Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Dick Emery Show is a British sketch comedy show starring Dick Emery. [2] It was broadcast on the BBC from 1963 to 1981. [1] [3] It was directed and produced by Harold Snoad. [4] The show was broadcast over 18 series with 166 episodes. [1] [3] The show experienced sustained popularity in the 1960s and 1970s. The BBC described the show as ...
Richard Gilbert Emery was born 19 February 1915, [1] in University College Hospital, Bloomsbury, London. [2] His parents were the comedy double act Callan and Emery. [1] They took him on tour when he was only three weeks old and gave him the occasional turn on the stage during his childhood, which was always on the move and disrupted, creating problems for the future but setting the scene for ...
Appearances include The Dick Emery Show (1980), Terry and June (1980), The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1981), Emery Presents: Legacy of Murder (1982), Smiley's People (1982), Jemima Shore Investigates (1983) and Never the Twain (1983).
Kinnear later appeared in many films and television shows, including Help!, [1] Till Death Us Do Part, Doctor at Large, Man About the House, George and Mildred, [1] The Dick Emery Show (as Gaylord's long-suffering father) and four episodes of The Avengers. [1] He starred in Cowboys, a sitcom about builders.
The Dick Emery Show (1963–1981) Dinnerladies (1998–2000) Do Not Adjust Your Set ... The Kenny Everett Video Show (1981–1988) A Kick Up the Eighties (1981–1984)
Later that year, Snoad began to work on The Dick Emery Show, the show was already in its twelfth series by then and he would continue to direct and produce the show until its end in 1981. In 1976, Snoad directed with Ray Cooney his first feature film Not Now, Comrade which starred Leslie Phillips , Windsor Davies , Don Estelle and Ian Lavender .
Television series which originated in the United Kingdom and ended in the year 1981. ... The Dick Emery Show; Doctors' Daughters; F. Fanny by Gaslight (TV series)
He is mainly known from the Dick Emery show. At the start of each episode he appeared as the interviewer, interviewing various characters played by Emery, with responses such as "Ooh you are awful, but I like you". Clyde was also a regular presenter on the BBC children's programme Play School (UK TV series) during the late 1960s. [3]