Sunday, 20 December 2015
301 Robbie
First watched : Uncertain
I didn't watch too much of this because I hated it.
"Robbie" was Fyfe Robertson, a weird, gaunt-looking bloke with an aggravatingly over-enunciated Scottish accent. He dressed like an Edwardian laird , surely the inspiration for beyond-irritating racing pundit John McCririck, but at least had the excuse of being born into that era , already in his seventies when the first of his four short series was aired in 1973.
I had no idea who this professional eccentric , roaming around Britain like a geriatric Alan Whicker, was, but he had a long background in serious journalism prior to appearing before the cameras in Tonight ( the precursor of Nationwide in the late fifties /early sixties ; Whicker also cut his teeth on the programme ).
There was a whiff of self-indulgence about the programme - one episode allowed him to foam at the mouth about modern art - but I guess he'd earned it. The final series in 1980 consisted of Fyfe dropping in on other examples of the active elderly such as ghastly "novelist" Barbara Cartland and catering tycoon Charles Forte.
Robertson died in 1987 aged 84.
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