The late Dame Edna Everage comic also seemed to hint at his financial issues as he called his medical bills 'bloody enormous' after breaking his hip in a fall.
- April 23, 2023
AceShowbiz - Barry Humphries described the accident that led to his death as "the most ridiculous thing" weeks before his passing. The Dame Edna Everage comic, who passed away aged 89 on Saturday, April 22 at Sydney's St Vincent's Hospital surrounded by his loved ones, following complications from hip surgery, talked about how he took a tumble at home that led to him needing the operation, and said it had left him in "agony."
"It was the most ridiculous thing, like all domestic incidents are. I was reaching for a book, my foot got caught on a rug or something, and down I went," he told The Sydney Morning Herald's Private Sydney celebrity column.
Barry - also renowned for his boozy, foul-mouthed Australian attache character Sir Les Patterson - gave the interview from a "rehabilitation facility" after his fall, where he was convalescing and undergoing "very painful" sessions with a physiotherapist.
He added about his determination to get back on the road for his fans, "I have to get back on my feet ... I'm going back on tour later this year. The result of my broken hip means I now have a titanium hip ... you can call me 'Bionic Bazza.' I sit a lot in the show, and there's a bit of pacing ... I don't think it's going to be a problem, but I do have to get on with my physio."
Despite retiring in 2012, Barry, who was married four times and had four children and 10 children, was last year back on stage in London with his one-man show "Man Behind the Mask". Barry also told how his medical bill was "bloody enormous," adding, "I strongly advise not breaking your hip!"
In 1961, while playing the part of undertaker Sowerby, in the West End production of "Oliver!", Barry slipped and fell down a cliff during a trip to Cornwall, and broke his arm following a fall down a 50-metre slope onto rocks. He was later airlifted to hospital after being strapped to a stretcher dangling from a Naval helicopter.