Family & Relationships9 mins ago
Alan Simpson: Steptoe And Son Writer Dies At 87
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http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/en tertain ment-ar ts-3890 6672
I am still listening Hancock and Steptoe, and they are as funny as they were 40-50 years ago.
RIP Alan !
I am still listening Hancock and Steptoe, and they are as funny as they were 40-50 years ago.
RIP Alan !
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Same here cupid! It had 'The Test Pilot' on the other side.
I am really enjoying Steptoe re-runs, the early ones are just basically pure theatre - twenty-five minutes shot on one steady-cam on one location with no edits.
I love the way Wilfred Bramble could express so much with that wonderfully mobile face of his, from nasty snarling to fearful pathos in a nano-second, that was what good tv acting was all about.
I am really enjoying Steptoe re-runs, the early ones are just basically pure theatre - twenty-five minutes shot on one steady-cam on one location with no edits.
I love the way Wilfred Bramble could express so much with that wonderfully mobile face of his, from nasty snarling to fearful pathos in a nano-second, that was what good tv acting was all about.
Alan Simpson appeared in almost all of the early radio episodes of Hancock's Half Hour but without a credit for his acting role.
He played the man with a deadpan voice who turned up nearly every week for TH to chat to during a break in the action. That was often one of the funniest bits of each show, especially when one of them fluffed a line and a bit of ad-libbing was called for.
He played the man with a deadpan voice who turned up nearly every week for TH to chat to during a break in the action. That was often one of the funniest bits of each show, especially when one of them fluffed a line and a bit of ad-libbing was called for.
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