I always liked Harry Seacombe. He always seemed like a nice person, which isn't always the case amongst celebrities. You never felt that he was an ego out of control. And this biography seems to confirm this.
Indeed you get the impression that he's the Kevin Keegan of comedy in that his talent was average but he worked hard to improve it until he became a star. I suspect this is as incorrect about Seacombe as it is about Keegan. I think