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Brian Wilde blue plaque in Ashton-under-Lyne. Brian George Wilde (13 June 1927 – 20 March 2008) was an English actor best known for his roles in television comedy, most notably Mr Barrowclough in Porridge and Walter "Foggy" Dewhurst in Last of the Summer Wine. [1] Although tall, his gentle demeanour became his hallmark.
Brian Wilde; 1976–1985, 1990–1997, Colin Harris; 1997) Walter C. "Foggy" Dewhurst was the second ‘Third Man’, a former soldier who liked to boast of his military exploits in Burma during the Second World War. In fact, he had been a signwriter; and unlike Blamire, many of his old military stories were untrue.
A 2008 release named Last of the Summer Wine: Vintage 1976 focuses on the third series of the show and includes bonus interviews with Peter Sallis, Brian Wilde, and Frank Thornton. [114] Subsequently, every episode from the third to the twenty-seventh series has been released on DVD in Vintage collections, many including special features and ...
This episode marks the final appearance of Foggy, as played by Brian Wilde (Foggy is seen in some shots of the next episode, but is played by a body double). This is the last episode not to have a Cold open. Although some subsequent episodes don't have it (albeit less frequent).
Guest Appearance of Brian Conley. This episode was dedicated to Brian Wilde who died earlier that year. Audience of 3.39m – 50th most watched programme of the week. Will the Genuine Racer Please Stand Up? 29 June Howard decides to disguise himself from Pearl but discovers it is not as easy as he thought. Audience unknown.
The show was set in the fictional commuter village of Bradly Bush although actually filmed on location in Claygate, Surrey, England.. Retired soldier Major John Wyatt (Brian Wilde) is spurred into action after his sister Edwina's (Anne Ridler) home is burgled in broad daylight.
In addition to the CEO shakeup, Anu Subramanian, the company's chief financial officer, and Selby Drummond, chief marketing officer, previously announced plans to leave in early 2025.
February, 2008 – Lucas Campbell, a presenter of "Rock of Ages" on Chorley FM, resigned on-air after station chiefs decided to shift the show to a later slot. [ 8 ] February 9, 2014 – Dublin , Ireland 2FM presenter and former station boss John Clarke quit his daytime Sunday show in dramatic fashion, telling listeners he was "reading the ...