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A Fine Romance is a British sitcom starring husband-and-wife team Judi Dench and Michael Williams. The series was nominated for ten BAFTA British Academy Television Awards and was a winner of two for Dench's performances in 1982 and 1985.
Despite the Sunday slot becoming available, A Fine Romance instead premiered in January 1989 on Thursdays at 8/7c, where it replaced the cancelled freshman series Knightwatch. As was the case with the series it replaced, A Fine Romance lost out to The Cosby Show and A Different World on NBC and 48 Hours on CBS, and was pulled after barely two ...
A Fine Romance may refer to: "A Fine Romance" (song), a 1936 popular song written by Jerome Kern and Dorothy Fields; A Fine Romance, a 1991 Italian comedy; A Fine Romance (1981 TV series), a 1980s British sitcom; A Fine Romance (1989 TV series), a 1989 American comedy-drama; A Fine Romance, a 1984 play by William James Royce
A Fine Romance – situation comedy; Fireman Sam – children's; The First – drama; The First Churchills – history; First Class – game show; First Cut – documentary; The First Eden – nature documentary; The First Lady – drama; First Life – nature documentary; First of the Summer Wine – comedy; Fist of Fun – comedy; The Fitz ...
English: A Fine Romance (Italian: Cin cin) is a 1991 comedy film directed by Gene Saks. [1] Plot.
A Fine Romance: United Kingdom 1981–1984 Fired Up: United States 1997–1998 F.I.R. India 2006–2015 First of the Summer Wine: United Kingdom 1988–1989 First Time Out: United States 1995 Fish: United States 1977–1978 Fish Police: United States 1992 Flatbush: United States 1979 Fleabag: United Kingdom 2016–2019 Fleksnes Fataliteter ...
A Fine Romance (1981–1984) 2 November Marmalade Atkins (1981–1984) Theatre Box (1981) 8 December – Freetime (1981–1985) 13 December – Celebrity Playhouse (1981) Unknown – Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo (1980–1982)
A Fine Romance performed on tenor sax by Jules Grandgagnage "A Fine Romance" is a popular song composed by Jerome Kern with lyrics by Dorothy Fields, published in 1936. The song was written for the musical film, Swing Time, where it was co-introduced by Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers.