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Who is Richard Wattis?
Who is Richard Wattis
Richard Cameron Wattis (25 February 1912 – 1 February 1975) was an English actor.
A balding, bespectacled, bird-like British comic actor, Richard Wattis was an invaluable asset to any UK comedy film or TV programme for nearly thirty years. Much associated with the Eric Sykes TV series for the latter part of his career. He was often seen in officious roles, such as snooty shop
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Eric Sykes 'Sykes' Out-Takes
A few out-takes from the BBC 'Sykes' series with a few famous faces !
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Classic Ads: Pork Farms Pie with Richard Wattis
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Danger Man - S1, e19 Part A
Danger Man - Season 1, episode 19 Part A - Name, Date and Place (1961) - Directed by Charles Frend with Patrick McGoohan, Cyril Raymond, Richard Wattis, Kathleen Byron, Patricia Marmont, Jean Marsh, Susan Travers, Delena Kidd, Olive McFarland, Guy Deghy and Frederick Piper - first aired 22 January 1961
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Marilyn Monroe - I Hope You Like Caviar
The Prince And The Showgirl
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From "THE LONGEST DAY" (1962): Paratroopers landing
Clip from Darryl F. Zanuck's production "The Longest Day", based on Cornelius Ryan's book and directed by A. Marton, K. Annakin, B. Wicki, D.F. Zanuck. In these scenes: Arletty, Lionel Vitrant, Richard Beymer, Richard Wattis, Harry Fowler, John Gregson, et al.
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Air Travel, 1950's - Film 4759
Film to promote air travel. Fictional Jones family taking their first flight. BOAC airlines. Richard Wattis plays Mr Jones. Luggage porters, checking at airline desk. Stewardess, rolls eyes at desk. Very posh looking family. Too much luggage. Proper packing. Weighing luggage on the scale at home. Clothes laid out on the bed. Picking clothes, plastic containers for make up and cosmetics.. C
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Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 2 - Uncle
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 3 - Episode 2 - Holiday in Bogsea
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 2 - Bus
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Marilyn Monroe in The Prince and the Showgirl (1957)
Romantic comedy directed by Laurence Olivier. Starring Laurence Olivier, Marilyn Monroe, Richard Wattis.
With Marilyn Monroe, Laurence Olivier, Richard Wattis, David Horne.
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Sykes - Series 4 - Episode 3 - Caravan
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 5 - Rolls
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 8 - Job
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 3 - The Spy Ring
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 4 - Golf
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 3 - Walk
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 5 - Boat
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 16 - Cafe
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 6 - Episode 6 - End Of The World
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 3 - Episode 1 - The Stolen Bentley
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 13 - Salesman
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 6 - Stranger
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
Who is Richard Wattis?
Who is Richard Wattis
Richard Cameron Wattis (25 February 1912 – 1 February 1975) was an English actor.
A balding, bespectacled, bird-like British comic actor, ...
Who is Richard Wattis
Richard Cameron Wattis (25 February 1912 – 1 February 1975) was an English actor.
A balding, bespectacled, bird-like British comic actor, Richard Wattis was an invaluable asset to any UK comedy film or TV programme for nearly thirty years. Much associated with the Eric Sykes TV series for the latter part of his career. He was often seen in officious roles, such as snooty shop managers, secretaries and policemen. He was working right up to his sudden death from a heart attack in 1975.
Wattis was born in Wednesbury, Staffordshire. He attended King Edward's School and Bromsgrove School, after which he worked for the electrical engineering firm William Sanders & Co (Wednesbury) Ltd. His uncle, William Preston (1874–1941), was the managing director and was the Conservative MP for Walsall from 1924 to 1929.
After leaving the family business, Wattis became an actor. His debut was with Croydon Repertory Theatre, and he made many stage appearances in the West End in London. His first appearance in a film was A Yank at Oxford (1938), but war service interrupted his career as an actor. He served as a second lieutenant with the Arms Section of Special Operations Executive at Station VI during World War II. He is best known for his appearances in British comedies of the 1950s and 1960s, typically as the "Man from the Ministry" or similar character, with his trademark thick-rimmed round spectacles.
Such appearances included the St Trinian's films (The Belles of St Trinian's, Blue Murder at St Trinian's, and The Great St Trinian's Train Robbery) as Manton Bassett, a civil servant who was the Deputy Director of Schools in the Ministry of Education, where he was often seen frowning and expressing indignation at the outrageous behaviour of other characters. To American audiences, Wattis is probably best known for his performance as the British civil servant Northbrook in The Prince and the Showgirl (1957).
Wattis's other films included Hobson's Choice, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Carry On Spying, The Colditz Story, Dentist on the Job, Very Important Person, The Happiest Days of Your Life, and The Longest Day. He also appeared on television, including a long-running role in Sykes, and appearances in Danger Man, The Prisoner, The Goodies, Hancock's Half Hour, and Father, Dear Father. From 1957 to 1958, he appeared as Peter Jamison in three episodes of the American sitcom Dick and the Duchess.
Wattis was homosexual in an era when this was a taboo subject; unusually, in his role as Northbrook in The Prince and the Showgirl by gay playwright Terence Rattigan, he made it clear near the beginning of the film that he is attracted to the title character.
On 1 February 1975, Wattis died of a heart attack in a restaurant in Kensington, London. He was 62 years old.
wn.com/Who Is Richard Wattis
Who is Richard Wattis
Richard Cameron Wattis (25 February 1912 – 1 February 1975) was an English actor.
A balding, bespectacled, bird-like British comic actor, Richard Wattis was an invaluable asset to any UK comedy film or TV programme for nearly thirty years. Much associated with the Eric Sykes TV series for the latter part of his career. He was often seen in officious roles, such as snooty shop managers, secretaries and policemen. He was working right up to his sudden death from a heart attack in 1975.
Wattis was born in Wednesbury, Staffordshire. He attended King Edward's School and Bromsgrove School, after which he worked for the electrical engineering firm William Sanders & Co (Wednesbury) Ltd. His uncle, William Preston (1874–1941), was the managing director and was the Conservative MP for Walsall from 1924 to 1929.
After leaving the family business, Wattis became an actor. His debut was with Croydon Repertory Theatre, and he made many stage appearances in the West End in London. His first appearance in a film was A Yank at Oxford (1938), but war service interrupted his career as an actor. He served as a second lieutenant with the Arms Section of Special Operations Executive at Station VI during World War II. He is best known for his appearances in British comedies of the 1950s and 1960s, typically as the "Man from the Ministry" or similar character, with his trademark thick-rimmed round spectacles.
Such appearances included the St Trinian's films (The Belles of St Trinian's, Blue Murder at St Trinian's, and The Great St Trinian's Train Robbery) as Manton Bassett, a civil servant who was the Deputy Director of Schools in the Ministry of Education, where he was often seen frowning and expressing indignation at the outrageous behaviour of other characters. To American audiences, Wattis is probably best known for his performance as the British civil servant Northbrook in The Prince and the Showgirl (1957).
Wattis's other films included Hobson's Choice, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Carry On Spying, The Colditz Story, Dentist on the Job, Very Important Person, The Happiest Days of Your Life, and The Longest Day. He also appeared on television, including a long-running role in Sykes, and appearances in Danger Man, The Prisoner, The Goodies, Hancock's Half Hour, and Father, Dear Father. From 1957 to 1958, he appeared as Peter Jamison in three episodes of the American sitcom Dick and the Duchess.
Wattis was homosexual in an era when this was a taboo subject; unusually, in his role as Northbrook in The Prince and the Showgirl by gay playwright Terence Rattigan, he made it clear near the beginning of the film that he is attracted to the title character.
On 1 February 1975, Wattis died of a heart attack in a restaurant in Kensington, London. He was 62 years old.
- published: 22 Jul 2015
- views: 879
Eric Sykes 'Sykes' Out-Takes
A few out-takes from the BBC 'Sykes' series with a few famous faces !...
A few out-takes from the BBC 'Sykes' series with a few famous faces !
wn.com/Eric Sykes 'Sykes' Out Takes
A few out-takes from the BBC 'Sykes' series with a few famous faces !
- published: 28 Jan 2010
- views: 72732
Danger Man - S1, e19 Part A
Danger Man - Season 1, episode 19 Part A - Name, Date and Place (1961) - Directed by Charles Frend with Patrick McGoohan, Cyril Raymond, Richard Wattis, Kathlee...
Danger Man - Season 1, episode 19 Part A - Name, Date and Place (1961) - Directed by Charles Frend with Patrick McGoohan, Cyril Raymond, Richard Wattis, Kathleen Byron, Patricia Marmont, Jean Marsh, Susan Travers, Delena Kidd, Olive McFarland, Guy Deghy and Frederick Piper - first aired 22 January 1961
wn.com/Danger Man S1, E19 Part A
Danger Man - Season 1, episode 19 Part A - Name, Date and Place (1961) - Directed by Charles Frend with Patrick McGoohan, Cyril Raymond, Richard Wattis, Kathleen Byron, Patricia Marmont, Jean Marsh, Susan Travers, Delena Kidd, Olive McFarland, Guy Deghy and Frederick Piper - first aired 22 January 1961
- published: 15 Jan 2010
- views: 11955
From "THE LONGEST DAY" (1962): Paratroopers landing
Clip from Darryl F. Zanuck's production "The Longest Day", based on Cornelius Ryan's book and directed by A. Marton, K. Annakin, B. Wicki, D.F. Zanuck. In thes...
Clip from Darryl F. Zanuck's production "The Longest Day", based on Cornelius Ryan's book and directed by A. Marton, K. Annakin, B. Wicki, D.F. Zanuck. In these scenes: Arletty, Lionel Vitrant, Richard Beymer, Richard Wattis, Harry Fowler, John Gregson, et al.
wn.com/From The Longest Day (1962) Paratroopers Landing
Clip from Darryl F. Zanuck's production "The Longest Day", based on Cornelius Ryan's book and directed by A. Marton, K. Annakin, B. Wicki, D.F. Zanuck. In these scenes: Arletty, Lionel Vitrant, Richard Beymer, Richard Wattis, Harry Fowler, John Gregson, et al.
- published: 12 May 2011
- views: 64826
Air Travel, 1950's - Film 4759
Film to promote air travel. Fictional Jones family taking their first flight. BOAC airlines. Richard Wattis plays Mr Jones. Luggage porters, checking at airline...
Film to promote air travel. Fictional Jones family taking their first flight. BOAC airlines. Richard Wattis plays Mr Jones. Luggage porters, checking at airline desk. Stewardess, rolls eyes at desk. Very posh looking family. Too much luggage. Proper packing. Weighing luggage on the scale at home. Clothes laid out on the bed. Picking clothes, plastic containers for make up and cosmetics.. Ceiling fan going around. Entering a Spanish café with a parrot. Using one outfit in several ways. Magically changing clothes in the café. Airport lounge.
wn.com/Air Travel, 1950's Film 4759
Film to promote air travel. Fictional Jones family taking their first flight. BOAC airlines. Richard Wattis plays Mr Jones. Luggage porters, checking at airline desk. Stewardess, rolls eyes at desk. Very posh looking family. Too much luggage. Proper packing. Weighing luggage on the scale at home. Clothes laid out on the bed. Picking clothes, plastic containers for make up and cosmetics.. Ceiling fan going around. Entering a Spanish café with a parrot. Using one outfit in several ways. Magically changing clothes in the café. Airport lounge.
- published: 16 Oct 2014
- views: 174
Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 2 - Uncle
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 1 Episode 2 Uncle
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 15 Dec 2014
- views: 4886
Sykes - Series 3 - Episode 2 - Holiday in Bogsea
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 3 Episode 2 Holiday In Bogsea
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 25 Feb 2015
- views: 4804
Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 2 - Bus
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 2 Episode 2 Bus
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 4019
Marilyn Monroe in The Prince and the Showgirl (1957)
Romantic comedy directed by Laurence Olivier. Starring Laurence Olivier, Marilyn Monroe, Richard Wattis.
With Marilyn Monroe, Laurence Olivier, Richard Wattis,...
Romantic comedy directed by Laurence Olivier. Starring Laurence Olivier, Marilyn Monroe, Richard Wattis.
With Marilyn Monroe, Laurence Olivier, Richard Wattis, David Horne.
wn.com/Marilyn Monroe In The Prince And The Showgirl (1957)
Romantic comedy directed by Laurence Olivier. Starring Laurence Olivier, Marilyn Monroe, Richard Wattis.
With Marilyn Monroe, Laurence Olivier, Richard Wattis, David Horne.
- published: 03 Feb 2011
- views: 277582
Sykes - Series 4 - Episode 3 - Caravan
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 4 Episode 3 Caravan
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 25 Feb 2015
- views: 2906
Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 5 - Rolls
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 2 Episode 5 Rolls
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 3500
Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 8 - Job
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 1 Episode 8 Job
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 2975
Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 3 - The Spy Ring
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 2 Episode 3 The Spy Ring
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 3035
Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 4 - Golf
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 2 Episode 4 Golf
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 3454
Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 3 - Walk
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 1 Episode 3 Walk
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 5109
Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 5 - Boat
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 1 Episode 5 Boat
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 3791
Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 16 - Cafe
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 1 Episode 16 Cafe
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 4339
Sykes - Series 6 - Episode 6 - End Of The World
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 6 Episode 6 End Of The World
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 26 Feb 2015
- views: 2215
Sykes - Series 3 - Episode 1 - The Stolen Bentley
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 3 Episode 1 The Stolen Bentley
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 25 Feb 2015
- views: 3120
Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 13 - Salesman
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 2 Episode 13 Salesman
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 2720
Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 6 - Stranger
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 1 Episode 6 Stranger
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 3002
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Sykes - Series 5 - Episode 8 - Bath
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 1 - An Engagement
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 3 - Episode 3 - The Pub
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 4 - Episode 7 - Christmas Party
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 7 - Fancy Dress
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Diamonds on Wheels (1973)
Three English teen-agers, tuning up for a 24-hour road rally, have the brains and talent to transform their car into a potential trophy-winner. However, the unsuspecting racers come away from the junkyard with a second-hand driver’s seat filled with stolen diamonds! By the time the hidden loot is discovered, the youths are deeply involved in a dangerous race against murderous mobsters who are inte
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Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 6 - Peeping Tom
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
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Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 9 - Ankle
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 an
Sykes - Series 5 - Episode 8 - Bath
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 5 Episode 8 Bath
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 25 Feb 2015
- views: 4423
Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 1 - An Engagement
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 2 Episode 1 An Engagement
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 3677
Sykes - Series 3 - Episode 3 - The Pub
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 3 Episode 3 The Pub
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 25 Feb 2015
- views: 5195
Sykes - Series 4 - Episode 7 - Christmas Party
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 4 Episode 7 Christmas Party
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 25 Feb 2015
- views: 3580
Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 7 - Fancy Dress
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 2 Episode 7 Fancy Dress
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 2829
Diamonds on Wheels (1973)
Three English teen-agers, tuning up for a 24-hour road rally, have the brains and talent to transform their car into a potential trophy-winner. However, the uns...
Three English teen-agers, tuning up for a 24-hour road rally, have the brains and talent to transform their car into a potential trophy-winner. However, the unsuspecting racers come away from the junkyard with a second-hand driver’s seat filled with stolen diamonds! By the time the hidden loot is discovered, the youths are deeply involved in a dangerous race against murderous mobsters who are intent on reclaiming the booty at any price. And the trio discovers the stakes in this deadly game their own lives! Buckle up for danger and drama in a Disney thriller that delivers high-revving excitement from start to finish.
Patrick Allen ... Insp. Cook
George Sewell ... Henry Stewart
Derek Newark ... Mercer
Dudley Sutton ... Finch
Barry Jackson ... Wheeler
Christopher Malcolm ... Jock
Richard Wattis ... Sir Hilary Stanton
Allan Cuthbertson ... Gus Ashley
Ambrosine Phillpotts ... Lady Truesdale
Maggie Hanley ... Mrs. Maggie Stewart
George Innes ... Insp. Timothy
George Woodbridge ... PC Andrew
Edwin Richfield
Patrick Holt ... Steward
Andrew McCulloch ... Billy
wn.com/Diamonds On Wheels (1973)
Three English teen-agers, tuning up for a 24-hour road rally, have the brains and talent to transform their car into a potential trophy-winner. However, the unsuspecting racers come away from the junkyard with a second-hand driver’s seat filled with stolen diamonds! By the time the hidden loot is discovered, the youths are deeply involved in a dangerous race against murderous mobsters who are intent on reclaiming the booty at any price. And the trio discovers the stakes in this deadly game their own lives! Buckle up for danger and drama in a Disney thriller that delivers high-revving excitement from start to finish.
Patrick Allen ... Insp. Cook
George Sewell ... Henry Stewart
Derek Newark ... Mercer
Dudley Sutton ... Finch
Barry Jackson ... Wheeler
Christopher Malcolm ... Jock
Richard Wattis ... Sir Hilary Stanton
Allan Cuthbertson ... Gus Ashley
Ambrosine Phillpotts ... Lady Truesdale
Maggie Hanley ... Mrs. Maggie Stewart
George Innes ... Insp. Timothy
George Woodbridge ... PC Andrew
Edwin Richfield
Patrick Holt ... Steward
Andrew McCulloch ... Billy
- published: 21 Dec 2015
- views: 742
Sykes - Series 2 - Episode 6 - Peeping Tom
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 2 Episode 6 Peeping Tom
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 2761
Sykes - Series 1 - Episode 9 - Ankle
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred wit...
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
wn.com/Sykes Series 1 Episode 9 Ankle
Sykes is a British sitcom that aired on BBC 1 from 1972 to 1979. Starring Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, it was written by Sykes, who had previously starred with Jacques in Sykes and A... (1960–1965) and Sykes and a Big, Big Show (1971). Forty-three of the 1970s colour episodes were remakes of scripts for the 1960s black and white series, such as "Bus" based on 'Sykes and a Following' from 1964 and the episode "Stranger" with guest star Peter Sellers based on 'Sykes and a Stranger' from 1961.
Sykes had the same premise as Sykes and A... with Sykes, Jacques, Richard Wattis and Deryck Guyler reprising their former identical roles. The series was brought to an end by the death of Hattie Jacques of a heart attack on 6 October 1980.
With the same premise as Sykes and A..., unmarried twins Eric and Harriet (Hat) Sykes are now living at an end of terrace house, 28 Sebastopol Terrace, East Acton, two doors down from their house in the previous programme. As before, Eric is childish and accident-prone while Hattie is patient. Their neighbour is the snobbish unmarried Charles Fulbright-Brown, and PC Corky Turnbull is the local policeman. Corky's wife, Elsie, is unseen, except for one episode, Caravan, in which she appears with her face covered in porridge during a food fight between Corky and Eric. Deryck Guyler also played Corky's brother Wilfred Turnbull, a train attendant on the Glasgow to London sleeper train, in the episode Journey. Following the death of Richard Wattis in 1975 a new neighbour, Melody Rumbelow, moves in. The local baker is the widowed Madge Kettlewell (Joan Sims), who appears occasionally, and who fancies Eric - she is first seen in the episode Football. Eric and Hattie are also the owners of a cuckoo clock, naming the very temperamental bird inside Peter. Both speak to it as if it were a real bird, and a great deal of comedy derives from the antagonistic and sarcastic 'conversations' between Eric and Peter.
- published: 23 Feb 2015
- views: 2702
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Terry-Thomas and Liberace Duet
This is a clip I remember catching as a child about 1989 or 1990 (obviously as part of something larger as the original show was 1969 and never re-run), and it was my first experience of the superb entertainer who was Liberace and the start of a long-standing admiration. Apart from that, I thought it was very funny, and have looked for it since. I was therefore very pleased to find it as part of
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The Abominable Snowman of the Himalayas (1957) trailer
Starring Forrest Tucker, Peter Cushing, Maureen Connell, Richard Wattis, Robert Brown, and Wolfe Morris. Directed by Val Guest.
DVD available from Anchor Bay.
http://www.amazon.com/Abominable-Snowman-Forrest-Tucker/dp/6305807914/ref=sr_1_1?s=movies-tv&ie;=UTF8&qid;=1435765033&sr;=1-1&keywords;=abominable+snowman+of+the+himalayas
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The Past is Present: Jens Hoffmann Interview
2013 marks the 80-year anniversary of Diego Rivera's 27-panel mural, Detroit Industry. Commissioned by the Detroit Institute of Arts and financed by the Ford family, Detroit Industry portrays the successful fusion of man and machine. Representing the city through a series of intricate vignettes, Rivera's mural celebrates the working man, the advancement of technology, and the industrial wonder of
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Danger Man - S1, e19 Part B
Danger Man - Season 1, episode 19 Part B - Name, Date and Place (1961) - Directed by Charles Frend with Patrick McGoohan, Cyril Raymond, Richard Wattis, Kathleen Byron, Patricia Marmont, Jean Marsh, Susan Travers, Delena Kidd, Olive McFarland, Guy Deghy and Frederick Piper - first aired 22 January 1961
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●{Miklòs Ròzsa}● ((( Prelude ))) 'THE V.I.P'.s Hotel Internacional.wmv
║███║The V.I.P'.s (Hotel Internacional)
Año: 1963
País: Reino Unido
Dirección: Anthony Asquith
Argumento: Ira Levin (obra de teatro)
Guión: Terence Rattigan
*Música: Miklòs Ròzsa
Fotografía: Jack Hildyard
Intérpretes: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Louis Jourdan, Elsa Martinelli, Margaret Rutherford, Maggie Smith, Rod Taylor, Orson Welles, Linda Christian, Dennis Price, Richard Wattis, Ronal
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The Time of his Life - Directed by Leslie S.Hiscott
Mr. Pastry's social climbing daughter, president of a society for the rehabilitation for ex convicts, hides the fact that her father is himself a prisoner. When he is released and arrives at her home, she panics and locks him in the attic until a job can be found for him, preferably abroad. His continual escapades from the attic and the slapstick situations that develop make this a wonderfully hil
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AM1690 Interview Justin Anderson, Grant McGowen, and Daryl Lisa Fazio
Pinch 'N' Ouch Theatre discuss BODY AWARENESS on AM1690. With Larry Larson, Justin Anderson, Grant McGowen, and Daryl Lisa Fazio.
BODY AWARENESS
By Annie Baker; directed by Justin Anderson; Presented by Pinch 'N' Ouch Theatre; At 7 Stages Theater, 1105 Euclid Avenue Northeast, Atlanta, GA 30307, (404) 545-5983. August 10 - 28, 2011; Running time: 1 hour and 30 minutes. www.pnotheatre.org
WITH: B
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The Prince and the Showgirl (1957)
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/english-movies/movie/345-the-prince-and-the-showgirl
1. Go to www.classicmovieslibrary.com
TIP: Easily find any movie by using the search function, just enter anything about the movie (title, director, actor etc)
2. Purchase the decompression-password for just 1€ for the movie you just downloaded.
TIP: Create a free account if you don't already have one.
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DAVID ZWIRNER - Jordan Wolfson
Jordan Wolfson
Solo Exhibition
David Zwirner- 533 W. 19th
533 W. 19th Street
New York, NY 10011
March 6th - April 19th, 2014
Opening: March 6th 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
David Zwirner is pleased to present its first exhibition with Jordan
Wolfson, on view at 533 West 19th Street in New York. Wolfson, who
joined the gallery in 2013, will debut an animatronic sculpture, a major
development in the ar
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TV Heroes - Deryck Guyler - Danny Baker
Here's the brilliantly witty Danny Baker introducing TV Heroes - Derek Guyler - BBC TV - Brodcast in 1995. The career of Deryck Guyler is looked at as Danny Baker pays tribute to another unsung hero of the small screen. His regular appearances on Michael Bentine 's/t's a Square World made him a household name, but his most popular characters were the police constable Corkie in Sykes and Norman Pot
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Eric Sykes - Outtakes and Anecdotes
Bits and pieces in memory of Eric Sykes - what fun they had on the set and what fun they shared with us. Rest in chaotic laughter all.
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Le prince et la danseuse - 1957
Buy with 1€ and download here: http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/french-movies/movie/347-le-prince-et-la-danseuse
Le prince Charles, Régent de Karpathie, petit royaume d'Europe Centrale, vient représenter son pays aux cérémonies du couronnement de George V, à Londres, en l'année 1912. Le prince assiste alors à la représentation d'une revue légère où il tombe sur le charme d'une jeune actrice
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Who is Barry Evans?
Barry Joseph Evans (18 June 1943 – 9 February 1997) was an English actor and television performer best known for his appearances in British sitcoms such as Doctor in the House and Mind Your Language.
Born in Guildford, Surrey, and abandoned as a baby, Evans was educated at the orphanage boarding schools run by the Shaftesbury Homes, first at Fortescue House School in Twickenham and then at Bisley
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The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956)
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/english-movies/movie/585-the-man-who-knew-too-much
1. Go to www.classicmovieslibrary.com
TIP: Easily find any movie by using the search function, just enter anything about the movie (title, director, actor etc)
2. Purchase the decompression-password for just 1€ for the movie you just downloaded.
TIP: Create a free account if you don't already have one.
3.
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L'homme qui en savait trop (1956)
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/french-movies/movie/591-l-homme-qui-en-savait-trop
1. Go to www.classicmovieslibrary.com
TIP: Easily find any movie by using the search function, just enter anything about the movie (title, director, actor etc)
2. Purchase the decompression-password for just 1€ for the movie you just downloaded.
TIP: Create a free account if you don't already have one.
3.
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John Finnemore, Apparently - Roger Watiss
Happy Mondays - BBC Radio 4
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Lecture by Ryue Nishizawa, SANAA
Recorded Monday, November 7, 2011, and presented by the Graduate Studies Lecture Series and the Architecture Lecture Series at California College of the Arts, Ryue Nishizawaon presented in Timken Lecture Hall on the San Francisco campus.
Info: 415.703.9562 or architecture@cca.edu
Ryue Nishizawa and Kazuyo Sejima founded the Tokyo architecture studio SANAA in 1995. Their groundbreaking work i
Terry-Thomas and Liberace Duet
This is a clip I remember catching as a child about 1989 or 1990 (obviously as part of something larger as the original show was 1969 and never re-run), and it ...
This is a clip I remember catching as a child about 1989 or 1990 (obviously as part of something larger as the original show was 1969 and never re-run), and it was my first experience of the superb entertainer who was Liberace and the start of a long-standing admiration. Apart from that, I thought it was very funny, and have looked for it since. I was therefore very pleased to find it as part of the Terry-Thomas edition of the "Heroes of Comedy" series from 1999, currently being re-run on G.O.L.D.
wn.com/Terry Thomas And Liberace Duet
This is a clip I remember catching as a child about 1989 or 1990 (obviously as part of something larger as the original show was 1969 and never re-run), and it was my first experience of the superb entertainer who was Liberace and the start of a long-standing admiration. Apart from that, I thought it was very funny, and have looked for it since. I was therefore very pleased to find it as part of the Terry-Thomas edition of the "Heroes of Comedy" series from 1999, currently being re-run on G.O.L.D.
- published: 07 Jul 2010
- views: 40238
The Abominable Snowman of the Himalayas (1957) trailer
Starring Forrest Tucker, Peter Cushing, Maureen Connell, Richard Wattis, Robert Brown, and Wolfe Morris. Directed by Val Guest.
DVD available from Anchor Bay.
...
Starring Forrest Tucker, Peter Cushing, Maureen Connell, Richard Wattis, Robert Brown, and Wolfe Morris. Directed by Val Guest.
DVD available from Anchor Bay.
http://www.amazon.com/Abominable-Snowman-Forrest-Tucker/dp/6305807914/ref=sr_1_1?s=movies-tv&ie;=UTF8&qid;=1435765033&sr;=1-1&keywords;=abominable+snowman+of+the+himalayas
wn.com/The Abominable Snowman Of The Himalayas (1957) Trailer
Starring Forrest Tucker, Peter Cushing, Maureen Connell, Richard Wattis, Robert Brown, and Wolfe Morris. Directed by Val Guest.
DVD available from Anchor Bay.
http://www.amazon.com/Abominable-Snowman-Forrest-Tucker/dp/6305807914/ref=sr_1_1?s=movies-tv&ie;=UTF8&qid;=1435765033&sr;=1-1&keywords;=abominable+snowman+of+the+himalayas
- published: 30 Jun 2013
- views: 559
The Past is Present: Jens Hoffmann Interview
2013 marks the 80-year anniversary of Diego Rivera's 27-panel mural, Detroit Industry. Commissioned by the Detroit Institute of Arts and financed by the Ford fa...
2013 marks the 80-year anniversary of Diego Rivera's 27-panel mural, Detroit Industry. Commissioned by the Detroit Institute of Arts and financed by the Ford family, Detroit Industry portrays the successful fusion of man and machine. Representing the city through a series of intricate vignettes, Rivera's mural celebrates the working man, the advancement of technology, and the industrial wonder of the time—the Ford V-8.
Over the past 80 years, the city of Detroit has faced many challenges, and, sadly, fewer triumphs. Looking back across the historic events that have shaped the Detroit of the present, the fifteen artists commissioned for The Past is Present offer unique perspectives on the city. From the riots of 1943, and the decline of the manufacturing industry, to the advent of Motown, and the present urban gardening movement, The Past is Present will feature 15 newly-commissioned murals. Made by artists from around the world whose works are rooted in explorations of history, political conflict, and social change, these works allow an opportunity to begin where Rivera left off, examining the history of the city from contemporary points of view.
While Rivera may be remembered as often for large-scale controversies as he is for his large-scale frescoes, the impact of his works - their ability to capture history, energize resistance, and celebrate change - cannot be denied. It is in this spirit that this exhibition is based. Providing a looking glass into the past, the murals presented in The Past is Present allow for a reflection of what Detroit was, what it is, and what it may become.
The Past is Present is curated by Jens Hoffmann, MOCAD's guest curator and coordinated by MOCAD exhibitions department Zeb Smith, Jonathan Rajewski, and Liz Glass. The participating artists include: Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla, Julieta Aranda, Katherine Ball, Andrea Bowers, Carolina Caycedo, Nicolás Consuegra, Harrell Fletcher, Claire Fontaine, Maryam Jafri, William E. Jones, Daniel Martinez, Pedro Reyes, Martha Rosler, Slanguage, and Hank Willis Thomas.
wn.com/The Past Is Present Jens Hoffmann Interview
2013 marks the 80-year anniversary of Diego Rivera's 27-panel mural, Detroit Industry. Commissioned by the Detroit Institute of Arts and financed by the Ford family, Detroit Industry portrays the successful fusion of man and machine. Representing the city through a series of intricate vignettes, Rivera's mural celebrates the working man, the advancement of technology, and the industrial wonder of the time—the Ford V-8.
Over the past 80 years, the city of Detroit has faced many challenges, and, sadly, fewer triumphs. Looking back across the historic events that have shaped the Detroit of the present, the fifteen artists commissioned for The Past is Present offer unique perspectives on the city. From the riots of 1943, and the decline of the manufacturing industry, to the advent of Motown, and the present urban gardening movement, The Past is Present will feature 15 newly-commissioned murals. Made by artists from around the world whose works are rooted in explorations of history, political conflict, and social change, these works allow an opportunity to begin where Rivera left off, examining the history of the city from contemporary points of view.
While Rivera may be remembered as often for large-scale controversies as he is for his large-scale frescoes, the impact of his works - their ability to capture history, energize resistance, and celebrate change - cannot be denied. It is in this spirit that this exhibition is based. Providing a looking glass into the past, the murals presented in The Past is Present allow for a reflection of what Detroit was, what it is, and what it may become.
The Past is Present is curated by Jens Hoffmann, MOCAD's guest curator and coordinated by MOCAD exhibitions department Zeb Smith, Jonathan Rajewski, and Liz Glass. The participating artists include: Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla, Julieta Aranda, Katherine Ball, Andrea Bowers, Carolina Caycedo, Nicolás Consuegra, Harrell Fletcher, Claire Fontaine, Maryam Jafri, William E. Jones, Daniel Martinez, Pedro Reyes, Martha Rosler, Slanguage, and Hank Willis Thomas.
- published: 20 Sep 2013
- views: 1056
Danger Man - S1, e19 Part B
Danger Man - Season 1, episode 19 Part B - Name, Date and Place (1961) - Directed by Charles Frend with Patrick McGoohan, Cyril Raymond, Richard Wattis, Kathlee...
Danger Man - Season 1, episode 19 Part B - Name, Date and Place (1961) - Directed by Charles Frend with Patrick McGoohan, Cyril Raymond, Richard Wattis, Kathleen Byron, Patricia Marmont, Jean Marsh, Susan Travers, Delena Kidd, Olive McFarland, Guy Deghy and Frederick Piper - first aired 22 January 1961
wn.com/Danger Man S1, E19 Part B
Danger Man - Season 1, episode 19 Part B - Name, Date and Place (1961) - Directed by Charles Frend with Patrick McGoohan, Cyril Raymond, Richard Wattis, Kathleen Byron, Patricia Marmont, Jean Marsh, Susan Travers, Delena Kidd, Olive McFarland, Guy Deghy and Frederick Piper - first aired 22 January 1961
- published: 15 Jan 2010
- views: 4218
●{Miklòs Ròzsa}● ((( Prelude ))) 'THE V.I.P'.s Hotel Internacional.wmv
║███║The V.I.P'.s (Hotel Internacional)
Año: 1963
País: Reino Unido
Dirección: Anthony Asquith
Argumento: Ira Levin (obra de teatro)
Guión: Terence Rattigan
*...
║███║The V.I.P'.s (Hotel Internacional)
Año: 1963
País: Reino Unido
Dirección: Anthony Asquith
Argumento: Ira Levin (obra de teatro)
Guión: Terence Rattigan
*Música: Miklòs Ròzsa
Fotografía: Jack Hildyard
Intérpretes: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Louis Jourdan, Elsa Martinelli, Margaret Rutherford, Maggie Smith, Rod Taylor, Orson Welles, Linda Christian, Dennis Price, Richard Wattis, Ronald Fraser
*Argumento :
Un grupo de adinerados y elitistas personajes se alojan en un hotel tras haberse suspendido el vuelo donde iban a viajar de Londres a Nueva York. Entre ellos se encuentran, Frances, una mujer que iba a abandonar a su marido, pues piensa que le está siendo infiel; el director de cine Max Buda que, junto a su contable y una actriz, se aleja de Londres para no pagar unos impuestos; o una duquesa arruinada con problemas psicológicos. En el hotel, las historias de todos ellos se cruzarán y les ayudará a replantearse sus vidas.
Con un reparto coral, la película fue un gran éxito de taquilla. La pareja de moda Richard Burton y Elizabeth Taylor, que acababan de rodar Cleopatra (1963), fue, en parte, un reclamo para el público. Margaret Rutherford recibió el Oscar a la mejor actriz de reparto.
Comentarios de la Banda Sonora del propio Miklòs Rózsa, desde el original registro del Lp M-G-M ...
Los últimas cuatro películas para las que compuse música antes de los ''VIPs'' eran todas bíblicas o históricas "Ben-Hur", "Rey de Reyes", "El Cid" y "Sodoma y Gomorra", por lo que su estilo musical tenía que ser arcaico.Como ''VIPs'' es un drama contemporáneo, es necesario, por supuesto, un tratamiento musical diferente como el realizado en el preludio.
Miklós Rózsa.
==========================
║███║.V.I.P'.s The (International Hotel )
Year: 1963
Country: United Kingdom
Director: Anthony Asquith
Parents : Ira Levin ( play)
Writer: Terence Rattigan
Music: Miklos Rozsa * *
Photo: Jack Hildyard
Cast: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Louis Jourdan , Elsa Martinelli , Margaret Rutherford, Maggie Smith , Rod Taylor, Orson Welles , Linda Christian , Dennis Price, Richard Wattis , Ronald Fraser
*Plot :
A group of wealthy and elite characters staying in a hotel after having suspended the flight where they were to travel from London to New York. These include , Frances , a woman would leave her husband because he thinks it is cheating , film director Max Buddha , with his accountant and an actress away from London to not pay taxes , and a duchess ruined with psychological problems. At the hotel, all stories will cross and help them rethink their lives .
With an ensemble cast , the film was a blockbuster . Fashionable couple Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, who had just rolled Cleopatra ( 1963 ) , was, in part , a claim to the public. Margaret Rutherford received the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress .
Comentios of the soundtrack of Miklós Rózsa himself from the original record Lp MGM ...
The last four films for which I composed music before the ''VIPs'' were all biblical or historical " Ben- Hur ", " King of Kings" , "El Cid" and " Sodom and Gomorrah " , so their musical style had to be arcaico.Como ''VIPs'' is a contemporary drama, it is necessary , of course, a different musical treatment as performed in the prelude .
Miklós Rózsa.
==========================
Copyright Responsabilidad Bajo la Sección 107 de la Ley de Propiedad Intelectual de 1976, se tiene en cuenta para el "uso justo" para los propósitos tales como crítica, comentario, información periodística, la docencia, la erudición y la investigación. El uso justo es un uso permitido por la ley de derechos de autor que de otra manera se está infringiendo. No lucrativas, educativas o de uso personal inclina la balanza a favor del uso justo.
wn.com/● Miklòs Ròzsa ● ((( Prelude ))) 'The V.I.P'.s Hotel Internacional.Wmv
║███║The V.I.P'.s (Hotel Internacional)
Año: 1963
País: Reino Unido
Dirección: Anthony Asquith
Argumento: Ira Levin (obra de teatro)
Guión: Terence Rattigan
*Música: Miklòs Ròzsa
Fotografía: Jack Hildyard
Intérpretes: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Louis Jourdan, Elsa Martinelli, Margaret Rutherford, Maggie Smith, Rod Taylor, Orson Welles, Linda Christian, Dennis Price, Richard Wattis, Ronald Fraser
*Argumento :
Un grupo de adinerados y elitistas personajes se alojan en un hotel tras haberse suspendido el vuelo donde iban a viajar de Londres a Nueva York. Entre ellos se encuentran, Frances, una mujer que iba a abandonar a su marido, pues piensa que le está siendo infiel; el director de cine Max Buda que, junto a su contable y una actriz, se aleja de Londres para no pagar unos impuestos; o una duquesa arruinada con problemas psicológicos. En el hotel, las historias de todos ellos se cruzarán y les ayudará a replantearse sus vidas.
Con un reparto coral, la película fue un gran éxito de taquilla. La pareja de moda Richard Burton y Elizabeth Taylor, que acababan de rodar Cleopatra (1963), fue, en parte, un reclamo para el público. Margaret Rutherford recibió el Oscar a la mejor actriz de reparto.
Comentarios de la Banda Sonora del propio Miklòs Rózsa, desde el original registro del Lp M-G-M ...
Los últimas cuatro películas para las que compuse música antes de los ''VIPs'' eran todas bíblicas o históricas "Ben-Hur", "Rey de Reyes", "El Cid" y "Sodoma y Gomorra", por lo que su estilo musical tenía que ser arcaico.Como ''VIPs'' es un drama contemporáneo, es necesario, por supuesto, un tratamiento musical diferente como el realizado en el preludio.
Miklós Rózsa.
==========================
║███║.V.I.P'.s The (International Hotel )
Year: 1963
Country: United Kingdom
Director: Anthony Asquith
Parents : Ira Levin ( play)
Writer: Terence Rattigan
Music: Miklos Rozsa * *
Photo: Jack Hildyard
Cast: Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, Louis Jourdan , Elsa Martinelli , Margaret Rutherford, Maggie Smith , Rod Taylor, Orson Welles , Linda Christian , Dennis Price, Richard Wattis , Ronald Fraser
*Plot :
A group of wealthy and elite characters staying in a hotel after having suspended the flight where they were to travel from London to New York. These include , Frances , a woman would leave her husband because he thinks it is cheating , film director Max Buddha , with his accountant and an actress away from London to not pay taxes , and a duchess ruined with psychological problems. At the hotel, all stories will cross and help them rethink their lives .
With an ensemble cast , the film was a blockbuster . Fashionable couple Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, who had just rolled Cleopatra ( 1963 ) , was, in part , a claim to the public. Margaret Rutherford received the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress .
Comentios of the soundtrack of Miklós Rózsa himself from the original record Lp MGM ...
The last four films for which I composed music before the ''VIPs'' were all biblical or historical " Ben- Hur ", " King of Kings" , "El Cid" and " Sodom and Gomorrah " , so their musical style had to be arcaico.Como ''VIPs'' is a contemporary drama, it is necessary , of course, a different musical treatment as performed in the prelude .
Miklós Rózsa.
==========================
Copyright Responsabilidad Bajo la Sección 107 de la Ley de Propiedad Intelectual de 1976, se tiene en cuenta para el "uso justo" para los propósitos tales como crítica, comentario, información periodística, la docencia, la erudición y la investigación. El uso justo es un uso permitido por la ley de derechos de autor que de otra manera se está infringiendo. No lucrativas, educativas o de uso personal inclina la balanza a favor del uso justo.
- published: 17 Jan 2012
- views: 2581
The Time of his Life - Directed by Leslie S.Hiscott
Mr. Pastry's social climbing daughter, president of a society for the rehabilitation for ex convicts, hides the fact that her father is himself a prisoner. When...
Mr. Pastry's social climbing daughter, president of a society for the rehabilitation for ex convicts, hides the fact that her father is himself a prisoner. When he is released and arrives at her home, she panics and locks him in the attic until a job can be found for him, preferably abroad. His continual escapades from the attic and the slapstick situations that develop make this a wonderfully hilarious film.
Directed By
Leslie S. Hiscott
Richard Hearne - Charles Pastry
Ellen Pollock - Lady Florence
Richard Wattis - Edgar
Robert Moreton - Humphrey
Frederick Leister - Sir John
Peter Sinclair - Kane
John Downing - Simon
Anne Smith - Penelope
Darcy Conyers - Morgan
Year of Production 1955
Running Time: 1 hr 11 mins approx
Black & White
PAL
Format: 4:3
Region: 0
Sound: Mono
wn.com/The Time Of His Life Directed By Leslie S.Hiscott
Mr. Pastry's social climbing daughter, president of a society for the rehabilitation for ex convicts, hides the fact that her father is himself a prisoner. When he is released and arrives at her home, she panics and locks him in the attic until a job can be found for him, preferably abroad. His continual escapades from the attic and the slapstick situations that develop make this a wonderfully hilarious film.
Directed By
Leslie S. Hiscott
Richard Hearne - Charles Pastry
Ellen Pollock - Lady Florence
Richard Wattis - Edgar
Robert Moreton - Humphrey
Frederick Leister - Sir John
Peter Sinclair - Kane
John Downing - Simon
Anne Smith - Penelope
Darcy Conyers - Morgan
Year of Production 1955
Running Time: 1 hr 11 mins approx
Black & White
PAL
Format: 4:3
Region: 0
Sound: Mono
- published: 19 Aug 2013
- views: 562
AM1690 Interview Justin Anderson, Grant McGowen, and Daryl Lisa Fazio
Pinch 'N' Ouch Theatre discuss BODY AWARENESS on AM1690. With Larry Larson, Justin Anderson, Grant McGowen, and Daryl Lisa Fazio.
BODY AWARENESS
By Annie Baker...
Pinch 'N' Ouch Theatre discuss BODY AWARENESS on AM1690. With Larry Larson, Justin Anderson, Grant McGowen, and Daryl Lisa Fazio.
BODY AWARENESS
By Annie Baker; directed by Justin Anderson; Presented by Pinch 'N' Ouch Theatre; At 7 Stages Theater, 1105 Euclid Avenue Northeast, Atlanta, GA 30307, (404) 545-5983. August 10 - 28, 2011; Running time: 1 hour and 30 minutes. www.pnotheatre.org
WITH: Barrett Doyle (Jared), Daryl Lisa Fazio (Phyllis), Jayson Smith (Frank), Kathleen Wattis (Joyce)
wn.com/Am1690 Interview Justin Anderson, Grant Mcgowen, And Daryl Lisa Fazio
Pinch 'N' Ouch Theatre discuss BODY AWARENESS on AM1690. With Larry Larson, Justin Anderson, Grant McGowen, and Daryl Lisa Fazio.
BODY AWARENESS
By Annie Baker; directed by Justin Anderson; Presented by Pinch 'N' Ouch Theatre; At 7 Stages Theater, 1105 Euclid Avenue Northeast, Atlanta, GA 30307, (404) 545-5983. August 10 - 28, 2011; Running time: 1 hour and 30 minutes. www.pnotheatre.org
WITH: Barrett Doyle (Jared), Daryl Lisa Fazio (Phyllis), Jayson Smith (Frank), Kathleen Wattis (Joyce)
- published: 18 Aug 2011
- views: 1046
The Prince and the Showgirl (1957)
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/english-movies/movie/345-the-prince-and-the-showgirl
1. Go to www.classicmovieslibrary.com
TIP: Easily find any movie b...
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/english-movies/movie/345-the-prince-and-the-showgirl
1. Go to www.classicmovieslibrary.com
TIP: Easily find any movie by using the search function, just enter anything about the movie (title, director, actor etc)
2. Purchase the decompression-password for just 1€ for the movie you just downloaded.
TIP: Create a free account if you don't already have one.
3. Enjoy the movie! :-)
Year - 1957
Duration - 1h 52m
Director - Laurence Olivier
Scenarist - Terence Rattigan
Actors
Marilyn Monroe: Elsie Marina
Laurence Olivier: Charles, the Prince Regent of Carpathia
Sybil Thorndike: the Dowager Queen
Richard Wattis: Northbrook
Jeremy Spenser: King Nicolas of Carpathia
Paul Hardwick: Major Domo
Esmond Knight: Colonel Hoffman
Rosamond Greenwood: Maud
Aubrey Dexter: The Ambassador
Maxine Audley: Lady Sunningdale
Harold Goodwin: Call Boy
Jean Kent: Maisie Springfield
Daphne Anderson: Fanny
Gillian Owen: Maggie
Vera Day: Betty
Margot Lister: Lottie
Charles Victor: Theatre Manager
David Horne: The Foreign Office
Genre - Comedy,Romance
When Grandduke Charles, the prince-regent of Carpathia, a fictitious Balkan country which could start a European war by switching alliances, visits London for the coronation of the new British King in 1911, and spends his one evening off at the Coconut Girl Club, the reputed stickler for protocol is so charmed by a clumsy American understudy that he orders his British attaché to invite her to the embassy for a private supper. Being overlooked and understanding German, she learns of the repressive attitude of the regent and the plans of his reformist, pro-German minor son, King Nicholas, to take over power by surprise, but doesn't dodge and tries to reconcile father and son. The queen-dowager decides to make her lady-in-waiting for the coronation day, so she stays in the picture to everyone else's surprise.
wn.com/The Prince And The Showgirl (1957)
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/english-movies/movie/345-the-prince-and-the-showgirl
1. Go to www.classicmovieslibrary.com
TIP: Easily find any movie by using the search function, just enter anything about the movie (title, director, actor etc)
2. Purchase the decompression-password for just 1€ for the movie you just downloaded.
TIP: Create a free account if you don't already have one.
3. Enjoy the movie! :-)
Year - 1957
Duration - 1h 52m
Director - Laurence Olivier
Scenarist - Terence Rattigan
Actors
Marilyn Monroe: Elsie Marina
Laurence Olivier: Charles, the Prince Regent of Carpathia
Sybil Thorndike: the Dowager Queen
Richard Wattis: Northbrook
Jeremy Spenser: King Nicolas of Carpathia
Paul Hardwick: Major Domo
Esmond Knight: Colonel Hoffman
Rosamond Greenwood: Maud
Aubrey Dexter: The Ambassador
Maxine Audley: Lady Sunningdale
Harold Goodwin: Call Boy
Jean Kent: Maisie Springfield
Daphne Anderson: Fanny
Gillian Owen: Maggie
Vera Day: Betty
Margot Lister: Lottie
Charles Victor: Theatre Manager
David Horne: The Foreign Office
Genre - Comedy,Romance
When Grandduke Charles, the prince-regent of Carpathia, a fictitious Balkan country which could start a European war by switching alliances, visits London for the coronation of the new British King in 1911, and spends his one evening off at the Coconut Girl Club, the reputed stickler for protocol is so charmed by a clumsy American understudy that he orders his British attaché to invite her to the embassy for a private supper. Being overlooked and understanding German, she learns of the repressive attitude of the regent and the plans of his reformist, pro-German minor son, King Nicholas, to take over power by surprise, but doesn't dodge and tries to reconcile father and son. The queen-dowager decides to make her lady-in-waiting for the coronation day, so she stays in the picture to everyone else's surprise.
- published: 26 Jun 2013
- views: 17472
DAVID ZWIRNER - Jordan Wolfson
Jordan Wolfson
Solo Exhibition
David Zwirner- 533 W. 19th
533 W. 19th Street
New York, NY 10011
March 6th - April 19th, 2014
Opening: March 6th 6:00 PM - 8:...
Jordan Wolfson
Solo Exhibition
David Zwirner- 533 W. 19th
533 W. 19th Street
New York, NY 10011
March 6th - April 19th, 2014
Opening: March 6th 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
David Zwirner is pleased to present its first exhibition with Jordan
Wolfson, on view at 533 West 19th Street in New York. Wolfson, who
joined the gallery in 2013, will debut an animatronic sculpture, a major
development in the artist's practice. Also on view will be new wall-
mounted sculptures and the video Raspberry Poser (2012), shown in
New York for the first time.
Over the past decade, Wolfson has become known for his thought-
provoking works in a wide range of media, including video, sculpture,
installation, photography, and performance. He pulls intuitively from
the world of advertising, the Internet, and the technology industries to
produce ambitious and enigmatic narratives. However, instead of
simply appropriating found material, the artist creates his own unique
content, which frequently revolves around a series of invented,
animated characters.
Presented here for the first time, Wolfson's animatronic sculpture
combines film, installation, and performance in the figure of a
curvaceous, scantily clad woman covered in dirt marks and wearing a
witch mask. Unlike the artist's two-dimensional subjects, this life-size
character was developed in close collaboration with a special effects
studio in California used by major Hollywood productions. The woman
can be encountered on a one-on-one basis in a mirrored room in the
gallery, creating a different kind of viewing experience that intensifies
the importance of the gaze found throughout Wolfson's work.
In a new series of sculptures mounted to the wall, digital inkjet prints
featuring their own cast of cartoon characters are overlaid with the
artist's bumper stickers, which also align the four sides of the sculptures.
These stickers combine to create jumbled narratives seemingly
intended for mass consumption. While they appear readymade, each
has been designed and written by Wolfson.
Composed of digital video, computer-generated imagery, and the
artist's drawings, Raspberry Poser is part of a series of works that began
with Con Leche, an animation of marching Diet Coke bottles from 2009,
and also include Animation, masks from 2011 featuring his Shylockian
Jew character. Unlike these earlier videos, Raspberry Poser involves
multiple subjects, including a punk played by Wolfson himself
wandering around New York City and Paris, a heart-filled condom,
bouncy HIV viruses, and a chilled-out, self-destructive adolescent
cartoon character.
Jordan Wolfson was born in 1980 in New York. In 2003, he received his
B.F.A. in sculpture from the Rhode Island School of Design.
In April 2014, a selection of his video works will be shown at the
McLellan Galleries in Glasgow as part of the 6th Glasgow International.
In 2013, Jordan Wolfson: Ecce Homo/le Poseur marked the most
comprehensive survey of his work to date, organized by the Stedelijk
Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.) in Ghent. Also in 2013 was his
first solo exhibition in the United Kingdom presented at the Chisenhale
Gallery in London. Other institutions which have previously hosted solo
shows include the Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna; REDCAT, Los Angeles (both
2012); Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf (2011); CCA
Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco (2009); Swiss
Institute of Contemporary Art, New York (2008); Galleria d'Arte
Moderna e Contemporanea di Bergamo, Italy (2007); and the
Kunsthalle Zürich (2004).
In 2009, he received the prestigious Cartier Award from the Frieze
Foundation, which helps an artist from outside the United Kingdom
realize a major project at Frieze Art Fair in London.
Work by Wolfson is held in public collections worldwide, including the
Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo Turin; Galleria d'Arte Moderna e
Contemporanea di Bergamo, Italy; Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall;
Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; Museum Ludwig, Cologne;
Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.), Ghent; and the Whitney
Museum of American Art, New York. The artist lives and works in New
York and Los Angeles.
Music by:
Chill Carrier - A New Day
wn.com/David Zwirner Jordan Wolfson
Jordan Wolfson
Solo Exhibition
David Zwirner- 533 W. 19th
533 W. 19th Street
New York, NY 10011
March 6th - April 19th, 2014
Opening: March 6th 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
David Zwirner is pleased to present its first exhibition with Jordan
Wolfson, on view at 533 West 19th Street in New York. Wolfson, who
joined the gallery in 2013, will debut an animatronic sculpture, a major
development in the artist's practice. Also on view will be new wall-
mounted sculptures and the video Raspberry Poser (2012), shown in
New York for the first time.
Over the past decade, Wolfson has become known for his thought-
provoking works in a wide range of media, including video, sculpture,
installation, photography, and performance. He pulls intuitively from
the world of advertising, the Internet, and the technology industries to
produce ambitious and enigmatic narratives. However, instead of
simply appropriating found material, the artist creates his own unique
content, which frequently revolves around a series of invented,
animated characters.
Presented here for the first time, Wolfson's animatronic sculpture
combines film, installation, and performance in the figure of a
curvaceous, scantily clad woman covered in dirt marks and wearing a
witch mask. Unlike the artist's two-dimensional subjects, this life-size
character was developed in close collaboration with a special effects
studio in California used by major Hollywood productions. The woman
can be encountered on a one-on-one basis in a mirrored room in the
gallery, creating a different kind of viewing experience that intensifies
the importance of the gaze found throughout Wolfson's work.
In a new series of sculptures mounted to the wall, digital inkjet prints
featuring their own cast of cartoon characters are overlaid with the
artist's bumper stickers, which also align the four sides of the sculptures.
These stickers combine to create jumbled narratives seemingly
intended for mass consumption. While they appear readymade, each
has been designed and written by Wolfson.
Composed of digital video, computer-generated imagery, and the
artist's drawings, Raspberry Poser is part of a series of works that began
with Con Leche, an animation of marching Diet Coke bottles from 2009,
and also include Animation, masks from 2011 featuring his Shylockian
Jew character. Unlike these earlier videos, Raspberry Poser involves
multiple subjects, including a punk played by Wolfson himself
wandering around New York City and Paris, a heart-filled condom,
bouncy HIV viruses, and a chilled-out, self-destructive adolescent
cartoon character.
Jordan Wolfson was born in 1980 in New York. In 2003, he received his
B.F.A. in sculpture from the Rhode Island School of Design.
In April 2014, a selection of his video works will be shown at the
McLellan Galleries in Glasgow as part of the 6th Glasgow International.
In 2013, Jordan Wolfson: Ecce Homo/le Poseur marked the most
comprehensive survey of his work to date, organized by the Stedelijk
Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.) in Ghent. Also in 2013 was his
first solo exhibition in the United Kingdom presented at the Chisenhale
Gallery in London. Other institutions which have previously hosted solo
shows include the Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna; REDCAT, Los Angeles (both
2012); Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf (2011); CCA
Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco (2009); Swiss
Institute of Contemporary Art, New York (2008); Galleria d'Arte
Moderna e Contemporanea di Bergamo, Italy (2007); and the
Kunsthalle Zürich (2004).
In 2009, he received the prestigious Cartier Award from the Frieze
Foundation, which helps an artist from outside the United Kingdom
realize a major project at Frieze Art Fair in London.
Work by Wolfson is held in public collections worldwide, including the
Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo Turin; Galleria d'Arte Moderna e
Contemporanea di Bergamo, Italy; Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall;
Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago; Museum Ludwig, Cologne;
Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.), Ghent; and the Whitney
Museum of American Art, New York. The artist lives and works in New
York and Los Angeles.
Music by:
Chill Carrier - A New Day
- published: 07 Mar 2014
- views: 12741
TV Heroes - Deryck Guyler - Danny Baker
Here's the brilliantly witty Danny Baker introducing TV Heroes - Derek Guyler - BBC TV - Brodcast in 1995. The career of Deryck Guyler is looked at as Danny Bak...
Here's the brilliantly witty Danny Baker introducing TV Heroes - Derek Guyler - BBC TV - Brodcast in 1995. The career of Deryck Guyler is looked at as Danny Baker pays tribute to another unsung hero of the small screen. His regular appearances on Michael Bentine 's/t's a Square World made him a household name, but his most popular characters were the police constable Corkie in Sykes and Norman Potter , the school janitor in Please Sir!
Deryck Guyler, born at the outbreak of WW1 in 1914 at Liverpool in England, was the only child of Elsie and Samuel Guyler. He grew up in Liverpool and had his senior education at Liverpool College. On leaving school he tried his hand at a few things including working with his father in the family jewelers business 'Green & Guyler'. However, he then left home to go to Bristol theological college to become an Anglican Minister, in those days Deryck was not a Catholic. It was not long before it became obvious to the 'powers-that-be' that he would make a better actor than a Parson!!!! So, he eventually joined the Liverpool Repertory Company in 1935 which became his training ground for a very successful career in theatre, radio and television.
During the war, however, he was called up to join the RAF Police and served there for a time before being invalided out and then rejoined his profession. As all the theatres had been closed down due to wartime, he was sent out on ENSA (Entertainment National Services Association) to entertain the troops. It was during this time that he met and married his wife Paddy, who was also working on ENSA with her two sisters as a three handed singing harmony act, 'The Lennox Sisters'. They were married on 15th Sep 1941 so, at the time of his death Deryck and Paddy had just celebrated their 58th wedding anniversary. They had two sons, Peter, born 26th April 1943 during the war and Chris, born after the war on 15th June 1948. Soon after their son Peter was born, Deryck converted to the Catholic faith and became an active member of the 'Catholic Stage Guild'. They also had another wedding ceremony, as Paddy was also a Catholic, and son Peter was in the front row of the church.
Just after the war, in 1946, Deryck joined the famous war time radio show ITMA ('It's That Man Again') and was with the show until its finish in 1949, due to the death of its star Tommy Handley. It was during this time that he was renowned for bringing to the radio, for the first time, the Liverpudlian accent with his immortal character "Frisby Dyke". Not long after this television started and Deryck began pursuing his very successful career in this new medium of entertainment. Due to the excellent quality of his voice he started in television, as many did, doing 'voice-overs' for many, many commercials which was his 'bread and butter', but then, he went on to become as well known for his face as he was for his voice in many TV series including Three Live Wires (1961), Room at the Bottom (1966), Best of Enemies (1968) and the well known Sykes (1972) series with Eric Sykes, Hattie Jacques and Richard Wattis. There were many other series that followed, supporting such other stars as Michael Bentine in It's a Square World (1960) and Harry Worth in his own series and then, of course, the TV series he's probably best known for, Please Sir! (1968) as the cantankerous school janitor 'Norman Potter'!!
It was in 1982 that he went out to New Zealand to star in a series written by an English TV scriptwriter Vince Powell called "An Age Apart"; it only went to 'air' in New Zealand. So, after a long successful career lasting over 50 years he then decided to retire 'down under' in Australia to be near his younger son Chris and his family, Deryck's three grandchildren, Paul, Mark and Cathryn. Deryck and his wife Paddy arrived in Brisbane on 5th November 1993, and lived in the tree-lined suburb of Ashgrove until about September of 1997. In October of that year, due to a few unfortunate falls at home attributed to his frailty and ailing legs, he had to go into a nursing home to be cared for, his wife Paddy being too small and frail herself to care for him. Regrettably due to his frailty; he had to be content with a wheelchair to get around. Paddy moved to 'Forest Place' Retirement Village, attached to the nursing home, and naturally, visited him daily. The rest of the family too often visited him in the nursing home where he was looked after admirably by the nursing home staff at 'Forest Place' until the evening of 7 October 1999 when he passed away very peacefully at about eight o'clock whilst wife Paddy and son Chris with his wife, were at his bedside to say their final 'Goodbyes'.
wn.com/Tv Heroes Deryck Guyler Danny Baker
Here's the brilliantly witty Danny Baker introducing TV Heroes - Derek Guyler - BBC TV - Brodcast in 1995. The career of Deryck Guyler is looked at as Danny Baker pays tribute to another unsung hero of the small screen. His regular appearances on Michael Bentine 's/t's a Square World made him a household name, but his most popular characters were the police constable Corkie in Sykes and Norman Potter , the school janitor in Please Sir!
Deryck Guyler, born at the outbreak of WW1 in 1914 at Liverpool in England, was the only child of Elsie and Samuel Guyler. He grew up in Liverpool and had his senior education at Liverpool College. On leaving school he tried his hand at a few things including working with his father in the family jewelers business 'Green & Guyler'. However, he then left home to go to Bristol theological college to become an Anglican Minister, in those days Deryck was not a Catholic. It was not long before it became obvious to the 'powers-that-be' that he would make a better actor than a Parson!!!! So, he eventually joined the Liverpool Repertory Company in 1935 which became his training ground for a very successful career in theatre, radio and television.
During the war, however, he was called up to join the RAF Police and served there for a time before being invalided out and then rejoined his profession. As all the theatres had been closed down due to wartime, he was sent out on ENSA (Entertainment National Services Association) to entertain the troops. It was during this time that he met and married his wife Paddy, who was also working on ENSA with her two sisters as a three handed singing harmony act, 'The Lennox Sisters'. They were married on 15th Sep 1941 so, at the time of his death Deryck and Paddy had just celebrated their 58th wedding anniversary. They had two sons, Peter, born 26th April 1943 during the war and Chris, born after the war on 15th June 1948. Soon after their son Peter was born, Deryck converted to the Catholic faith and became an active member of the 'Catholic Stage Guild'. They also had another wedding ceremony, as Paddy was also a Catholic, and son Peter was in the front row of the church.
Just after the war, in 1946, Deryck joined the famous war time radio show ITMA ('It's That Man Again') and was with the show until its finish in 1949, due to the death of its star Tommy Handley. It was during this time that he was renowned for bringing to the radio, for the first time, the Liverpudlian accent with his immortal character "Frisby Dyke". Not long after this television started and Deryck began pursuing his very successful career in this new medium of entertainment. Due to the excellent quality of his voice he started in television, as many did, doing 'voice-overs' for many, many commercials which was his 'bread and butter', but then, he went on to become as well known for his face as he was for his voice in many TV series including Three Live Wires (1961), Room at the Bottom (1966), Best of Enemies (1968) and the well known Sykes (1972) series with Eric Sykes, Hattie Jacques and Richard Wattis. There were many other series that followed, supporting such other stars as Michael Bentine in It's a Square World (1960) and Harry Worth in his own series and then, of course, the TV series he's probably best known for, Please Sir! (1968) as the cantankerous school janitor 'Norman Potter'!!
It was in 1982 that he went out to New Zealand to star in a series written by an English TV scriptwriter Vince Powell called "An Age Apart"; it only went to 'air' in New Zealand. So, after a long successful career lasting over 50 years he then decided to retire 'down under' in Australia to be near his younger son Chris and his family, Deryck's three grandchildren, Paul, Mark and Cathryn. Deryck and his wife Paddy arrived in Brisbane on 5th November 1993, and lived in the tree-lined suburb of Ashgrove until about September of 1997. In October of that year, due to a few unfortunate falls at home attributed to his frailty and ailing legs, he had to go into a nursing home to be cared for, his wife Paddy being too small and frail herself to care for him. Regrettably due to his frailty; he had to be content with a wheelchair to get around. Paddy moved to 'Forest Place' Retirement Village, attached to the nursing home, and naturally, visited him daily. The rest of the family too often visited him in the nursing home where he was looked after admirably by the nursing home staff at 'Forest Place' until the evening of 7 October 1999 when he passed away very peacefully at about eight o'clock whilst wife Paddy and son Chris with his wife, were at his bedside to say their final 'Goodbyes'.
- published: 08 Mar 2015
- views: 1706
Eric Sykes - Outtakes and Anecdotes
Bits and pieces in memory of Eric Sykes - what fun they had on the set and what fun they shared with us. Rest in chaotic laughter all....
Bits and pieces in memory of Eric Sykes - what fun they had on the set and what fun they shared with us. Rest in chaotic laughter all.
wn.com/Eric Sykes Outtakes And Anecdotes
Bits and pieces in memory of Eric Sykes - what fun they had on the set and what fun they shared with us. Rest in chaotic laughter all.
- published: 08 Jul 2012
- views: 20842
Le prince et la danseuse - 1957
Buy with 1€ and download here: http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/french-movies/movie/347-le-prince-et-la-danseuse
Le prince Charles, Régent de Karpathie, ...
Buy with 1€ and download here: http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/french-movies/movie/347-le-prince-et-la-danseuse
Le prince Charles, Régent de Karpathie, petit royaume d'Europe Centrale, vient représenter son pays aux cérémonies du couronnement de George V, à Londres, en l'année 1912. Le prince assiste alors à la représentation d'une revue légère où il tombe sur le charme d'une jeune actrice américaine. Guindé et portant monocle, il semble pourtant se réveiller à la vie, au contact de cette délicieuse chorus girl...
Year: 1957
Duration: 1h 52m
Director: Laurence Olivier
Scenarist: Terence Rattigan
Actors: Marilyn Monroe: Elsie Marina,
Laurence Olivier: Charles, the Prince Regent of Carpathia,
Sybil Thorndike: the Dowager Queen,
Richard Wattis: Northbrook,
Jeremy Spenser: King Nicolas of Carpathia,
Paul Hardwick: Major Domo,
Esmond Knight: Colonel Hoffman,
Rosamond Greenwood: Maud,
Aubrey Dexter: The Ambassador,
Maxine Audley: Lady Sunningdale,
Harold Goodwin: Call Boy,
Jean Kent: Maisie Springfield,
Daphne Anderson: Fanny,
Gillian Owen: Maggie,
Vera Day: Betty,
Margot Lister: Lottie,
Charles Victor: Theatre Manager,
David Horne: The Foreign Office
Alternative Title: The Prince and the Showgirl
Genre: Comedy, Romance
Embedded Subtitles: Yes
Audio Language: English
Subtitle Language: French
wn.com/Le Prince Et La Danseuse 1957
Buy with 1€ and download here: http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/french-movies/movie/347-le-prince-et-la-danseuse
Le prince Charles, Régent de Karpathie, petit royaume d'Europe Centrale, vient représenter son pays aux cérémonies du couronnement de George V, à Londres, en l'année 1912. Le prince assiste alors à la représentation d'une revue légère où il tombe sur le charme d'une jeune actrice américaine. Guindé et portant monocle, il semble pourtant se réveiller à la vie, au contact de cette délicieuse chorus girl...
Year: 1957
Duration: 1h 52m
Director: Laurence Olivier
Scenarist: Terence Rattigan
Actors: Marilyn Monroe: Elsie Marina,
Laurence Olivier: Charles, the Prince Regent of Carpathia,
Sybil Thorndike: the Dowager Queen,
Richard Wattis: Northbrook,
Jeremy Spenser: King Nicolas of Carpathia,
Paul Hardwick: Major Domo,
Esmond Knight: Colonel Hoffman,
Rosamond Greenwood: Maud,
Aubrey Dexter: The Ambassador,
Maxine Audley: Lady Sunningdale,
Harold Goodwin: Call Boy,
Jean Kent: Maisie Springfield,
Daphne Anderson: Fanny,
Gillian Owen: Maggie,
Vera Day: Betty,
Margot Lister: Lottie,
Charles Victor: Theatre Manager,
David Horne: The Foreign Office
Alternative Title: The Prince and the Showgirl
Genre: Comedy, Romance
Embedded Subtitles: Yes
Audio Language: English
Subtitle Language: French
- published: 21 Sep 2014
- views: 168
Who is Barry Evans?
Barry Joseph Evans (18 June 1943 – 9 February 1997) was an English actor and television performer best known for his appearances in British sitcoms such as Doct...
Barry Joseph Evans (18 June 1943 – 9 February 1997) was an English actor and television performer best known for his appearances in British sitcoms such as Doctor in the House and Mind Your Language.
Born in Guildford, Surrey, and abandoned as a baby, Evans was educated at the orphanage boarding schools run by the Shaftesbury Homes, first at Fortescue House School in Twickenham and then at Bisley Boys' School in Bisley, Surrey. His acting ability was recognised at an early age and he often played the leading roles in school plays. Evans attended the Italia Conti Academy and later won a John Gielgud Scholarship to study at the Central School of Speech and Drama.
One of Evans' first television credits was in the soap opera Crossroads in 1964. He subsequently played the lead role in the film Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush (1967), where he was cast as a sex-starved boy who finds it difficult to lose his virginity.
His first major television role was in the sitcom Doctor in the House (1969–70), based on Richard Gordon's series of novels, which had already been turned into a feature film series. Evans starred as the earnest but gullible Michael Upton. Following the show's success, he starred in the sequel to the series, Doctor at Large (1971). Evans enjoyed working with his fellow actors and later described these as the best years of his life.
In 1975, he had the lead role in Stanley Long's sex comedy Adventures of a Taxi Driver. Despite the film's commercial success, Evans declined to appear in the sequel.
Evans starred as Jeremy Brown in the ITV sitcom Mind Your Language (1977–79), which was a humorous look at an evening class tutor attempting to teach immigrants English. Most of the characters were foreign stereotypes; it was immensely popular, both in the UK and internationally, and especially in the countries the actors portrayed. The series was written by TV scriptwriter Vince Powell, and was adapted for American TV as What a Country! in 1986. In the same year it was briefly revived for a further 13 episodes.
By the late 1980s, his youthful image was working against him, and he found it difficult to obtain mature acting roles in line with his age. His last role was as Bazzard in the film adaptation of The Mystery of Edwin Drood in 1993. By the late 1990s, he was a minicab driver in Leicestershire, where in 1997 he was found dead aged 53 in his bungalow. The police discovered the actor's body after going to his house to tell him they had recovered his stolen car. The cause of his death has never been confirmed. The Coroner found a blow to Evans' head and an 18-year-old man was arrested but later released without charge. The Coroner also found high levels of alcohol in his system which suggested suicide or accidental death. An open verdict was eventually given.
Most well known roles.. Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush, Mind Your Language, Crossroads, Doctor in the House, Doctor at Large and the sex comedy Adventures of a Taxi Driver.
wn.com/Who Is Barry Evans
Barry Joseph Evans (18 June 1943 – 9 February 1997) was an English actor and television performer best known for his appearances in British sitcoms such as Doctor in the House and Mind Your Language.
Born in Guildford, Surrey, and abandoned as a baby, Evans was educated at the orphanage boarding schools run by the Shaftesbury Homes, first at Fortescue House School in Twickenham and then at Bisley Boys' School in Bisley, Surrey. His acting ability was recognised at an early age and he often played the leading roles in school plays. Evans attended the Italia Conti Academy and later won a John Gielgud Scholarship to study at the Central School of Speech and Drama.
One of Evans' first television credits was in the soap opera Crossroads in 1964. He subsequently played the lead role in the film Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush (1967), where he was cast as a sex-starved boy who finds it difficult to lose his virginity.
His first major television role was in the sitcom Doctor in the House (1969–70), based on Richard Gordon's series of novels, which had already been turned into a feature film series. Evans starred as the earnest but gullible Michael Upton. Following the show's success, he starred in the sequel to the series, Doctor at Large (1971). Evans enjoyed working with his fellow actors and later described these as the best years of his life.
In 1975, he had the lead role in Stanley Long's sex comedy Adventures of a Taxi Driver. Despite the film's commercial success, Evans declined to appear in the sequel.
Evans starred as Jeremy Brown in the ITV sitcom Mind Your Language (1977–79), which was a humorous look at an evening class tutor attempting to teach immigrants English. Most of the characters were foreign stereotypes; it was immensely popular, both in the UK and internationally, and especially in the countries the actors portrayed. The series was written by TV scriptwriter Vince Powell, and was adapted for American TV as What a Country! in 1986. In the same year it was briefly revived for a further 13 episodes.
By the late 1980s, his youthful image was working against him, and he found it difficult to obtain mature acting roles in line with his age. His last role was as Bazzard in the film adaptation of The Mystery of Edwin Drood in 1993. By the late 1990s, he was a minicab driver in Leicestershire, where in 1997 he was found dead aged 53 in his bungalow. The police discovered the actor's body after going to his house to tell him they had recovered his stolen car. The cause of his death has never been confirmed. The Coroner found a blow to Evans' head and an 18-year-old man was arrested but later released without charge. The Coroner also found high levels of alcohol in his system which suggested suicide or accidental death. An open verdict was eventually given.
Most well known roles.. Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush, Mind Your Language, Crossroads, Doctor in the House, Doctor at Large and the sex comedy Adventures of a Taxi Driver.
- published: 01 Aug 2015
- views: 3659
The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956)
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/english-movies/movie/585-the-man-who-knew-too-much
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Year - 1956
Duration- 2h
Director - Alfred Hitchcock
Scenarists - John Michael Hayes, Charles Bennett, D.B. Wyndham-Lewis and Angus MacPhail
Actors
James Stewart: Dr. Benjamin McKenna
Doris Day: Josephine Conway McKenna
Brenda de Banzie: Lucy Drayton
Bernard Miles: Edward Drayton
Ralph Truman: Inspector Buchanan
Daniel Gélin: Louis Bernard (as Daniel Gelin)
Mogens Wieth: Ambassador
Alan Mowbray: Val Parnell
Hillary Brooke: Jan Peterson
Christopher Olsen: Hank McKenna
Reggie Nalder: Rien
Richard Wattis: Assistant Manager
Noel Willman: Woburn
Alix Talton: Helen Parnell
Yves Brainville: Police Inspector
Genre - Thriller
While attending a medical conference in Paris, American physician Dr. Ben McKenna, his wife, retired musical theater actress and singer Jo McKenna née Conway, and their adolescent son Hank McKenna decide to take a side trip to among other places Marrekesh, French Morocco. With a knife plunged into his back, Frenchman Louis Bernard, who the family met earlier in their bus ride into Marrakesh and who is now masquerading as an Arab, approaches Ben, cryptically whispering into Ben's ears that there will be an attempted assassination in London of a statesman, this news whispered just before Bernard dies. Ben is reluctant to provide any information of this news to the authorities because concurrently Hank is kidnapped by British couple, Edward and Lucy Drayton, who also befriended the McKennas in Marrakesh and who probably have taken Hank out of the country back to England. Whoever the unknown people the Draytons are working for have threatened to kill Hank if Ben divulges any information ...
wn.com/The Man Who Knew Too Much (1956)
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/english-movies/movie/585-the-man-who-knew-too-much
1. Go to www.classicmovieslibrary.com
TIP: Easily find any movie by using the search function, just enter anything about the movie (title, director, actor etc)
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TIP: Create a free account if you don't already have one.
3. Enjoy the movie! :-)
Year - 1956
Duration- 2h
Director - Alfred Hitchcock
Scenarists - John Michael Hayes, Charles Bennett, D.B. Wyndham-Lewis and Angus MacPhail
Actors
James Stewart: Dr. Benjamin McKenna
Doris Day: Josephine Conway McKenna
Brenda de Banzie: Lucy Drayton
Bernard Miles: Edward Drayton
Ralph Truman: Inspector Buchanan
Daniel Gélin: Louis Bernard (as Daniel Gelin)
Mogens Wieth: Ambassador
Alan Mowbray: Val Parnell
Hillary Brooke: Jan Peterson
Christopher Olsen: Hank McKenna
Reggie Nalder: Rien
Richard Wattis: Assistant Manager
Noel Willman: Woburn
Alix Talton: Helen Parnell
Yves Brainville: Police Inspector
Genre - Thriller
While attending a medical conference in Paris, American physician Dr. Ben McKenna, his wife, retired musical theater actress and singer Jo McKenna née Conway, and their adolescent son Hank McKenna decide to take a side trip to among other places Marrekesh, French Morocco. With a knife plunged into his back, Frenchman Louis Bernard, who the family met earlier in their bus ride into Marrakesh and who is now masquerading as an Arab, approaches Ben, cryptically whispering into Ben's ears that there will be an attempted assassination in London of a statesman, this news whispered just before Bernard dies. Ben is reluctant to provide any information of this news to the authorities because concurrently Hank is kidnapped by British couple, Edward and Lucy Drayton, who also befriended the McKennas in Marrakesh and who probably have taken Hank out of the country back to England. Whoever the unknown people the Draytons are working for have threatened to kill Hank if Ben divulges any information ...
- published: 13 Sep 2013
- views: 958
L'homme qui en savait trop (1956)
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/french-movies/movie/591-l-homme-qui-en-savait-trop
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Year - 1956
Duration - 2h
Director - Alfred Hitchcock
Scenarists - John Michael Hayes, Charles Bennett, D.B. Wyndham-Lewis and Angus MacPhail
Actors
James Stewart: Dr. Benjamin McKenna
Doris Day: Josephine Conway McKenna
Brenda de Banzie: Lucy Drayton
Bernard Miles: Edward Drayton
Ralph Truman: Inspector Buchanan
Daniel Gélin: Louis Bernard (as Daniel Gelin)
Mogens Wieth: Ambassador
Alan Mowbray: Val Parnell
Hillary Brooke: Jan Peterson
Christopher Olsen: Hank McKenna
Reggie Nalder: Rien
Richard Wattis: Assistant Manager
Noel Willman: Woburn
Alix Talton: Helen Parnell
Yves Brainville: Police Inspector
Genre - Thriller
En vacances au Maroc avec sa femme et son fils, le Dr McKenna fait la connaissance d'un Français qui sera assassiné sous leurs yeux le lendemain de leur rencontre. Quelques jours plus tard, leur fils a été enlevé. Ils vont devoir mener leur enquête.
wn.com/L'Homme Qui En Savait Trop (1956)
http://www.classicmovieslibrary.com/en/french-movies/movie/591-l-homme-qui-en-savait-trop
1. Go to www.classicmovieslibrary.com
TIP: Easily find any movie by using the search function, just enter anything about the movie (title, director, actor etc)
2. Purchase the decompression-password for just 1€ for the movie you just downloaded.
TIP: Create a free account if you don't already have one.
3. Enjoy the movie! :-)
1. Allez a www.classicmovieslibrary.com
ASTUCE: trouvez facilement n'importe quel film en utilisant la fonction de recherche, il suffit d'entrer quoi que ce soit sur le film (titre, realisateur, acteur, etc)
2. Achetez le decompression mot de passe pour seulement 1 € pour le film que vous avez telecharge.
ASTUCE: Creez un compte gratuit si vous ne possedez pas deja un.
3. Profitez du film! :-)
Year - 1956
Duration - 2h
Director - Alfred Hitchcock
Scenarists - John Michael Hayes, Charles Bennett, D.B. Wyndham-Lewis and Angus MacPhail
Actors
James Stewart: Dr. Benjamin McKenna
Doris Day: Josephine Conway McKenna
Brenda de Banzie: Lucy Drayton
Bernard Miles: Edward Drayton
Ralph Truman: Inspector Buchanan
Daniel Gélin: Louis Bernard (as Daniel Gelin)
Mogens Wieth: Ambassador
Alan Mowbray: Val Parnell
Hillary Brooke: Jan Peterson
Christopher Olsen: Hank McKenna
Reggie Nalder: Rien
Richard Wattis: Assistant Manager
Noel Willman: Woburn
Alix Talton: Helen Parnell
Yves Brainville: Police Inspector
Genre - Thriller
En vacances au Maroc avec sa femme et son fils, le Dr McKenna fait la connaissance d'un Français qui sera assassiné sous leurs yeux le lendemain de leur rencontre. Quelques jours plus tard, leur fils a été enlevé. Ils vont devoir mener leur enquête.
- published: 13 Sep 2013
- views: 465
Lecture by Ryue Nishizawa, SANAA
Recorded Monday, November 7, 2011, and presented by the Graduate Studies Lecture Series and the Architecture Lecture Series at California College of the Arts, R...
Recorded Monday, November 7, 2011, and presented by the Graduate Studies Lecture Series and the Architecture Lecture Series at California College of the Arts, Ryue Nishizawaon presented in Timken Lecture Hall on the San Francisco campus.
Info: 415.703.9562 or architecture@cca.edu
Ryue Nishizawa and Kazuyo Sejima founded the Tokyo architecture studio SANAA in 1995. Their groundbreaking work includes the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, the Serpentine Pavilion in London, the Christian Dior Building in Tokyo, the Rolex Learning Center in Lausanne, Switzerland, and the Toledo Museum of Art's Glass Pavilion. They won the prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2010 and the Berlin Academy of Arts Kunstpreis in 2007. Nishizawa holds a professorship at Yokohama National University and has maintained his own independent design office since 1997.
Presented by the Architecture Program, the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, and the SFMOMA A+D Forum. Cosponsored by the President's Diversity Steering Group
The 2011-12 Architecture Lecture Series is funded by Grants for the Arts / San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund; InterContinental San Francisco; Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum, Inc.; Jensen Architects; John Marx / Form4; McCall Design Group; Perkins + Will; Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP; SmithGroup; WRNS Studio; WSP Flack + Kurtz; ARCH Art and Drafting Supply; BraytonHughes Design Studios; FME Architecture and Design; Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects; Long & Levit LLP; SRG Partnership; Andrea Cochran Landscape Architecture; Auerbach Pollock Friedlander | Auerbach Glasow French; BAR Architects; Dome Construction Corporation; Donald MacDonald Architects; J.H. Fitzmaurice Construction; ProPM, Inc.; TANNERHECHT Architecture; and Turnbull Griffin Haesloop Architects.
Founding support for CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts programs has been provided by Phyllis C. Wattis and Judy and Bill Timken. General support for the Wattis Institute provided by the Phyllis C. Wattis Foundation, Grants for the Arts / San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund, Ann Hatch and Paul Discoe, and the CCA Curator's Forum.
Generous support for the CCA Graduate Studies Lecture Series has been provided by Grants for the Arts / San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund.
wn.com/Lecture By Ryue Nishizawa, Sanaa
Recorded Monday, November 7, 2011, and presented by the Graduate Studies Lecture Series and the Architecture Lecture Series at California College of the Arts, Ryue Nishizawaon presented in Timken Lecture Hall on the San Francisco campus.
Info: 415.703.9562 or architecture@cca.edu
Ryue Nishizawa and Kazuyo Sejima founded the Tokyo architecture studio SANAA in 1995. Their groundbreaking work includes the New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, the Serpentine Pavilion in London, the Christian Dior Building in Tokyo, the Rolex Learning Center in Lausanne, Switzerland, and the Toledo Museum of Art's Glass Pavilion. They won the prestigious Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2010 and the Berlin Academy of Arts Kunstpreis in 2007. Nishizawa holds a professorship at Yokohama National University and has maintained his own independent design office since 1997.
Presented by the Architecture Program, the CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, and the SFMOMA A+D Forum. Cosponsored by the President's Diversity Steering Group
The 2011-12 Architecture Lecture Series is funded by Grants for the Arts / San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund; InterContinental San Francisco; Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum, Inc.; Jensen Architects; John Marx / Form4; McCall Design Group; Perkins + Will; Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP; SmithGroup; WRNS Studio; WSP Flack + Kurtz; ARCH Art and Drafting Supply; BraytonHughes Design Studios; FME Architecture and Design; Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects; Long & Levit LLP; SRG Partnership; Andrea Cochran Landscape Architecture; Auerbach Pollock Friedlander | Auerbach Glasow French; BAR Architects; Dome Construction Corporation; Donald MacDonald Architects; J.H. Fitzmaurice Construction; ProPM, Inc.; TANNERHECHT Architecture; and Turnbull Griffin Haesloop Architects.
Founding support for CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts programs has been provided by Phyllis C. Wattis and Judy and Bill Timken. General support for the Wattis Institute provided by the Phyllis C. Wattis Foundation, Grants for the Arts / San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund, Ann Hatch and Paul Discoe, and the CCA Curator's Forum.
Generous support for the CCA Graduate Studies Lecture Series has been provided by Grants for the Arts / San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund.
- published: 27 Nov 2011
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