"Vipers Skiffle Group
Formed in 1956, the group consisted of various members, including Wally Whyton (b. 23 September 1929, London, England, d. 23 January 1997, London, England), Tommy Steele, Hank Marvin, Jet Harris and Bruce Welch. It grew out of the 'frothy coffee' scene, centred at the 2I's coffee bar in London's Soho district in the late 50s. Whyton was the musical brains, and with Bill Varley, wrote the group's first hit, 'Don't You Rock Me Daddy-O', which was even more successful for the 'King Of Skiffle', Lonnie Donegan. After having their 'cleaned up' version of 'Maggie May' banned by the BBC, the Vipers had two other UK chart entries in 1957 - 'Cumberland Gap' and 'Streamline Train'. However, the whole skiffle craze was short-lived, and before long Steele had become an 'all-round entertainer', Marvin, Harris and Welch had formed the Shadows, via the Drifters, and Whyton had carved out a career as a singer and broadcaster on radio programmes such as Country Meets Folk and Country Club, having previously hosted a number of UK children's television shows, one of which featured the glove-puppet Pussy Cat Willum. In 1960, the Vipers sang 11 songs in the musical play Mr. Burke M.P. at London's Mermaid Theatre. Whyton also played the part of 'The Commentator'. Copyright © 2001, Muze Inc. MUZE© is a registered trademark of Muze Inc. All rights reserved"
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