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moehat.
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- April 12, 2009 at 23:42 #221517
Funny you should mention rising damp Ian, as Leonard Rossiter was in one of the Steptoes in a cracking episode where him and his old sidekick escape from the nick.
I’ll need to get a couple of shillings and buy the Rising Damp boxset i think.
April 13, 2009 at 00:20 #221521Funny you should mention rising damp Ian, as Leonard Rossiter was in one of the Steptoes in a cracking episode where him and his old sidekick escape from the nick.
I’ll need to get a couple of shillings and buy the Rising Damp boxset i think.
Wasnt he also in "Any old Iron?" where he tries to buy some emtal roofing or copper, maybe season 2/3.
Craig
April 13, 2009 at 00:31 #221523There are currently a few episodes of Rising Damp available on the ITV iPlayer.
I watched one the other day and in was mention of:
# An impending manmade environmental epoch
# A current deep economic recession
# Sexploitation of the young
# Politicians at itStrange how 30 years on – some things never changed.
April 13, 2009 at 06:03 #221572Hi Moehat
The Biederbacke Affair et al are sporadically on ITV3, indeed I watched an episode this week.
The really annoying thing is that there doesn’t seem to be a pattern to when the next episode is on. (I don’t use printed TV schedules.) I’ve just gone through the TV guide for this week, and there doesn’t seem to be an episode on.
Wasn’t particularly into Steptoe & Son because I didn’t like the seedy environment. Same applied to Rising Damp.
The two comedies I really enjoyed were Soap! and Brass! Also, Chance In A Million.
(I think the exclamation marks were part of the title, rather than me just putting them there.)
April 13, 2009 at 13:03 #221597Funny you should mention rising damp Ian, as Leonard Rossiter was in one of the Steptoes in a cracking episode where him and his old sidekick escape from the nick.
I’ll need to get a couple of shillings and buy the Rising Damp boxset i think.
Wasnt he also in "Any old Iron?" where he tries to buy some emtal roofing or copper, maybe season 2/3.
Craig
I know he was in a couple Craig, not sure exactly what the other one is.
Gearald, what do you mean about it being in a ‘seedy enviroment’. The run a rag and bone business, not a brothel.
April 13, 2009 at 14:48 #221616Thanks Gerald; I’ll check out ITV3…I have found a dvd set of the complete series for @ £25, so I may buy it.
April 13, 2009 at 15:18 #221624Okay Graeme, seedy was the wrong word. I meant squalid, dreary, depressing, dark, confined. I didn’t like The Lovers either, for the same reason – Beckinsale sitting in a deckchair all the time.
April 13, 2009 at 17:07 #221643Regarding the new Red Dwarf episodes.
All they did was do a rehash of the episode Back to Reality from Series 3 or 4.
April 13, 2009 at 17:33 #221649Last nights episode was a let down, but it has been fun watching some of the classic episodes
. More recently I absolutely loved Hyperdrive.
April 13, 2009 at 18:04 #221652Funny you should mention rising damp Ian, as Leonard Rossiter was in one of the Steptoes in a cracking episode where him and his old sidekick escape from the nick.
I’ll need to get a couple of shillings and buy the Rising Damp boxset i think.
Wasnt he also in "Any old Iron?" where he tries to buy some emtal roofing or copper, maybe season 2/3.
Craig
Not "Any Old Iron" That was about a gay man that fancied Harold but he of course couldn’t see it. The other episode he was in was "The Lead Man Cometh" where he steals the lead of the Steptoes Roof then sells it back to them.
May 18, 2009 at 23:20 #228543I came across an old article from the Guardian, so i thought i’d throw it up in this thread. I’m still watching the boxset, and still enjoying it !!!
When Wilfrid Brambell and Harry H Corbett, stars of the hit BBC sitcom Steptoe and Son, first met each other in 1962, it marked the beginning of one of the most successful double acts in the history of British television. By the time Corbett died in 1982, the two wished that they had never set eyes on one another. But the extraordinary story behind their bizarre relationship has never, until now, been fully told. I was brought up watching Steptoe and Son and, ever since, I’ve wondered what the magic ingredient was that made the show so hugely successful. Finally I decided to make a film about it. And the truth was stranger than I could have imagined.
At its peak, the programme commanded an audience of 28 million viewers. Brambell played dirty old rag-and-bone man Albert Steptoe, a festering, fly-blown Tory who lazed about the yard all day, drank distilled paraffin and couldn’t care if he dropped a denture in his homemade steak and kidney pud.
Corbett played Albert’s son. By day, Harold Steptoe bought and sold antique junk from a horse-drawn cart. By night, he prepared for the socialist revolution by reading books by Marx and Shaw. Harold aspired to a life beyond the gates of the family business. He was a connoisseur of fine wine and dreamed of expensive foreign holidays, but his every effort was rendered useless by the need to care for his father and the countless banana skins writers Ray Galton and Alan Simpson threw in his way.
But the two actors’ real-life relationship was just as bizarre – and even more fraught – than their on-screen one. Wilfrid Brambell was gay and an alcoholic, notorious for his outrageous behaviour (on one infamous occasion he exposed himself to a woman at a party). He routinely told adoring fans who met him in the street to "**** off". Harry H Corbett was a womaniser who hated his role in Steptoe and died a bitter and disappointed man. When Steptoe finished in 1974, Corbett loathed Brambell. Within three years, the feeling was mutual.
Brambell, fearful of fans’ reactions in a less permissive time, worked hard to keep his sexuality a secret. Once or twice a year, he disappeared to Hong Kong to party with the colony’s top English-language broadcaster, who many believed was his lover. On one trip he brought a young Malayan man back with him to London to be his "valet".
Brambell’s drinking caused serious problems both on the show and off it. At rehearsals, he constantly forgot his lines. Once, being interviewed on television in New Zealand after he’d had one too many, he was asked by the presenter what he thought of the country. He was frank. "I hate your ******* cathedrals. I hate your ******* town. It’s the lowest place I’ve been in all my life." Flying back the end of the tour, he urinated in the captain’s cabin thinking it was the toilet, had to be restrained and was thrown off the plane at Singapore.
What were the demons that drove Brambell? Was he frustrated that he couldn’t be openly gay because he knew prejudice could kill his career? Or was he distressed by the public persona of a cheeky and dirty old man, utterly at odds with his self-image as a dandy? In truth, both probably played a part, but an event earlier in his life was a factor too. In 1948, Brambell married an actress, Molly Josephine. They lived in a flat in London and took in lodgers to help pay the bills. A young and handsome student moved in and had an affair with Molly, and she became pregnant. At first, Wilfrid thought that the child was his. When he found out that it was the lodger’s, he filed for divorce. Close friend Anne Pichon remembers the emotional shock to Brambell. "He was staying in my home and I would hear him wake up in the night, literally screaming, howling with pain."
Did Brambell ever share his anxieties with Corbett? It’s unlikely since, away from the cameras, the two actors hardly ever socialised and seldom spoke. Production staff remember script read-throughs at which Wilfrid would be at one end of the table, Harry at the other. On the day that the show was recorded, Wilfrid would prop up the BBC bar, while Harry would sit in his dressing room, working on his lines and worrying if his well-oiled co-star would deliver. On a tour of Australia in 1976, they travelled for five months in separate cars and never once shared a dressing room.
Before Steptoe, Brambell was a professional character actor, known for playing old men in French drawing-room farces. Corbett was an intense, macho, highly political Method actor, a member of the experimental Theatre Workshop Company and feted for his performances as Richard II. While Brambell chatted rep, Corbett spoke of the collectivisation of the working class.
For Corbett, the early years of Steptoe brought him a lifestyle that was the stuff of Harold Steptoe’s dreams. He bought a luxury house in St John’s Wood, London, where he hosted large showbiz parties. He was a regular celebrity guest of Prime Minister Harold Wilson. He tanned in the South of France. Freddie Ross Hancock, Tony Hancock’s second wife, and good a friend at the time, remembers a typical Corbett episode at the airport in Cannes when she saw one girlfriend of Harry’s off at departures, only to pick a new one up at arrivals.
But in the early 1970s a rot seems to have set in Harry’s mind, that was two-parts boredom with the formula of Steptoe to four-parts frustration with working with a dysfunctional drunk. Production staff remember that Corbett gave the impression it wasn’t worth continuing rehearsals because, after lunch, Brambell was often too drunk. During recordings of the show, Brambell would get on Harry’s nerves as, worse for wear, the old man would take an eternity to move a prop. Corbett became disenchanted by offers of work outside of Steptoe that were variations on his rag-and-bone character. Slowly, the coolness of his relationship with Brambell turned to ice.
It was in 1976, on a stage tour of Australia, that Corbett and Brambell’s professional partnership finally fell apart. The Steptoe series had ended and the two actors, desperate to make some money, played any venue that would have them, in a show that turned the Steptoe theme into second-rate song-and-dance vaudeville.
On one occasion, Wilfrid didn’t turn up for a show, and left Harry to entertain a 1,000-strong audience with impromptu juggling and stand-up. The tour manager found Wilfrid round the block in the front room of one of the theatre ushers, drinking Guinness. In the daytime, while Harry looked at the sights, Wilfrid either stayed in his hotel room drinking Gordons and calling the tour manager to organise a pedicure, or cruised the esplanade at Surfer’s Paradise with new-found friends in a feather boa. Wilfrid told the tour manager that Harry was a pompous and stuck-up actor. Harry would just remain quiet and get on with the job, simmering inside. "Hate, that’s the only word I can think of," says tour manager Kevin O’Neil.
It is said that one of the great tricks of situation comedy is to come up with a situation in which people are trapped, because real comedy only comes from tension and aggression between characters. In Steptoe, writers Ray Galton and Alan Simpson sought to highlight the generational tension between parents and children at the centre of the 60s revolution. Harold and Albert Steptoe were imprisoned in their relationship. Throughout the series, they bicker and berate one another. Whatever heights Harold aspires to, Albert brings his son tumbling down.
Ironically, after Steptoe, Corbett and Brambell appear to have found themselves in a similar situation offscreen. Typecast as a rag-and-bone man, Harry’s creative ambitions bore little fruit. His professional fate was inextricably tied to the wild, secretive and unpredictable Brambell. The old man had few ambitions, other than to have a good time at his local in Pimlico and to add to his collection of antique silver.
Art mirroring life? Is this the reason why Corbett and Brambell’s performance in Steptoe was so good? Tragicomedy on screen, tragicomedy off. Harold Steptoe would have loved the idea. Albert would probably have hated it.
June 10, 2009 at 23:10 #233254I’m watching the 6th series and i have to say this is the best £25-30 i’ve spent since i bought the Sharpe boxset. This has to be the best British comedy series of all time in my humble opinion.
June 19, 2009 at 02:04 #235069Having been disappointed with the second episode of Krod Mandoon and the Flaming Sword of Fire
I thoroughly enjoyed Psychoville…..although it was a re hashed version of League of Gentlemen, that didn’t seem to matter. It had that
essential touch of poignancy that comedy needs, and actually made me jump a couple of times, and there was a touch of Mighty Booshness about it as well.
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