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For Richer or Poorer was a box office flop, earning $32.7 million on an estimated budget of $35 million. [3] Reviews of the film were mainly negative. It currently holds a 17% approval rating at Rotten Tomatoes based on 24 reviews. [4]
Lansley, Stewart. The Richer, The Poorer: How Britain Enriched the Few and Failed the Poor. A 200-Year History (Policy Press, 2021). Laybourn Keith. The Evolution of British Social Policy and the Welfare State, c. 1800–1993 (Keele University Press. 1995). online; Levine-Clark, Marjorie.
Lansley married his first wife Marilyn Biggs in 1985 and they had three daughters. [38] They divorced in 2001, and Lansley married Sally Low, with whom he has had a son and a daughter. [38] Lansley's wealth was estimated at £700,000 in 2009. [39] In April 2018, Lansley revealed that he has stage 3 bowel cancer. [40]
Lovers and Friends is an American soap opera that aired on NBC from January 3 to May 6, 1977. [1] When the show didn't catch on immediately, NBC put the show on hiatus for seven months, and then brought it back on December 6, 1977, as a retooled show with the title For Richer, For Poorer.
For Richer For Poorer may refer to: "For Richer For Poorer" (The Green Green Grass), an episode of the BBC sitcom, The Green Green Grass; For Richer...For Poorer, a 1975 BBC television pilot; For Richer, for Poorer, a 1992 made-for-TV comedy film; Lovers and Friends, an American soap opera, renamed For Richer, For Poorer
The show had many overlaps with Till Death Us Do Part. It had the same writer ( Johnny Speight ) and producer ( Dennis Main Wilson ). Both shows took their titles from the traditional wedding vows, and Bert was seen as the left-wing equivalent of Alf Garnett .
"For Richer For Poorer" is the series finale episode of the BBC sitcom, The Green Green Grass. It was screened on 5 March 2009, as the ninth and last episode of the fourth series and the final appearances of the main cast in this series. [1] It was written by Gary Lawson and John Phelps, and directed by Dewi Humphreys.
The 1998 design of the BNS built on earlier work on the "consensual definition of poverty" by Mack and Lansley in the UK [7] and Hallerod in Sweden. [8]Mack and Lansley defined items as necessities if, as above, more than 50% of respondents identified them as such, Results were summarised in terms of percentages of the respondents lacking 1, 2, 3 to N number of necessities.