brown Slouch Hat'. According to Billy Maloney, the song earned him more than £1,500 in royalties 'in the days when APRA [Australian Performing Rights Association] were not half so active as they are today' (p.41).
Wallace's two final films saw him take on supporting roles, including as a barber in The Rats of Tobruk (1944) and the small role of a flustered stage manager in Wherever She Goes (1951), a film biography about celebrated Australian pianist Eileen Joyce. According to Billy Maloney, there had been talk in the 1930s of the comedian being offered a Hollywood contract. His failure in England in the late 1920s may have instilled in him the realisation that he was far too Australian to appeal to foreign tastes, leading him to decline all offers (p.39).
The late 1940s saw Wallace's third significant career path open up, this time in radio. In 1949, he presented the George Wallace Road Show on the Macquarie Network. The programme was based around a character called 'Wallaby' Wallace, a local identity in the town of Bullamakanka. However, despite his considerable experience as a variety, film, and theatre actor, the move to radio was not easy for him. Jacqueline Kent cites a 1949 interview with Wallace in which he admits that he found it hard to adapt his comedic techniques to radio. 'The hardest thing', said the comedian, 'is keeping my voice down. After years on the stage where you have to raise your voice to make a point, I found in radio that this only made the mike blast, and it took me a long time to break the habit of wanting to shout at it' (p.24). Kent goes on to note that Wallace eventually emerged triumphant as a radio star, even though his shows differed from the typical programmes made by the Colgate Unit. Although still performed live in front of a studio audience, Wallace (unlike Roy Rene) didn't have a particular set of catchphrases, and neither did the characters have any immediately recognisable characteristics (funny voices or mannerisms, etc.). 'They spoke standard (though stage rural) Australian', writes Kent, 'and the humour depended on fast gags rather than vaudeville-style routines. Though the humour of the Wallace shows stands up better [than most of its contemporaries] the characters did not have the same kind of familiarity as did the people living in and around [Rene's] McCackie Mansion' (p.24).
Wallace continued to tour as a variety artist throughout the 1950s, with one notable show being Pin-up Parade (1955). Co-starring Diana Del, Barry Rugless, and Peter Madigan, it had one of its most successful seasons at Brisbane's Theatre Royal, beginning 19 March.). Among his final appearances before retiring was The Good Old Days, which toured in 1957. The company comprised fellow variety veterans Jim Gerald and Queenie Paul, and emerging performers such as Maurice Colleano. In late 1958, Wallace also followed his son's twenty-two-month season at the Brisbane Tivoli Theatre, with a five-week engagement beginning 26 December. Wallace headlined a show that also included the 'Queen of Striptease,' Carmelita, and her fellow striptease artists, 'The 6 Undraped Nudes'. (For the first week of 1959, the Tivoli management advertised the programme as 'George Wallace... Happy Nude Year'). The following year, Wallace finally succumbed to the heart trouble that had plagued him for several years, passing away in his sleep at his home in Doncaster Avenue, Kensington (Sydney) aged 66.