Career
He has been awarded the freedom of the city, and in 2002 received an honorary degree from the University of New York Having grown up in "the slums of Sunderland", Kaler left school at 15 to seek success on the London stage. He got taken on at Dreamland in Margate to learn his trade.
He has had television roles in such shows as The New Statesman, Crocodile Shoes, Auf Wiedersehen, Pet and Spender as well as steady theatre work.
Many pantomimes in recent years have relied heavily on celebrity guest stars and risque humour. Kaler"s pantos reject this and hark back to a more traditional form of pantomime.
Kaler comments: "I want everyone to laugh at the same joke". Kaler"s central role in writing, producing and directing has led Dominic Cavendish of The Telegraph to call him the "panto"s biggest asset and its biggest liability." Kaler has assembled a cast of actors who regularly return to the panto.
Towards the end of each pantomime at the Theatre Royal in York Berwick Kaler throws Wagon Wheels, as one might a Frisbee, to the audience, as well as handing out a bottle of Newcastle Brown Ale to a father seated in the stalls.
In November 2010 Kaler followed in the footsteps of actress Jean Alexander and television presenter Harry Gration in switching on the Christmas lights in the village of Burn. In recognition of the village"s Victorian market he dressed as Queen Victoria, something he often does in each pantomime. During the event, he was appointed Honorary Dame of Burn.
In 2012, he was featured on the documentary Michael Grade"s History of the Pantomime Dame, which also featured clips from the 2011 pantomime The York Family Robinson, a parody of the novel The Swiss Family Robinson by Johann David Wyss.
The program aired in December 2012 on British Broadcasting Corporation Four.