Career
Hilliam wrote most of the duo"s songs, played the piano and sang in a "light, high tenor voice". The duo"s only film appearance is in the prelude of the 1936 Tod Slaughter melodrama The Crimes of Stephen Hawke. Hilliam also wrote music and lyrics, and was musical director, for the stage play Buddies, and starred in his own concert-party shows, "Flotsam"s Follies", whose cast included a young Tony Hancock.
Hilliam was born in Scarborough, North Yorkshire in 1890, as Bentley Collingwood Smailes.
He began his career as an entertainer at local functions, under the name Lloyd Holland, and also attended the local boys" school Scarborough College from 1902 to 1906. Hilliam wrote a series of odes for the school magazine under the pseudonym Aimless, an anagram of Smailes.
He later changed his name permanently from Smailes to Hilliam. During World War I, he served as a Lieutenant in the Canadian Engineers.
His address was given as residing at Cadnam, Hampshire, England, and formerly West Hill, Highgate, London.
On 23 May 1935, a conditional order of discharge was made. The case continued, with an adjournment in October of that year, when his address was given as Robin Grove, West Hill. He appeared as a "castaway" on the British Broadcasting Corporation Radio programme Desert Island Discs on 3 August 1959.