Thursday, 30 November 2017
850 Winter Olympics 1988
First viewed : February 1988
I recall this Olympics for one thing only -the exploits of Eddie "the Eagle" Edwards , the plucky British amateur who became the first British ski jumper at an Olympics since 1929. With limited training due to lack of funding, Eddie still qualified fair and square at the 1987 World Championship and became a media sensation. As a friend of mine commented "he looks like the guy that gets sand kicked in his face" which added to his underdog appeal. Edie predictably finished last in both his events and the spoilsports on the Olympic committee changed the rules to make it difficult for him ( Eddie failed to qualify in 1992, 1994 and 1998 ) , or anyone of his ilk, to qualify again but he remains a legend.
Tuesday, 28 November 2017
849 The Golden Oldie Picture Show
First viewed : 1988
I avoided this like the plague when it first arrived in the mid-eighties; the idea of the Beeb making their own cheap films to accompany pre-video ( i.e pre-1977 hits ) sounded hideous. By 1988 though, my punk-centric letterboxing when it came to consuming music had eroded and I was more receptive to listening to pop from previous eras whether I'd heard it before or not.
Therefore, I did watch the occasional episode of the third and final series in 1988. The ones I remember are Kiki Dee's Amereuse ( a soft focus film of pastoral snogging ) and The Hollies' He Ain't Heavy He's My Brother ( a film of special needs kids having a day out ). The latter airing may have helped it to number one in the autumn. I also recall hearing The Hollies' Gasoline Alley Bred and The Moody Blues' Isn't Life Strange for the first time on the programme though I don't recall anything about the accompanying films.
It was presented by Dave Lee Travis so I don't suppose it will ever surface again although the ban on editions of Top of the Pops which he presented is completely ridiculous.
Monday, 27 November 2017
848 The British Record Industry Awards / The BRITS
First viewed : 10 February 1986
Oh this is a blunder. I don't know why I thought I didn't see the 1986 Awards ceremony when scanning those listings but I definitely remember Norman Tebbit presenting an award to Wham and giving a cheeky speech congratulating the industry and musicians for being such great capitalists. One in the eye for the nascent Red Wedge project !
I don't think I saw the 1987 awards hosted by Jonathan King but I watched it the following year with Noel Edmunds. I remember Andrew Lloyd-Webber winning some classical award and making an embarrassing speech about how watching Jack Good's shows made him a rocker or something. When New Order won Best Video for True Faith, Bernard Sumner slagged him off for it in his acceptance speech. That year was also memorable for the embarrassment suffered by Rick Astley. He won the Best Single Award for Never Gonna Give You Up but the show was over-running so a BPI exec came on stage to accept his reward for him and announce the Outstanding Contribution to Music winners, The Who who went straight into Who Are You . The problem was no one told Rick what was happening and he was halfway to the podium when The Who came on and he had to return sheepishly to his seat. Even Mick Fleetwood made a sarky remark about it the following year.
The 1989 ceremony of course has gone down in history as one of the great live TV disasters when the inexpert presenters Mick Fleetwood and Samantha Fox were felled by a malfunctioning autocue and the whole thing fell apart. I didn't see it at the time but have seen most of it on list shows since. It led to the decision that future ceremonies wouldn't be broadcast live, a policy that lasted for the next 18 years despite the move from the BBC to ITV in 1993. This meant that events like Lisa Stansfield's protest at the Gulf War, John Prescott's dousing and of course Jarvis Cocker's stage invasion were discreetly edited out.
Some of the subsequent highlights I recall are
- Martika seemingly off her face on something in 1993
- Host Richard O'Brien saying "Something for every taste there" after Andy Bell and k d lang's duet on Enough Is Enough
- Ben Elton's grating insincerity as host in 1998
- Chumbawamba changing the words to Tubthumping to criticise New Labour
- Nodding off during the 2000 ceremony and missing the Ronnie Wood / Brandon Block altercation
One regular feature that used to annoy me was the appearance towards the end , of the BPI chairman Maurice Oberstein until his death in 2001. No we're not going to warm to you because you've brought on a mangy dog and are wearing a stupid hat , you self-satisfied old bore.
Once we got into the noughties my interest in contemporary music waned and the last one I recall watching is when Paul Weller won the Outstanding Contribution to Music Award which was in 2006.
Sunday, 26 November 2017
847 A Night of Comic Relief
First viewed : 5 February 1988
After Live Aid and Sport Aid , it was the comedians' turn. Although the charity Comic Relief had been launched in 1985, this was its live TV debut. For better or worse, this was the start of the TV charity marathon becoming a regular event.
A Night of Comic Relief ran from 7.30 pm to around 4.00 am the next day. I remember our accounting lecturer coming in with a red nose on, that morning. I also recall my mum bleating on beforehand, "But you can't keep laughing for all those hours !" There wasn't much danger of that given some of the names on the bill and all the filmed inserts with celebs standing in the desert or pushing someone in a wheelchair to tug at your heartstrings. This aspect was perfectly summed up by Ricky Gervais on Room 101 some years later - " You get Robbie Coltrane and Dawn French telling you there's a world food shortage. Well I wonder why that is ".
The programme was anchored by Griff Rhys-Jones, Lenny Henry ( this might have been the start of his slide into the hectoring bore he is today ) and Jonathan Ross. I saw the beginning and the first set piece item, a Spitting Image Question of Sport which ended with the puppet David Coleman getting blown up by his real-life counterpart who very visibly wasn't amused by the sketch at all. I then went to the pub and unfortunately came in just in time to catch a routine from Cannon and Ball which seemed to consist of smashing a load of plates. The camera then panned to Ross who'd clearly enjoyed it as much as me and said "Woo ! A stonker from Cannon and Ball there" while signalling that wasn't quite what he was thinking at the time.
Comic Relief alternates with Sport Relief so it's a biennial retreat.
Saturday, 25 November 2017
846 Talking Pictures
First viewed : 25 January 1988
This was a ten part BBC 1 documentary on the history of film created and presented by who else but Barry Norman. The ten episodes dealt with genres rather than periods allowing a more unified thematic approach. The series was noted for its liberal use of soft focus photography when interviewing the survivors from yesteryear. Pride of place went to a still lucid 96 year old film director Hal Roach who launched Harold Lloyd and Laurel and Hardy in the silent era.
Friday, 24 November 2017
845 Best and Marsh - The Perfect Match
First viewed : Winter 1988
I must admit I'm cheating a bit here as this was on when I was playing pool down at The Red Lion on Friday nights and I hardly saw any of it at the time. Fortunately some of it is on YouTube.
It was a regional programme for Granada viewers. presented by Tony Wilson with New Order inevitably providing the theme tune. It brought in the two greatest football entertainers of the seventies for a chat about the period, based around extended footage from the ITV vaults.
Marsh of course retired tidily after making a packet in the USA and became a top football pundit. Best's playing career just dribbled away and he never found much of a role for himself beyond feeding the tabloids every so often. You would expect then that Marsh would be very assured and Best shambling and incoherent by comparison but he was generally tidy and lucid - this was just a year before the infamous Wogan appearance. You don't really think of Wilson as a football man and he did seem a bit less sure of himself in their company but he obviously knew enough to stay in the conversations.
Though, as far as I'm aware, the show wasn't broadcast outside the Granada region, the format reappeared in the very similar There's Only One Brian Moore a few years later.
Thursday, 23 November 2017
844 Whicker's World : Living With Waltzing Matilda
First viewed : January 1988
I'm sure I caught some Alan Whicker before this series but not being a great fan of his style, I don't know when that might have been. I'm pretty sure I caught some of this Sunday evening series on BBC One which concentrated on ex-pats from Britain who'd made a successful move to Australia. It was part of a number of programmes to coincie with Australia's bicentennial celebrations.
Wednesday, 22 November 2017
843 Fifteen To One
First viewed : January 1988
My mum alerted me to this one during a revision week for my first set of accountancy exams as a suggested break from revising. This was shortly after its inception as a replacement for Countdown on Channel Four
It was devised by its quizmaster William G Stewart almost as an act of atonement for producing the horrors of The Price Is Right on ITV. It was a quickfire quiz show with a high standard of question and a tough proposition for anyone who ventured on it. Contestants had three lives i.e. they could get two questions wrong and a correct answer gave you the choice of taking the next one for points or nominating someone else in the hope they'd fluff and lose a life. That way the fifteen contestants were whittled down to just three for the final round. Fifteen To One's requirement for large numbers of contestants meant it attracted people who'd fail the personality screenings for things like Telly Addicts or Blankety Blank which was quite refreshing. Stewart was friendly but brisk., with little time-wasting banter and the show was a ratings success.
I knew three people who got on it over the years. I don't think any of them have the resources to sue me but I'll use initials just in case. I haven't got the time to go looking for a relevant still.
PB - a Burnley-supporting council tax clerk from Littleborough who looked like weatherman Michael Fish's younger brother and had the personality of a lettuce. Kevin from Eggheads is Bruce Forsyth compared to this guy. He did pretty well but didn't become a series champion.
BB- PB's great rival on the Littleborough quiz scene. He was a bumptious bearded social worker - think Tom from Reggie Perrin - who played for the pub just down the road from me. I'm not sure how he did.
SL - a flaky bloke who was briefly an office colleague around this time. He'd come from Wages ( one of his ex-colleagues claimed to have spotted him having a hand shandy under the desk ) where he couldn't hack the deadlines but our section had pressures too and he'd regularly go off sick until our new boss managed to offload him, receiving a number of abusive communications thereafter. He had the gall to describe himself as a free lance musician from Devon ( where he'd fled ) and became the last man standing on his programme but then his bottle went and he didn't get on the leader board.
The programme was broadcast while I was at work so I never saw that much of it. It finished in 2003. I've never seen the daytime revival with Sandi Tovskig. Stewart died a couple of months back aged 84.
Tuesday, 21 November 2017
842 APB
First viewed : 9 January 1988
This new pop show went into Channel Four's Sunday lunchtime slot previously occupied by Network 7. When I originally wrote about that show I confused the two; that post has now been corrected.
APB was ITV's Cinderella region, Border's attempt at a pop show though it also featured film and sports items as well. It was presented by Gaz Top .APB took the approach that there were enough performance and video outlets on TV and its pop features instead allowed the stars to expand on their particular interests so, for example, Michael Hutchence showed us round his motorcycle collection.
Bjork and Einar from The Sugarcubes came in and were interviewed sitting on a giant leather chair that made them look like Thuinderbirds puppets. Instead of being asked when their LP was coming out, they talked about Iceland's geography.
The programme helped turn me on to All About Eve after a feature where Julianne Regan talked about her love of candles and Goth-y stuff and she came across as a very sweet personality.
It only lasted the one series.
Monday, 20 November 2017
841 When We Are Married
First viewed : 26 December 1987
This was a full-length dramatisation of another J B Priestley play, set in Yorkshire and poking fun at the Edwardian Nonconformist mentality. Three smug middle aged men, pillars of their community, and their wives are celebrating their silver wedding anniversary when the young organist they've been bullying reveals that, due to a paperwork error, they may not be legally married at all, shattering their complacency. There are many farcical complications before matters are finally resolved.
I had seen an Am Dram version of this eight years earlier and thought it dragged on a bit but Dearnley Drama Group didn't have Peter Vaughan, Timothy West and Bernard Cribbins in the three main roles and that made a hell of a difference. The play's a period piece now but , in the right hands, still very funny.
Sunday, 19 November 2017
840 Garbo : A Biographical Portrait
First viewed : 25 December 1987
This was the best viewing available on Christmas night, preferable to Miss Marple and Inspector Morse , a long documentary on the famously reclusive former film star who walked away at the height of her fame. It was narrated by fellow Swedish actress Bibi Anderson and acted as a curtain raiser for a short season of her films. Garbo was still alive, though in poor health, at the time and of course didn't participate in the programme.
Saturday, 18 November 2017
839 The Marksman
First viewed : 4 December 1987
This three part serial turned into something of an embarrassment for the BBC. It was intended to be broadcast in September but was yanked after the Hungerford massacre and put back to December where it became a feelbad drama in the run up to Christmas.
David Threlfall played Don Weaver, a Liverpudlian professional criminal living in Spain and dabbling in real estate who receives a message from his ex-father in law ( James Ellis ) that his 12 year old son has been brutally murdered. He returns to his old stamping-ground to exact violent revenge assisted by Michael Angelis as an old associate and Leslie Ash . who created some extra publicity for the series by appearing topless in a shower scene. Terence Harvey as a bent cop and Craig Charles as a gangster were also along for the rude.
The series was unremittingly grim and violent. It owed a lot to Get Carter and like Carter, Weaver was an evil thug given to bouts of hypocritical self-pity and a rapist to boot. A fair proportion of the cast ended up dead by the final reel. Liverpool was portrayed as a lawless , abandoned ghost city where anything went, the boy's murder turning out to be a senseless act of gratification by three loser junkies who had no idea who he was. There was some of that old Scouse humour which somehow made things worse. Weaver is fond of showing people a photo of his apartment block in the Med and does so to one of the murderers he's about to top saying "That's my baby" to which the doomed scally replies "I'm more of a leg man myself".
Richard Griffiths was also in it as Ellis's innocent partner in a bookshop. He functioned as a sort of one man Greek chorus giving an ironic perspective on the cycle of violence which I guess gave the writers a get-out clause in the face of the criticism the series received.
Friday, 17 November 2017
838 1914 All Out
First viewed : 7 November 1987
This was a one-off drama for Remembrance Day ( or near enough ) chronicling the devastation inflicted on a village cricket team by World War One. It was a familiar enough story, the sudden interruption of a glorious summer by the horrors of the world's most destructive conflict but well done with a fairly unknown cast.
Thursday, 16 November 2017
837 Out of Court
First viewed : Autumn 1987
This was a legal magazine programme on BBC Two presented by Rough Justice's David Jessel so it tended to take a rather sceptical view of the workings of the law to say the least. I watched the odd episode in the autumn of 1987 because Law was a module in the Graduate Conversion Course I was doing at Liverpool Poly at the time.
Wednesday, 15 November 2017
836 Top Town
First viewed : Autumn 1987
This was a BBC North West revival , in the mid-evening Friday regional slot on BBC Two, of an inter-town talent contest that ran in the fifties. It was presented by Stuart Hall. The two towns had celebrity champions. The only episode I saw had ex-Liver Bird Polly James pitted against Bill Waddington ( Coronation St's Percy Sugden ) so I'm guessing it must have been Blackburn v Oldham. There was a bit of football-based banter between the two before the contest started. The only act I can recall is a terrible female singer who did Saving All My Love For You pronouncing all her "oo" sounds as "er" hence "We'll be making love the whole night threrererrr !". I'd love to see that again but I doubt there's much chance. Apparently, another episode featured actress Clare Sweeney , presumably representing Liverpool, doing Somewhere Over The Rainbow. It only lasted for one series.
Tuesday, 14 November 2017
835 The Charmer
First viewed : Autumn 1987
I only dipped into this and chiefly remember it for the fact that my Dad was so keen on it. He generally disdained television except for cricket but in the last decade of his life he developed a taste for period drama if it was set around the time of his boyhood as this was. The Charmer was loosely based on a fifties novel Mr Stimpson and Mr Gorse by Patrick Hamilton and concerns a suave but pyschopathic conman called Gorse who seduces then swindles a wealthy widow to get a foothold in upper class society but is pursued by her thwarted lover Mr Stimpson.
Nigel Havers playing against type as a scheming arriviste, was Gorse, Bernard Hepton was Stimpson, Rosemary Leach played the mark and Fiona Fuillerton was Clarice, Gorse's unattainable lover.
The TV series went much further than the book in bringing Gorse's activities to a definite end whereas Hamilton preserved him for a further novel.
Monday, 13 November 2017
834 Pulaski
First viewed : Autumn 1987
This one went down like a lead balloon. Roy Last of the Summer Wine Clarke decided to try his hand at a detective show parody and came up with his horror. Pulaski was the name of a fictional cop show similar to ITV's Dempsey and Makepeace where an American ex-priest and his female sidekick righted wrongs. The twist was that we then saw that the actor playing Pulaski , Larry Summers ( David Andrews ) was in reality a drunken arsehole despised by co-star Kate ( Caroline Langrishe ). But in a further twist fans of the show wanted him to solve their cases and the crooks involved expected him to behave like Pulaski too.
It was far too "clever" for its own good and that , coupled with having a detestable leading actor, alienated both viewers and critics alive. I remember Nina Myskow excoriating it. I think I saw just the one episode where he was poncing about in a dress and that was more than enough.
The series was canned after just 8 episodes. Andrews hasn't appeared on British TV since but his film c.v. is actually quite impressive.
Sunday, 12 November 2017
833 Mussolini : The Untold Story
First viewed : 1 September 1987
This controversial US mini-series was belatedly shown on BBC One over consecutve nights, two years after being aired in the US. It had a strong cast with George C Scott in the title role, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio as his daughter, Robert Downey Jr and Gabriel Byrne as one his sons and Raul Julia as his son-in-law. While Scott achieved a remarkable likeness that couldn't be said about Gunnar Moller as Hitler and gorgeous blonde Virginia Madsen
was about as far from resembling Clara Petacci as it was possible to imagine.
The series was criticised for concentrating on the dictator's private life and glossing over the nature of his regime and status as Hitler's chief ally ( actually more of an Achilles heel than a prop ) in World War Two. That's fair comment although historians are generally agreed that Mussolini actually thought that Nazi theories on race were nonsense and dragged his heels when it came to implementing anti-semitic policies. Though ruthless enough, he doesn't merit the same level of opprobrium as his ally.
The series was also mocked for its supposedly seamless insertion of colourised contemporary footage. As the Sunday Telegraph's critic observed "It was of course completely unnoticeable as long as you were blind". It didn't amount to much more than a few minutes' footage of tanks rolling anyway.
I don't think it's been repeated.
Saturday, 11 November 2017
832 Hollywood Legends
First viewed : 21 August 1987
This was a Channel Four series of imported documentaries about Hollywood greats. I can only recall watching the last one about dark starlet Natalie Wood and her still-controversial death by drowning.
Thursday, 9 November 2017
831 Lovejoy
First viewed : 24 August 1987
This comedy drama series based on a series of novels by Jonathan Gash was first broadcast in 1986 and was only moderately successful. I first caught it on its repeat run in 1987, the first episode I saw being the second one where a thuggish criminal is pursuing Lovejoy for loot he's stashed in an antique dresser.
Lovejoy was a combination of The Antiques Roadshow and Minder . Ian McShane was the titular hero , a "divvie" ( someone with a sixth sense for a genuine antique ) and a lovable rogue who often operated on the fringes of the law. Instead of mixing it with the lowlifes of London Lovejoy maintained a precarious existence in leafy and prosperous Suffolk although there were just as many crooks and conmen to contend with . Lovejoy was assisted by his friend Tinker ( Dudley Sutton ), an auction "barker" who often fell off the wagon and Eric ( Chris Jury ) his naive apprentice and a convenient device for Lovejoy to explain the significance of the object in question ( when he wasn't talking directly to the camera ). He also enjoyed the patronage of local nob's wife Lady Jane ( Phyllis Logan ) with whom he had an unconsummated friendship. His business rivals were successful self-made philistine Charlie Gimbert ( Malcolm Tierney ) and the gay Dandy Jack ( Geoffrey Bateman ) although he would sometimes work with them. Most of the storylines had some element of crime in them.
I wasn't the only one who tuned in when the series was repeated and the BBC were happy to commission another series. Unfortunately, in the meantime, McShane had flown off for an unmemorable run in Dallas as Sue Ellen's new love interest and filming had to wait until that finished. The first season got another repeat run in 1990 as a trailer for the long-delayed second season. Lovejoy's absence was explained in the first episode by having him come out of prison after being framed by a local crook.
Otherwise, it largely picked up where the first season left off . Dandy Jack never returned although he was occasionally mentioned in the script and Charlie didn't reappear until the fourth season which I thought was a shame since his antagonistic relationship with Lovejoy drove much of the comedy in the first season. Nevertheless it became regular Sunday night viewing for my mum and I for the next few years and was a big ratings winner with increasingly high profile guest stars. McShane brought over his new buddies Linda Gray and Ken Kercheval to appear although he failed to snag Larry Hagman.
The series jumped the shark in the fifth season when it started shedding cast members. Jane was first to go when her husband went bankrupt. and their mansion was bought by Charlie. She was replaced by Charlotte ( Caroline Langrishe ) , a posh auctioneer who did become Lovejoy's lover. Then Eric was replaced ( because Jury had set up a successful production company and wanted to go behind the cameras ) by Beth ( Diane Parish ) although it was never explained what a black Cockney girl was doing in Bury St Edmunds in the first place. By the start of the sixth season Charlie was gone too and the series had clearly run its course. We were still watching but in agreement that it had gone stale. Even the series finale when Eric and Jane came back for Lovejoy and Charlotte's intended wedding wasn't much cop.
Wednesday, 8 November 2017
830 Love Me Tender
First viewed : 14 August 1987
To mark the tenth anniversary of Elvis Presley's death, Central TV put together a tribute show that was part concert, part video jukebox with pre-recorded numbers performed on a set. Some of the artists only appeared in that way. Everyone did one or more Elvis number and though it went on for over two hours , only two of the performances stick in my mind. One was the Pet Shop Boys covering Always On My Mind which went on to be the Christmas number one that year. The other was Kim Wilde doing a very sexy interpretation of One Night with plenty of cleavage on show.
Tuesday, 7 November 2017
829 A Beast With Two Backs
First viewed : 4 August 1987
This play was first broadcast in 1968 but was shown again as part of a Dennis Potter season in 1987. The title refers to a slang expression for bonking although sexual themes are not quite as prominent as in some of his other works. The play was loosely based on an historical event in Potter's beloved Forest of Dean which Potter used to show how underlying prejudice can lead to violence and tragedy at the slightest excuse. An Italian impresario and his lovable harmless dancing bear are set upon by vigilante miners over the death of the village tart who has actually been killed by a combination of one of their own and the local vicar. Filmed in grainy black and white, it's pretty bleak stuff and one of Potter's best-remembered single plays.
Monday, 6 November 2017
828 Crimes of War
First viewed : 22 July 1987
This was a documentary about two accused war criminals living in Britain with no mechanism to extradite them for trial. Both Antonas Gecas and Kirilo Zvarich were East European not German but accused of enthusiastic collaboration with the Nazis in Second World War atrocities.
The programme eventually led to the War Crimes Act of 1991 to make the process easier. I don't know what happened to Zvarich but Gecas evaded prosecution until he was ruled too ill to stand trial in response to an extradition request from his native Lithuania in 2001. He died shortly afterwards.
Ironically, one of those most loudly calling for him to face justice was the then - Labour MP Greville Janner, who himself escaped prosecution for sex crimes on medical grounds a couple of years ago.
Sunday, 5 November 2017
827 The Cook Report
First viewed : 22 July 1987
This investigative series was essentially a televised version of the radio 4 series Checkpoint which had been running since 1973; my mum knew who Roger Cook was long before I did. He was an Australian journalist based in the UK since 1968 who specialised in uncovering crooks and confronting them once he had the evidence often at the cost of taking a punch or worse.
Once cameras were involved, the reaction could often be more extreme.The show also revealed Cook to be a fairly chunky bloke whose solid frame could absorb a lot of the punishment. The bigger budget he received from Central TV allowed him to investigate issues with higher stakes than dodgy antiques dealers such as child pornography and the IRA 's protection rackets. In its visual style the programme was very similar to World in Action.
Like Rough Justice, the programme made enemies and Cook was himself subject to his doorstepping technique over an episode suggesting Arthur Scargill had taken money from Colonel Gadaffi. He wasn't happy but he didn't hit anyone.
It's often assumed that the programme was cancelled after a News of the World article in 2000 alleging that much of it was faked which they were eventually forced to retract. In fact the decision to cancel the show had been taken for budgetary reasons two years earlier.
Cook has been semi-retired since the show ended and is now 74.
Saturday, 4 November 2017
826 Clive James at the Playboy Mansion
First viewed : 18 July 1987
The acerbic Aussie continued to get all the tough assignments and ITV sent him on a weekend mission to Hugh Hefner's abode for an interview and general sightseeing tour. Hefner, perpetually in his dressing gown, stalked the premises like a character from The Great Gatsby living out a male fantasy. With his ad man's patter and freedom from any doubts about the exploitarive nature of his business , Hefner was too wily an old bird to be pinned down by James who was too busy trying not to drool at the sight of so many cosmetically-enhanced bosoms in the vicinity. I suspect that went for the cameramen too.
Thursday, 2 November 2017
825 The RKO Story
First viewed : July 1987
This was a six-part documentary series on BBC Two narrated by Ed Asner , telling the story of the famous film studio. I'm not sure how many I saw but I do recall seeing the second one , mainly about Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, both of whom were still alive when the series was made.
Wednesday, 1 November 2017
824 Watching
First viewed : 1987
It's a bit cheeky to include this as I don't think I ever saw a whole episode through. It wasn't that I didn't like it, just that I preferred to be in The Red Lion when it was on and by the time we got a VCR I probably felt that I'd missed too much. It starred Paul Bown as shy bird watcher Malcolm who somehow acquires a lively Scouse girlfriend Brenda ( Emma Wray ). Brenda also came with a bossy sister Pamela ( Liza Tarbuck ) and it came as something of a surprise to me that I could find such a big girl attractive.
It was Tarbuck's TV debut and the springboard for an ongoing media career. Neither of her co-stars have done as well with Bown still working as a jobbing actor and Wray disappearing from public view at the end of the nineties. The series ran from 1987 to 1993.
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