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Sir David John White (born 2 February 1940 [3] [4]), known professionally as David Jason, is an English actor.He has played Derek "Del Boy" Trotter in the BBC sitcom Only Fools and Horses, Detective Inspector Jack Frost in A Touch of Frost, Granville in Open All Hours and Still Open All Hours, and Pop Larkin in The Darling Buds of May, as well as voicing several cartoon characters, including ...
For the Welsh audience, she played the character of Phyllis Doris, the family's teen daughter in the comedy series Ryan and Ronnie. She later appeared in several English-language sitcoms and soap operas. She lived with David Jason and accompanied him to Buckingham Palace in 1993 to receive his OBE. [3]
‘Only Fools and Horses’ star says he mets up with his newly discovered daughter ‘when we can’ ‘Surprise is an understatement’: David Jason discovers 52-year-old daughter he didn’t ...
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The square oast house of Buss Farm, featured in the opening credits, seen in 2007. The Larkin family live on a farm in rural England, in the county of Kent.Sidney ("Pop") and his common law wife Florence ("Ma") have six children: eldest daughter Mariette, followed by their only son Montgomery, and other daughters Primrose, twins Zinnia and Petunia, and Victoria.
Jason Kelce and Kylie Kelce are revealing the Love Actually character that captured their daughter’s heart. “The cutest thing about watching was that Ellie was watching at the end of the movie ...
Tessa Peake-Jones (born 9 May 1957) is an English actress who has appeared in The Danedyke Mystery (1979), Pride and Prejudice (1980), When We Are Married (1987), Up the Garden Path (1990–1993), So Haunt Me (1992–1994), The Demon Headmaster (1996–1998), The History of Tom Jones: a Foundling (1997), Summer in the Suburbs (2000), Poppy Shakespeare (2008), Doctors (2009–2011) and ...
Porridge is a British sitcom, starring Ronnie Barker and Richard Beckinsale, written by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais, and broadcast on BBC1 from 1974 to 1977. The programme ran for three series and two Christmas specials, and was followed by a feature film of the same name (in the United States, the film was released under the title Doing Time).