According to their backstory, Henry Kipper was born on 4 August 1914 (the opening day of
World War I and Sid on 3 September 1939 (the equivalent day for
World War II), both in the fictional village of St. Just-near-Trunch in Norfolk (
Trunch is a real place, but its cited near neighbour is not). Their supposed ancestor was one "Ephraim Kipper" who founded the dynasty in 1837. Sugden and Nudds performed as the Kipper Family throughout the 1980s and released several cult albums. With a good deal of skill and affection for their parodied originals, they performed their humorous variations of traditional folk songs, with lyrics sometimes twisted to take in themes including cross-dressing, under-age sex, homosexuality at sea and the dissection of human cadavers. In 1986 they published a song book based on their three albums released to that date, entitled "Since Time Immoral: The Kipper Family Song Book", under the auspices of the
English Folk Dance and Song Society (to continue the fiction that the characters were real), under the "editorship" of Nudds and Sugden but noting on the internal copyright page "all songs and music copyright R. Nudds and C. Sugden". With illustrations by Molly Nudds, the song transcriptions were arranged in 3 sections: "The Ever Decreasing Circle: Ritual and seasonal songs" ("The Rusty Cold Farmer" to "The Lightweight Dirge"), "Love, Lust and Lamentation: Songs of courtship and marriage" ("Not Sixteen 'Til Sunday" to "The Seven Deadly Sins") and "Drowning Sorrows and Sinking Sailors: Naval, drinking and other songs" ("The Village P.I.M.P." to "The Losing of the Whale"). In the early days, the Kipper Family would perform to crowds expecting an ordinary folk act, firmly staying in character during the whole period in the public eye, and it would be several songs into the set before the penny dropped. Later recordings include "We're Norfolk and Good", "Arrest These Merry Gentlemen" and "Bored of the Dance" and also a folk opera,
The Crab Wars. In addition to the released LPs,
Christmas with the Kippers, a Christmas special, was recorded for
BBC Radio 2.
The Crab Wars, an elaborate 2xLP production, was a loose parody of
Peter Bellamy's 1977 ballad opera
The Transports, and (like its inspiration) featured many other "folk luminaries" of the day including
Ashley Hutchings,
John Kirkpatrick, Shep Woolley,
Cathy Lesurf,
Martin Carthy, Mick Graves, Sarah Graves,
Tim Laycock,
Phil Beer, Peter Bellamy, John Smith,
Richard Digance, Gary Carpenter, and
Fairport Convention. They were seen once on British television. The children's programme,
Get Fresh, featured a spaceship that would arrive in a different location each Saturday morning. One Saturday the destination was Trunch, and who should be there but Sid and Henry. The duo split at the end of 1991. In 2006, Sugden presented a series of podcasts for Channel 4 radio called
The Kipper Country Code, as Sid Kipper. Chris Sugden later retired the character of Sid Kipper. Sugden died on 3 April 2024. ==Characters==