The Love Boat sailed from ABC into American homes for nine seasons, from 1977 until 1986. The hour-long dramedy/sitcom was a favorite of viewers and critics alike - so come remember it here!
Week of October 22 to 28 1977 TV Guide Cast of Welcome Back Kotter on Cover Vol 25 Number 43 Issue 1282 Western New England Edition Excellent Condition TV Guide is complete Ships flat and secured with cardboard Great gift idea Pictures are of the actual TV guide you will be receiving Please use the photos, any questions just send me a message
The Best of Warner Bros.: Hanna-Barbera 25 Cartoon Collection (Released May 21, 2013 by Warner Home Video) Another Looong DVD Review by Joe Torcivia SUMMARY: The most inexplicably confusing DVD I’ve ever reviewed! Yes, really! I’m almost at a loss as to what I can say about this collection, so bear with me, should this review ramble a bit. HERE is my original post on the coming of this set. It WILL help explain my confusion a bit, if you would be kind enough to read both my post and the linked announcement found therein. As best I can figure, Warner Bros., on the occasion of its turning 90, is celebrating its “centennial minus ten” with a series of special collections of the film, animation, television, and comic book properties that have made the studio my favorite of all creative entities. Hear! Hear! I second that emotion! Now, one doesn’t just become a monolithic presence in the field of entertainment without a few acquisitions along the way and so, sometime in the 1990s (like DC Comics before it), the Hanna-Barbera cartoon studio became a part of the vast Time Warner Communications empire. That acquisition would explain the existence of a special Hanna-Barbera collection to mark the 90th anniversary of Warner Bros. However, it doesn’t explain why “The Best of Warner Bros.: Hanna-Barbera 25 Cartoon Collection” looks as if it WERE ASSEMBLED BY a nonagenarian! I’m sorry, I should really take that back… Most nonagenarians would probably do a better – or at least a more LOGICAL – job of assembling this package! Honestly… I DON’T UNDERSTAND what this set is trying to accomplish – beyond creating a great big Hanna-Barbera goulash in a stewpot! Goulash is only good when you can EAT IT, Boo Boo! I get the distinct impression that no one tasked with the creation of this set has any historical knowledge of the glory days of Hanna-Barbera. A period I was privileged to witness first hand, and which probably accounts for the high regard in which I hold the first 10-12 years of the studio’s output, even today. Just "pick up whatever you find"! It looks as if they just picked up whatever they found lying around the Warner Vaults, adding just enough oddball, or other first time releases, to prevent it from completely becoming a double-dip affair, slapped a “Best of Warner Bros.” cover on it (…and even THAT COVER underwent revisions to replace a NON-Hanna-Barbera character inadvertently included in the character mélange. Touché Turtle now replaces Very-Late-Period-Looney-Tunes-Character “Rapid Rabbit”, between Yogi Bear and Quick Draw McGraw on the package) – and threw it out there to an unsuspecting public. Look Between Yogi and Quick Draw... A late '60s Looney Tunes character! Sloppy! But, WHAT IS IT? Is it a celebration and historical survey of the glory days of the Hanna-Barbera cartoon studio? If so, why are Huckleberry Hound and Yogi Bear omitted from the set? If not for the success of that iconic pair, I doubt that H-B would have progressed much further! I thought I was more "iconic" than the a-ver-age bear! Here’s the list of contents from the announcement. Compare it with the list of what we ACTUALLY GOT, and you will see that the collection appears to have had a very rough journey to completion… that is, if you can call ANYTHING like this without Huck and Yogi “complete”! For ease of comparison, that which was announced, but does not appear, is highlighted in RED. (Make note of ALL the RED, folks!) 1950s The Ruff & Reddy Show (1957) "Planet Pirates" (episode 1) Huckleberry Hound (1958) "Spud Dud" Yogi Bear (1958) "Snow White Bear" Hokey Wolf (1961) "Castle Hassle" Pixie and Dixie and Mr. Jinks (1958) "A Wise Quack," The Quick Draw McGraw Show (1959) "Masking for Trouble" Augie Doggie and Doggie Daddy (1959) "Gone to the Ducks" Snooper and Blabber (1959) "The Lion is Busy" with Snagglepuss Loopy De Loop (1959) "Wolf Hounded" 1960s The Flintstones (1960) "Love Letters on the Rocks" 30 mins. The Yogi Bear Show (1961) Snagglepuss "The Roaring Lion" Yakky Doodle "Hasty Tasty" Top Cat (1961) "T.C. Minds the Baby" 30 mins. Wally Gator "Gator-Napper" Touché Turtle and Dum Dum "Rapid Rabbit" with Ricochet Rabbit Lippy the Lion & Hardy Har Har "Hick Hikers" The Jetsons (1962) "Rosie the Robot" 30 mins The Magilla Gorilla Show (1964) "Makin' with the Magilla" Punkin' Puss & Mushmouse "Callin' All Kin" Ricochet Rabbit & Droop-a-Long "Will 'O the Whip" Jonny Quest (1964) "The Robot Spy" 30 mins. Peter Potamus (1964) "Cleo Trio" Breezly and Sneezly "Stars and Gripes" Yippee, Yappee and Yahooey "Black Bart" 1960s Atom Ant "The Big Gimmick" Secret Squirrel "Cuckoo Clock Cuckoo" Squiddly Diddly "Way Out Squiddly" Precious Pupp "Precious Jewels" The Hillbilly Bears "Do The Bear" Winsome Witch "Have Broom will Travel" Frankenstein, Jr. "The Shocking Electrical Monster' The Impossibles (1966) "The Spinner" Space Ghost "The Heat Thing" Dino Boy "The Sacrifice" Space Kidettes (1966) "Moleman Menace' The Abbott and Costello Cartoon Show "Gadzooka" Birdman (1967) "Birdman Meets Birdboy" The Galaxy Trio (1967) "Revolt of the Robots" The Herculoids (1967) "Attack from Space" Cattanooga Cats (1969) "Witch Whacky" It's The Wolf (1969) "Slumber Jacks" Motormouse and Autocat (1969) "Wheelin' and Dealin'" 1970s The Funky Phantom (1971) "The Liberty Bell Caper" 30 mins. Jabberjaw (1976) "Dr. Lo has Got to Go" 30 mins. Additionally, the documentary "Here Comes a Star" is included on this set. And, here’s what we got: That which appears, but was not previously announced, is highlighted in GREEN. Disc One: (NEW or DD = “Double-Dip”) Quick Draw McGraw Show Opening Theme (Slightly Edited) Quick Draw McGraw: “Dynamite Fright” DD Quick Draw McGraw Show Closing Theme (Severely Edited) . Quick Draw McGraw Show Opening Theme (Slightly Edited) Snooper and Blabber: “Outer Space Case” DD Quick Draw McGraw Show Closing Theme (Severely Edited) . Quick Draw McGraw Show Opening Theme (Slightly Edited) Augie Doggie: “Growing, Growing, Gone!” DD Quick Draw McGraw Show Closing Theme (Severely Edited) . Hokey Wolf: “Castle Hassle” NEW . Quick Draw McGraw Show Opening Theme (Slightly Edited) Quick Draw McGraw: “The Mark of El Kabong” DD Quick Draw McGraw Show Closing Theme (Severely Edited) . Quick Draw McGraw Show Opening Theme (Slightly Edited) Augie Doggie: “Party Pooper Pop!” DD Quick Draw McGraw Show Closing Theme (Severely Edited) . Quick Draw McGraw Show Opening Theme (Slightly Edited) Snooper and Blabber: “Chilly Chiller” DD Quick Draw McGraw Show Closing Theme (Severely Edited) . Loopy De Loop: “Wolf Hounded” NEW Hokey Wolf: “Tricks and Treats” NEW The Flintstones: “Love Letters on the Rocks” DD . Yogi Bear Show Opening Theme (Slightly Edited) Snagglepuss: “The Roaring Lion” DD Yogi Bear Show Closing Theme (Post 60’s / Pre 1988 version, with odd sound effects) . Top Cat: “TC Minds the Baby” DD The Jetsons: “Rosie the Robot” DD Disc Two: (NEW or DD = “Double-Dip”) Magilla Gorilla Show Opening Theme (Post Ideal Toys Version) Magilla Gorilla: “Makin’ with the Magilla” DD Magilla Gorilla Show Closing Theme (Post Ideal Toys Version ) . Jonny Quest: “The Robot Spy” DD . Peter Potamus Show Opening Theme (Post Ideal Toys Version) Peter Potamus: “Cleo Trio” NEW Peter Potamus Show Closing Theme (Abbreviated Post Ideal Toys Version) . Touché Turtle: “Rapid Rabbit” NEW . Peter Potamus Show Opening Theme (Post Ideal Toys Version) Yippee, Yappee, and Yahooie: “Black Bart” DD Peter Potamus Show Closing Interstitial (“We Really Hate to Tell You, But We Have to be Off”) Peter Potamus Show Closing Theme (Abbreviated Post Ideal Toys Version) . Atom Ant Show Opening Theme Atom Ant “The Big Gimmick” NEW Atom Ant Show Closing Theme . Secret Squirrel Show Opening Theme Secret Squirrel “Cuckoo Clock Cuckoo” NEW Secret Squirrel Show Closing Theme . Atom Ant Show Opening Theme Hillbilly Bears “Do The Bear” NEW Atom Ant Show Closing Theme . Frankenstein Jr. and The Impossibles Opening Theme Frankenstein Jr.: “The Shocking Electrical Monster” DD Frankenstein Jr. and The Impossibles Closing Theme . Frankenstein Jr. and The Impossibles Opening Theme The Impossibles.: “The Spinner” DD Frankenstein Jr. and The Impossibles Closing Theme . Space Ghost Opening Theme Space Ghost: “The Heat Thing” DD Space Ghost Closing Theme . Abbott and Costello: “Gadzooka” NEW (Abbott and Costello opening theme sequence plays again, once the cartoon is over!) Now, I expected some inevitable changes in content between the original announcement and the actual release. I even said so in my earlier post. But, I ask you… How does that former list emerge as the latter one? I’d sure like to know the story behind THAT! How, in the name of Holy-Hanna, do you omit Huckleberry Hound and Yogi Bear? Honestly, I can see dispensing with Ruff and Reddy, if one chooses to discount or minimize its “historical value” (especially as it would only have been Part One of a continuity)… but HUCK and YOGI? Really? And who, in the name of Equally-Holy-Barbera, edited those QUICK DRAW shows to play the opening and closing theme sequences SIX TIMES?! Not to mention surrounding the Snagglepuss cartoon with the Yogi Bear theme sequences – yet leave out Yogi himself? No Yogi... but even J. Evil Scientist appears on the set, in a Snooper and Blabber "Double-Dip"! Indeed, why must a short cartoon even need to be surrounded by the overall theme of its “larger show”, if the show itself is not presented as such? For instance, does the “Atom Ant theme” need to surround the Atom Ant cartoon – and once again encircle the Hillbilly Bears cartoon? Do we really need this TWICE... ...When we don't have the full show? Why not just add Precious Pupp and present an ENTIRE “Atom Ant Show” – complete with the opening and closing themes ONLY ONCE? This may very well be the sloppiest editing I’ve ever seen in a “professionally assembled” DVD! As if that isn’t enough sloppy editing for any DVD set, the familiar “Meet the Flintstones” theme plays over each disc’s Main Menu – but it is an “extended version” that is made so by the abrupt and outright JARRING insertion of repeat passages into the theme! You’ve got to hear this to believe it! I honestly thought the soundtrack was skipping, until I realized what it was! Yes, it was more JARRING than even THIS! Why does this need to be? Isn’t the Flintstones theme long enough to play over a menu as-is without additional passages, ripped from its innards, that sound as if they were GRAFTED ON with all the finesse of Dr. Frankenstein… or would that be Dr. Franken-STONE? We have TWO Quick Draw McGraw shows! That SOULD be great news, because only FOUR such shows have been previously released on authorized DVD (Saturday Morning Cartoons 1960s Volumes One and Two) – but BOTH shows here are repeat-releases of THOSE SAME SHOWS! None of the vast amount of unreleased Quick Draw material, which COULD have appeared for this special occasion, did! The Peter Potamus cartoon is new to DVD, but the Yippee, Yappee, and Yahooie (a component part of the original “Potamus” show) is not! And, only TWO of those shows were previously released. Double-dips are unavoidable, especially if you’re trying to create an overall survey of H-B’s peak period. I expect that. You can’t do something of this nature without The Flintstones, Top Cat, or Magilla Gorilla – and they’ve already been released in their entirety. Okay to Double-Dip. Where double-dips should NOT occur are series where there is still a wealth of unreleased material, such as Huckleberry Hound, Quick Draw McGraw, Peter Potamus, Atom Ant, and Secret Squirrel. (That’s still a LOT of unreleased stuff, isn’t it?) NOT okay to Double-Dip! Especially TWICE on one set! The ONLY Extra Feature, on what should have been a very special collection, is a repeat of the “Here Comes a Star” tele-promotion piece to herald the coming of THE MAGILLA GORILLA SHOW in early 1964. Admittedly, it’s a nice look at the studio at its creative and professional height, with Bill and Joe getting lots of air time, hosting announcer George Fenniman, and promoting Magilla. Maybe I should "promote" SAFETY, instead! We'll do the PROMOTING around here... And do-oon't you for-get it! While it has already appeared on the MAGILLA GORILLA set of 2006, I suppose it’s worth including just for the visit with Bill and Joe! It WOULD have been nice to see something new, created or uncovered for this supposedly special occasion, though. Ah, but, here's a plus... a tre-men-dous plus! ...Take this down, Ding! Okey-dokey, Hokey! That Hokey's the greatest at.. at... whatever it is he does!! On the Plus Side, we have the DVD debut of Hokey Wolf – with not one, but two cartoons featuring the Phil Silvers-inspired character. And, speaking of wolves, we are treated to the first authorized DVD appearance of Loopy De Loop, as well. The Flintstones episode, “Love Letters on the Rocks”, was an unexpected – but excellent – choice to represent the series, plucked from the more adult-oriented First Season, and with “presumed marital infidelity” as its subject matter. The dialogue was particularly enjoyable throughout, and Jean Vander Pyl may have turned in one of her best performances as Wilma. “Love Letters on the Rocks” is the episode that introduced private-eye “Perry Gunnite” – a clever name-melding of then-TV icons “Perry Mason” and “Peter Gunn”, with the character of Gunnite coming across as a superb send-up of Craig Stevens’ “stony” (pardon) portrayal of Peter Gunn. Craig Stevens as "Peter Gunn" Raymond Burr as "Perry Mason"... Let's put their names together... ...And you get PERRY GUNNITE! Even the intrigue-style music, when Gunnite first enters the scene, is a right-on tribute to Henry Mancini’s underscore to PETER GUNN, which was used to open many episodes of that series. (I never realized how great a homage it was until seeing PETER GUNN more recently!) Kudos to composer Hoyt Curtin for that! Ya think Hoyt Curtin had this album? Though his TV career was “not such a much”, Perry Gunnite would remain a mainstay of the Flintstones comic books throughout the sixties – and even find his way into the ‘90s Flintstones run, published by Archie Comics. Does this ever happen to Peter Gunn? Actually, it HAS! The Touché Turtle cartoon was a true highlight of the set. Alas, only two of these have been released to DVD. Though there were never any on-screen credits, this series has Michael Maltese written all over it. It also introduces (if only in NAME) “Ricochet Rabbit” – not the Western character that would appear two years hence, but a super-fast varmint, the type of which Maltese would have plagued Quick Draw McGraw with a year or so prior. This is strictly my opinion but, wisely, the announced ‘70s material bit the dust, along with some of the more questionably chosen very late sixties stuff. Oddly, Scooby-Doo (from today’s perspective, perhaps the most famous H-B toon of them all) is not represented. I commend Warner’s uncharacteristic restraint in not reflexively shoehorning Scooby into this set, as he is available in SOOOO many other video venues. Finally, if there was one thing I was certain would be omitted – but, miraculously, was not – it would be the Abbott and Costello cartoon! …Though it is misattributed on the menu as a 1968 production, when the cartoon itself says 1967. The animated Abbott and Costello series, having debuted in 1967, was one of the very last of its breed… a five-minute cartoon short, designed to be “plugged-into” an afternoon, locally-hosted “kiddie-show”. Not unlike THESE made-for-TV Popeye cartoons. The once-popular after-school “host” format was in its own “last-gasps” by 1967, and I’m hard-pressed to think of any “plug-in” toons that might have come later. Batfink, perhaps? "Move over, Mel Blanc and Daws Butler -- Bud's on First!" A definite highlight to this series was Bud Abbott providing his own voice. This entry, “Gadzooka”, plays as if it may have been written by the great Michael Maltese (in sort of a Snooper and Blabber mode), whose own career at H-B was winding down, as the studio moved away from short gag cartoons, and is appropriate considering all the monsters the pair “met” in their later theatrical films! H-B also did “Laurel and Hardy” in a similar format, one season prior. H-B's Laurel and Hardy OVERALL: As I said in my earlier post: “This looks to be the most significant Hanna-Barbera DVD release in years!” Yet, somehow, Warner Home Video found a way to make this package (…to be kind) “less significant”. What should have been a celebration of the Hanna-Barbera cartoon studio at its best, was less a “celebration” and more of the kind of party planned by a butcher with eight thumbs, that was given on the wrong day, and where not all of the invitations were sent out. It's like no party I had before - that's for sure! I’ll end the review the way I began it, and say I’m still at a loss as to what to say about this collection. Despite all this “written analysis”, I still don’t know what I’ve got here! It’s not even a comprehensive survey of Hanna-Barbera cartoons and, thus, good for those who are less-steeped in H-B lore than I. Not, with some of the staggering omissions exhibited. I’ve never reviewed a DVD where I was honestly unable to recommend it to SOME segment of the population – but this may finally be it. ...Even though there are still many things to like about it. Okay, I’ll recommend this to zany Hanna-Barbera completists, like myself, who will enjoy the debut appearances of Hokey Wolf, Loopy De Loop, and Abbott and Costello – and the handful of other New-to-DVD installments, while pondering the collection that might have been. The rest of you can remain as confused as I am! Yeah, Huck... I agree. Let's turn the page on this, and get the rest of your cartoons released!
PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE TELL ME IT’S HERE….. 1. here come your weekend funnies!!! THIS ONE IS HILARIOUS…. every married man can appreciate the next one…ha ha… hmmm……
Amazon.com: Poster Metal Wall Tin Sign The Six Million Dollar Man Celebrity Poster TV Movie Poster Retro Gift Karaoke Man Cave Bars Cafes Decor Vintage Art Decorations Metal Signs8"x12": Posters & Prints
Comics, Vintage TV, Movies, Whatever
De ultieme comeback van onze geliefde misdaadschrijfster! Herontdek de vier televisiefilms van Murder She Wrote in één vierdelige boxset. Als er ergens een moord te betreuren valt, is onze favoriete schrijfster van misdaadromans meestal niet veraf. En als Jessica Fletcher haar feilloze speurneus volgt, valt ze soms moeilijk bij te benen. In deze vier afleveringen met speelfilmduur ontrafelt ze andermaal de meest complexe moordmysteries met haar vertrouwde flair en deductievermogen. Inhoud: South by Southwest (1997) A Story to Die For (2000) The Last Free Man (2001) The Celtic Ride (2003)
Remembering actor and Diff'rent Strokes star Gary Coleman through his five TV Guide Magazine cover images. |
Television in Florida started in an old theater in Miami. On March 21, 1949, WTVJ-Channel 4 began “telecasting” as the first TV station in the Sunshine State — and just the 16th in the nation. Three of the next six stations in the state would also call South Florida home. Here’s a trip through more...
Week of July 16 to 22 1966 TV Guide Fred Macmurray William Demarest My Three Sons on Cover Vol 14 Number 29 Issue 694 Western New York State Edition Fine Condition TV Guide is complete Ships flat and secured with cardboard Great gift idea Pictures are of the actual TV guide you will be receiving Please use the photos, any questions just send me a message
With Denver Pyle (left, bearded).
The Southern roots of the beloved 1970s television show
You can fund anything from a Happy Days production backed by the Fonz to a pizza delivery company. We show you where to go.
Doctors told Jason Gray-Stanford his heart and kidneys were completely failing, and that he needed an immediate heart transplant or he'd die within months
It’s difficult to believe that in the next few months, the actress – remembered by many as the glacially beautiful half of ITV’s 1980s detective duo Dempsey And Makepeace - will be turning 60.
Images from the cult television show The Prisoner mark the 50th anniversary of filming in Portmeirion, north Wales.
Whatever you do... don't mention the war!
Tim Lusher: The small screen takes a trip back to the 1980s this month, with dramas about Boy George, the day of Charles and Diana's wedding, an adaptation of Martin Amis's Money and the finale of Ashes to Ashes. But which are the most memorable shows of that decade?
When your socks looked like this.
Astrid Lindgren's little freckled face imp, Pippi Longstocking, made an immediate impression on her readers when she appeared in "Pippi Långstrump" ( 1945 ), the first in a series of children's story books. Pippi is the embodiment of the mischievous elf hidden within every child. Parents are always telling their young ones to behave, and sometimes they just want to run amuck with wild behavior. She's friendly and kind to everyone she meets - including criminals - but has no "proper manners" whatsoever, and as far as Pippi is concerned, who cares! Pippi, whose mother is an angel in heaven, and whose father is king of a South Seas island ( actually a stranded sea captain ), lives alone in a mansion called Villa Villekulla, and has learned to take care of herself....in her own inimitable way. She washes the kitchen floor by pouring buckets of soap water on it, and then skates around the kitchen in shoes strapped with brushes. She cleans the dinner table by folding the four corners of the tablecloth into the center, leaving all the dishes on it, and then throwing the sack into a drawer. If she finds a bit of old food later, it's all the tastier. Pippi isn't just a red-headed rascal...she has superhuman strength, too, like being able to lift a horse single-handedly. Where Pippi got her powers from is never explained ( nor how her pigtails stay air-born ), but since these are children's stories, why bother with explanations? The little girl never has to worry about money troubles because her father gave her a treasure chest full of gold coins to survive on. Annika and Tommy are two well-behaved youngsters whom Pippi befriends in town when she first arrives. They like to spend the day with Pippi and see what antics she can get herself into, vicariously enjoying her mischievousness without getting into trouble themselves. In 1949, Pippi popped onto the silver screen for the first time in the Swedish film Pippi Långstrump, starring Viveca Serlachius, an actress who resembled the dynamic Betty Hutton. She was such a hit with audiences, that ten more films followed, even though it was obvious that she was a woman playing a part meant for a child. It was not until Shirley Temple's Storytime ( 1961 ) that a child actress - Gina Gillespie - got to play Pippi. While this was an adequate version for American audiences, the best series that captured the true Pippi was the 1969 television series, starring Inger Nillson, a funny looking moppet who resembled the original book drawings of Pippi perfectly. Nillson had a natural charm about her that really brought Pippi to life and, unlike many child actors do today, she played her part without displaying an ego. The series was filmed throughout the charming villages of Kyrktrappen and Visby, showing Sweden in her days before the "modern look" took over. What makes the series truly entertaining is its gentle pace. It makes you feel like you are another child, tagging along with Tommy and Annika, to watch what Pippi is up to today. At one moment she may decide to go riding on her speckled workhorse, or buy out the candy shop. When the circus comes to town you can be sure Pippi will treat everyone to free tickets. No outing is boring because Pippi uses her imagination to spice things up all the time. This series, simply called Pippi Longstocking, was so popular that it was dubbed and released throughout Europe, Asia, and North America, repeatedly airing on television for many years. Children in the States who grew up with the show either remember with fondness the American voices who dubbed the main characters or the British voices ( which are featured on the DVDs ). The same year the series was released, its producers decided to edit segments from the show into a feature film version. This film, Pippi Longstocking ( 1969 ), was released throughout Europe and, in the US, and spawned another butchered compilation, Pippi Goes on Board ( 1969 ). Inger Nillson and the cast reunited then for two feature film versions of Pippi - Pippi in the South Seas ( 1970 ) and Pippi on the Run ( 1970 ), which were hurriedly made because all of the children were having growth spurts. Alas, these films lacked the laid-back charm of the television series which, to this day, remains the most beloved version of Lindgren's Pippi legacy. If you have a little one with a mind bent towards adventure, then this series is well worth checking out.
Maddie (Cybill Shepherd) en David (Bruce Willis) heten u welkom bij het Blue Moon Detective Agency, waar gevaar een alledaagse zaak is, zolang dit maar niet in de weg staat van hun wederzijdse verbale spervuur en non-stop gekibbel. Met gast optredens van Orson Welles, Eva Marie Saint, Whoopi Goldberg en Tim Robbins, bevat deze DVD box alle 24 afleveringen van het eerste en tweede seizoen. Een geestige mix van komedie en mysterie die MOONLIGHTING tot één van de meest geliefde series uit de jaren negentig maakt. Beeld: 4:3 Geluid: Engels (Mono), Italiaans (Mono), Spaans (Mono) Ondertiteling: Nederlands,Engels, Italiaans, Spaans Extra's: Documentaires: - 'Inside the Blue Moon Detective Agency - The Story of Moonlighting, Part Two' - 'Not Just a Day Job - The story of Moonlighting, Part One' - 'The Moonlighting Phenomenon'
Roy Clarke, the creator of Keeping Up Appearances, as well as other classic comedies including Open All Hours and Last of the Summer Wine explains Hyacinths enduring and global appeal...
One of the show's most popular characters will say goodbye
Man responsible for Henry's Cat and Noah and Nelly passes away just five days after Richard Briers, narrator of Roobarb
Pictures of comedian and actor Rik Mayall who has died aged 56.
Legendary Hyacinth Bucket, immortalised by actress Patricia Routledge in the hit 1990s BBC comedy Keeping Up Appearances, is back – but not as we know her, exclusive pictures reveal.