Posts Tagged With 'Terry Scott'

Not Now Darling/Comrade

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STAGE FARCE-derived punt at a ‘racier’ rival to the Carry On series with ironically appropriate umbrella title. Beginning life as a Ray Cooney-penned board-treader, first essayed in 1967 by Bernard Cribbins and Donald Sinden and still running across the globe to this day, Not Now Darling’s mink-coat-claimed-by-multiple-mistresses quasi-saucy shenanigans were considered perfect fodder for launching a viable alternative to the then-waning exploits of Sid James and company, and was duly made into a big screen version assembling a prospective Not Now rep company composed of those who hadn’t been allowed to ‘play’ Carry On – step forth Leslie Phillips, Julie Ege, Bill Fraser, Jack Hulbert, Cicely Courtneidge, Derren Nesbitt, wrestling refugee Jackie Pallo and Ray Cooney himself, alongside Carry On turncoats (or, more probably, flew-off-in-front-of-clergyman-exposing-camisole-coats) Barbara Windsor and Joan Sims, with notable ‘no thanks’-proffering intended recruits including Terry Scott and – believe it or not – Dudley Moore. More importantly, it boasted pioneering use of a new revolutionary camera effect that supposedly allowed a single set to look like multiple sets, but in reality, erm, didn’t.

Most of the ad-hoc ‘gang’ jumped ship after the first film in the franchise, leaving Cooney and Phillips to be joined by Michele Dotrice, Roy Kinnear, Carol Hawkins, Ian Lavender, June Whitfield, Lewis Fiander and a ‘canon’-taxing big name signing of both Windsor Davies and Don Estelle for Not Now Comrade, further farcical happenings in the name of a stripper (Hawkins, who spends much of the film basically topless, making its subsequent status as pre-daytime BBC1 afternoon favourite both thrilling to excitable youngsters and baffling to everyone else) helping a Russian ballet dancer to defect to the West, with a ludicrous amount of hiding in cupboards along the way. After which the Not Now series failed to, well, carry on. Sorry.

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TV Cream’s Advent Calendar Door 9: Entertainment For Holiday Monday On BBC1!

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httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eo3ekdyc-wI

“AND THIS is me!” Brace yourself, here’s the last few minutes of MIKE YARWOOD’s Christmas special from 1981, followed by a BBC1 trailer for a brilliant Holiday Monday line-up of Grange Hill, K9 and Company, Terry and June (“Not grandad’s paint stripper again?”), Battle Of Midway, Val Sings Bing and Only Fools and Horses (with original theme tune and Brady Bunch graphics), then it’s into the British television premiere of Gone With The Wind, spread over two nights, to borrow a phrase from Clive James, like a small golf tournament.

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Dangermouse

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Another bomb materialises on another plain background“CRUMBS!” ONE-EYED cartoon white mouse (DAVID JASON) and a short-sighted mole (Penfold – TERRY SCOTT), despite having only one and a half good eyes between them, continually outwit wheezing frog BARON GREENBACK and STILETTO the mafioso crow (BRIAN TRUEMAN) before reporting to Jimmy Edwardslike Colonel K (EDWARD KELSEY). Another superlative effort from Cosgrove-Hall. English-as-hell humour, in-jokes for the parents and Pythonesque fourth wall narrator interrupting the action make this long overdue a full revival. The mystic stick (“Are you the hairy old twit with the twig thing?”), cunning plans (“Aha! Greenback wants us to think that he thinks we’ll think there isn’t a drop at all. But I know he thinks that I know he thinks there is!”), the Time Traveller’s Potting Shed – it was all here. Dangermouse. Powerhouse.

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Doctor in Clover

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The fifth, Bogarde-less entry in the Thomas-Box franchise, with the distinct lack of Dirk somewhat offest by Joan Sims, Fenella Fielding, Alfie Bass, Eric Barker, John Junkin and Terry Scott as a hairdresser. To say nothing of a theme song not only sung by Kiki Dee, but with lyrics by Rick ‘Fingerbobs’ Jones, who we’d increasingly like to see a compilation album from.

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Too Many Crooks

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Some embryonic George Cole in this very classy Ealing crime caper. The Putative Arfur and his bungling gang – including Bernard Bresslaw and Sid James – go after aristocratic gun runner Terry-Thomas’s millions, with chaotic results. Treasures galore – the stylishly filmed opening ram-raid (bungled, of course), an ace bit of interplay with Thomas up before the beak (John Le Mesurier, naturally), and a climactic hearse chase (don’t cf. the film of That’s Your Funeral, please) plus Nicholas Parsons, Terry Scott, Joe Melia and Sam ‘Orlando’ Kydd in a plot more than a little reminiscent of ’80s crapcom Ruthless People.

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What a Whopper!

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Adam Faith searches for the Loch Ness monster (and, yes, sings the eponymous theme song) in the sort of fantasy comedy only a collaboration between Jeremy ‘Are You Being’ Lloyd and Terry ‘Genesis of the’ Nation could produce, with one of those Cream cast lists to die for – Sid James as a landlord, Charles Hawtrey as a Bohemian artist, Spike Milligan as a fisherman, Terry Scott and Gordon Rollings as coppers, Clive Dunn, Lance Percival, Wilfrid Brambell, Molly Weir, Fyffe “I’m standing here with this huge fish” Robertson and, in a slightly early seasonal appearance, Freddie ‘Dinner for One’ Frinton acting pissed.

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Terry and June

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Is it my turn to be a punk rocker or your turn to buy a new video recorder?Parasol not picturedSTURDY EIGHT o’clock suburbacom, with the rock solid SCOTT-WHITFIELD conglomerate in a sequel of sorts to HAPPY EVER AFTER with the Fletchers becoming the Medfords, upping sticks to Purley and moving in next to uppity neighbours Tarquin, Malcolm and Beattie, with blustery boss Sir Dennis Hodge (REGINALD MARSH, of course) completing the set. Too many memorable moments to mention, but we’ll do it anyway: the one where they had a barbecue – Terry’s food was awful, and the closing shot was three beefburgers going round on a record player, for some reason; the one where they go to France, and get assailed on the ferry by a kid acting badly, because he’d written in to JIM’LL FIX IT to be in Terry & June; the one where June became a punk (in 1985) – loads of Frankie Goes To Cricklewood “jokes”; the one where Terry has to buy a satellite dish so that a Middle East client he was entertaining could watch his favourite TV show (which turned out to be…Dallas); the one involving giant It’s A Knockout costumes – inevitably Terry got trapped in a giant rabbit’s outfit. Oh, and the one in which Terry fell in a river/lake/canal/giant pond, which was the one on every week.

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Gnomes of Dulwich, The

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GNOMES, EH? Now there’s a subject for laugh-out-loud light entertainment. Especially if you get HUGH LLOYD and TERRY SCOTT to dress up like Flowerpot Men, only as adults, and have JIMMY “HOT HI DE ALLO” PERRY to write the thing, and say it’s all just a satire on the Common Market.

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