The Country Party - Starring Peter Barkworth

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  • Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025

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  • @deborahrobertson8606
    @deborahrobertson8606 2 года назад +189

    I was 16 when this was broadcast. People are so insulting about the 1970's -I suppose because of the industrial upheaval - endless strikes etc. But, the culture was so much finer than today. (Apart from the architectural vandalism which was horrific). Popular music and television were superb - unmatched by anything today. Just for an hour or so I can go back and immerse myself in genuine excellence, something we took so much for granted then. Thank you.

    • @Blonde_Somnambulist
      @Blonde_Somnambulist 2 года назад +16

      Totally agree 👍

    • @janicaribeiro6350
      @janicaribeiro6350 2 года назад +12

      100%

    • @sharoncox4776
      @sharoncox4776 2 года назад +22

      Well said. Oh if only we could go back to those days!! TV brilliant with only 3 channels as well!

    • @janicaribeiro6350
      @janicaribeiro6350 2 года назад +30

      @@sharoncox4776 I know ! And now 300 odd channels and nothing to watch !

    • @theresmore2learn516
      @theresmore2learn516 2 года назад +20

      Wonderfully said! I despise American tv and I thank God for the BBC and RUclips taking us back to a more gentle way!

  • @sheargillsparkie9588
    @sheargillsparkie9588 Год назад +13

    I’ve watched Saturday Party and the whole series of Telford’s Change, absolutely scintillating. Peter Barkworth was an amazing actor and many others of his time. They seem to capture the Englishness of what was becoming an ever changing world in their time.

    • @DrLauraJoseph
      @DrLauraJoseph Год назад +2

      You must also watch Late Starter if you loved those

    • @sheargillsparkie9588
      @sheargillsparkie9588 Год назад +2

      @@DrLauraJoseph thoroughly enjoyed Late Starter, his character was like a fish out of water. The ending was bit bizarre, not seeing the growing attention of one individual to whom he becomes indebted. Again, superb acting.

    • @nikkytek4552
      @nikkytek4552 2 месяца назад +1

      Well said.

  • @DevonDandy
    @DevonDandy 2 года назад +71

    Those were the days when the duration of a television play is not shoe horned into the straight jacket of a schedule slot. Once again this brilliant cast carry it off.

    • @judeirwin2222
      @judeirwin2222 2 года назад +6

      You meant “ strait jacket”, not “straight jacket”. I wish the Brits would learn their own language. Strait means narrow or constrained. Straight means direct, in a line between two points, even.

    • @judeirwin2222
      @judeirwin2222 2 года назад

      @@catrionarobertson9919 anyone who has visited the UK recently will be laughing. The British did have manners once upon a time. Now most are dim, blighted and numb to everything, oppressed by the inequalities of their sullen, hopeless society, suspicious of strangers, angry at anyone who is slightly different from themselves and yearning for a shot of their lost Imperial wealth and greatness. Arrogant - because which True Brit does not believe he or she is superior to all others, and resentful that they are fading into inconsequentiality in a world that has passed them by. Condemned by their own stupidity and self-harming isolation through Brexit, theirs is a dying culture. Violence, crime, child poverty. Zero hours contracts, wages marooned in the 1980s, falling house prices. A shrinking economy. Long live happy Britain and its smiling, polite, kind people. Doomed and dying. But keep up the pretence of your specialness. It's all you have left.

    • @RiaLake
      @RiaLake 2 года назад +2

      @@catrionarobertson9919 I wouldn't generalise regarding good manners and everyone can learn. Lol.

    • @DevonDandy
      @DevonDandy Год назад +5

      @@judeirwin2222 I am mortified,,humbled, by your superior knowledge, How can RUclips function without being policed by some one of your superiority

    • @Crystalquartz964
      @Crystalquartz964 Год назад +1

      @@judeirwin2222 How clever of you, delighted to read your superior comment

  • @Cortinaman63
    @Cortinaman63 2 года назад +40

    Stuart Fanning: Thank you so much for this, Peter Barkworth was a family friend, so I remember both him, and also Joshua Le Touzel (David) who was at my Stage School, with much affection, great being able to see this again, after all those years, and brings back such fond memories of two fine fellow Actors, I had the pleasure of knowing.

    • @roysaxon2619
      @roysaxon2619 Месяц назад

      He was a brilliant actor. ❤

  • @lesleyromani
    @lesleyromani 2 года назад +40

    Great to watch Peter Barkworth after all these years. Thank you!

  • @suevans6436
    @suevans6436 2 года назад +40

    Very well put together performance, wonderful to see so many long forgotten faces and the superb Peter Barkworth. Thank you so much.

  • @celiabeverton4514
    @celiabeverton4514 Год назад +24

    Always like Peter Barkworth so cool and charming, great times the 70’s

  • @ange9663
    @ange9663 Год назад +21

    Great thank you, anything Peter Barkworth is in is worth watching superb actor. ❤️

  • @rogermassey8844
    @rogermassey8844 Год назад +7

    Well written and well acted. Very enjoyable! An interesting time capsule but with some universal truths.

  • @barbarapalmer8224
    @barbarapalmer8224 4 месяца назад +7

    Peter Barķworth has lovely smile as well as being a great actor..

  • @ZefZerg
    @ZefZerg Год назад +11

    Many thanks RUclips for helping to highlight and preserve the quality of British television,and given us the opportunity to view episodes that I for one have never seen before 👌🏾

  • @colleendaumen136
    @colleendaumen136 3 года назад +43

    Brilliant play... also see Saturday Party with the same cast, both are excellent!

  • @david11978
    @david11978 3 года назад +30

    Superb acting, I remember watching it when it was first shown.Thank you.

  • @MrTang-qo9wm
    @MrTang-qo9wm Год назад +16

    Peter Barkworth could accomplish more standing still for several seconds than most other actors could do in two hours. Amazingly subtle and beautiful.

  • @DavidDavid-kl4ru
    @DavidDavid-kl4ru 2 года назад +18

    Marvelous. Fascinating insight into a lost world

    • @TenTenJ
      @TenTenJ Год назад +1

      At least Britain can hold onto their culture, americas ravaged by manipulative dribble.

  • @jow6845
    @jow6845 2 года назад +19

    This was good - it’s held up very well.

  • @englishweather9763
    @englishweather9763 2 года назад +41

    a delight to watch, times when everything was so much more tasteful than today.

    • @jasonchambers4495
      @jasonchambers4495 Год назад

      Black and White Minstrel show was on. Not such great times.

    • @JJ21210
      @JJ21210 Год назад +1

      Please don't make the mistake of glorifying the past. Every era has its pluses and minuses; the big minuses of past eras were amped-up racism and sexism -- life was pretty crummy for about 70% of the population.

    • @TenTenJ
      @TenTenJ 4 месяца назад +3

      @@JJ21210 has it improved?

  • @twinkle3026
    @twinkle3026 Год назад +16

    This series was originally screened on British tv back in the late 1970's, but i was too young to be able to take interest in it at the time, but now i have luckily found this Gem on RUclips, i am really enjoying watching it. I noticed the two very young Birds of a feather working in the kitchen! (Pauline Quirke and Linda Robson) who both went on to greater things! ...... Incidentally, Peter's character gave us a glimpse into the future, when he was conversing with the unconventional couple as he said to them, "until we have telephones with televisions attached to them, we cannot see who we are booking in!" Many thanks for resurrecting this wonderful blast from the past for me! xxxxx

    • @Ian-xm5on
      @Ian-xm5on Год назад +4

      Twinkle - did you notice too, the poe faced looking woman? She played the part of the Meldrew's neighbour in "One foot in the grave!" I recognised quite a few other actors.

  • @marshhen
    @marshhen Год назад +5

    These are a fascinating time capsule. I was only 8 years old at this moment but I feel a very strange nostalgia for this culture of my parents.

  • @GradKat
    @GradKat 2 года назад +44

    How could I have forgotten Peter Barkworth? He was on the telly all the time when I was young. Fabulous actor with a beautiful plummy voice. It’s a shame the quality of this recording is poor, but it’s still very enjoyable for all that.

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg 2 года назад +6

      Most of the '70s t.v. material was recorded on tape, so the blurred images you see now nearly 50 years later are all you're ever going to get.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Год назад

      Seems a bit of a prat here ?

    • @eshaibraheem4218
      @eshaibraheem4218 Год назад

      @GradKat: Yes, he's attractive, isn't he? Before six-pack abs became de rigeur.

    • @JJ21210
      @JJ21210 Год назад +5

      @GradKat, I think you meant to write, "Thank you, uploader, for making this available; if not for you, I wouldn't be able to see this."
      It's indescribably rude of you to complain about the quality of the transfer for something that was taped from TV almost 50 years ago. It's incredibly rude of you to be anything other than grateful to someone who has gone to the trouble of uploading this so others can enjoy it. Please don't ever be rude again. Thanks.

    • @mattdavies7398
      @mattdavies7398 10 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@2msvalkyrie529 It's acting, love.

  • @myotheraccountonothe
    @myotheraccountonothe 2 года назад +11

    Brilliant acting. Thank you for posting 😊

  • @dryflyman7121
    @dryflyman7121 Год назад +10

    This reminded me of just how repulsive smoking in restaurants was. Great play, love Peter Barkworth.

  • @maxinejacobson4006
    @maxinejacobson4006 2 года назад +22

    Thoroughly enjoyed this. Love the “stuffy middle class” theme, at least you can understand them.

  • @simonbath
    @simonbath 2 года назад +6

    thanks for this first class noursihment

  • @steverhodesvideos6244
    @steverhodesvideos6244 3 года назад +7

    Amazing. Thanks for posting.

  • @benjaminclasper9355
    @benjaminclasper9355 Год назад +12

    I wish people would stop complaining always about having perfect quality with watching because you can’t have ever watched old video tapes if you expect the quality to always be as good as modern video and RUclips quality and it is from 1977 after all what do you expect
    And about the number code at the top it doesn’t bother me really at all and it’s interesting to see aswell and it’s just because of it being a bbc copy too.

  • @marymary5494
    @marymary5494 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for uploading. 👌💕

  • @MrYorickJenkins
    @MrYorickJenkins 6 месяцев назад +4

    Mick McGathy Jack Jones-that takes me back! Names on everyone's lips in 1977. Utterly forgotten now. How many people under 40 years old knows or cares who they were? Vanity, vanity all is vanity.That bit of trivia from me aside, an excellent play, well acted, very sad and very true to life.

  • @kimbozw1808
    @kimbozw1808 Год назад +1

    thanks for posting. been searching for a while. mark shivas production.

  • @ria1636
    @ria1636 2 года назад +11

    Definitely needs new staff! Thank you for the two, very enjoyable uploads.

  • @Ian-xm5on
    @Ian-xm5on Год назад +4

    Superb. Thank you. ☺ The skill of the actors doing things and talking at the same time is impressive. Each person played their part!

    • @crystalawen
      @crystalawen Год назад

      What a strange comment ; that’s what actors do

  • @PeterShieldsukcatstripey
    @PeterShieldsukcatstripey Год назад +2

    Fascinating to go inside the lives of the middle classes. Richard was a tremendous and selfless host.

  • @HookBeak_66
    @HookBeak_66 3 месяца назад +1

    Reminded me of my catering days, which was always hectic. Nice to see Pauline Quirke(18) & Linda Robson(19) as waitresses they'd later go on to perform, in the sitcom 'Birds of a Feather'. It must be difficult to find that people, you've had for ages as staff : Both are thieves & one's a drunk.

  • @Chahlie
    @Chahlie 2 года назад +2

    Love the ending! :)

  • @charlesachurch7265
    @charlesachurch7265 Год назад +2

    Superb drama.

  • @Mick_Harrison
    @Mick_Harrison 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant!

  • @amsbestunderstanding1646
    @amsbestunderstanding1646 Год назад +8

    Good story. Life is something that unfolds while we're making other plans.... not sure who said that, but it's very often true.

  • @adrianmadden
    @adrianmadden Месяц назад

    Loved this, superb.......these Play For Today 'kitchen sink' dramas are compulsive viewing. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Peter Barkworth, not familiar with him.......but wonderful in these two 'Party' dramas.

    • @stuartfanning
      @stuartfanning  Месяц назад +1

      Suggest you check out two series Peter Barkworth starred in Telford's Change and Late Starter. Both on RUclips and he was great in both.

    • @adrianmadden
      @adrianmadden Месяц назад

      @stuartfanning Cheers.......have watched The Passenger.......which was great, then Saturday Party. Read up on Wikipedia........
      Today watched The Office Party. Will watch out for your recommendation. I love all these old Play For Today and Armchair Theatre dramas.......⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @Lakeslover1
    @Lakeslover1 2 года назад +3

    I loved it !

  • @finolaomurchu8217
    @finolaomurchu8217 Год назад +8

    The pregnant girlfriend meeting wife, I was not expecting that. Then I see the actor who played the vicar is called Colin Farrell. Very enjoyable.☘️

  • @FrederickBowdler
    @FrederickBowdler 2 месяца назад

    Great camera work 😊

  • @juliet7703
    @juliet7703 2 года назад +3

    Nice twist at the end..

  • @melaniewalker5226
    @melaniewalker5226 Год назад +5

    It's nice to see the guests know how to use a knife and fork.

  • @Bambisgf77
    @Bambisgf77 2 года назад +8

    This was aired the year I was born. A curious look into life across the pond at that time.

    • @JJ21210
      @JJ21210 Год назад

      Pssst: Nobody says "across the pond."

  • @harmoniabalanza
    @harmoniabalanza Год назад +12

    For anyone who thinks this about "nothing": So much in here that reveals little chippings away at the fabric of society. at 39:00 the wife agrees to split up a property that was an integrated traditional farm so she can get more $$. The publisher laughs at a joke made by his author uneasily and a little too much, knowing that he himself doesn't really understand the joke and hoping the author doesn't cut into his profits. The "loyal" employees are cheats. The ex-wife is a piece of work, unsupportive, completely oblivious to why Richard gave up his money grubbing profession in the city. And when her daughter tries so hard to bring her parents back together she even asks "why is it so important to you?" Say what??? The young gate crashers don't even appreciate how he goes to extra trouble to accommodate them. Bottom line--the dissatisfaction and mean spiritedness of spoiled people who don't give a thing to anyone and think the world owes them everything they want. Sad all around, and our protagonist is just trying to have a decent life that doesn't rob or insult anyone. Then comes a subtle change and we see a touch of the warm humane in various people. A very human story well told.

    • @globallove
      @globallove Год назад +3

      i want the whole thing (and the Saturday Party) annotated like this. i pick up on some of it

    • @roelienpostma2367
      @roelienpostma2367 Месяц назад

      Well described! Eloquent!

  • @jackiecampbell7903
    @jackiecampbell7903 3 года назад +4

    Great drama!

  • @dee4174
    @dee4174 5 месяцев назад +1

    What goes on in the kitchen is enough to put one offeating out! The wairtress with the cold and the vegetables on the floor! 😂

  • @clareshaughnessy2745
    @clareshaughnessy2745 3 года назад +15

    Ha! Linda Robson and Pauline Quirk in the Kitchen! I’ll keep an eye out for Dorian

    • @electricleg207
      @electricleg207 2 года назад +9

      She's up stairs in one of the bedrooms .

  • @ZefZerg
    @ZefZerg Год назад

    And again thank you RUclips!

  • @Bible5771
    @Bible5771 2 года назад +5

    The opening scene looks like the vicarage in Miss Marple’s the Murder at the vicarage

  • @Sunny25611
    @Sunny25611 2 года назад

    I wish I could watch this movie but I can’t because of the flashing numbers on it. Thank you for uploading I’ll try to find it another way ❤

    • @robyn203
      @robyn203 Год назад

      Yes I had that problem too but solved it by covering it up with some material draped over the corner of the screen.

    • @adamssoraya7505
      @adamssoraya7505 Год назад +4

      Just ignore it

    • @melaniewalker5226
      @melaniewalker5226 Год назад

      ​@@robyn203 😂

    • @rounz1
      @rounz1 Год назад

      @@adamssoraya7505 For real. I was so engrossed in the story I forgot it was there.

    • @mattdavies7398
      @mattdavies7398 Год назад

      Sunny, you're like a character in the play.

  • @jujulionesselsa1416
    @jujulionesselsa1416 Год назад +4

    I feel like I am there with them. "If Only"

  • @lb2505
    @lb2505 2 года назад +3

    love it

  • @swanvictor887
    @swanvictor887 Год назад +2

    as a film maker myself, my only regret about past film is that 16mm never lasts as well as 35mm, but of course, TV Budgets could not stretch to full-frame stock sadly. I hope one day, perhaps using new technology, in the future, every 70s film shot on 16mm can be not just restored but brought up to modern standards and colourized, as it was shot: I'm sure this could be done one day, although the costs of course, would be questionable. The videotape studio scenes from the 70s, still look ok, thanks to the quality of the equipment used, even back in those days!

  • @AntPDC
    @AntPDC Год назад +7

    A relief to see no performative hugging, high-fives and perpetual neuroses and emotional incontinence.

    • @thadtuiol1717
      @thadtuiol1717 Месяц назад

      A relief to see a slice of England before it became so Americanised

    • @kibbylollabee1259
      @kibbylollabee1259 12 дней назад

      @@thadtuiol1717. As an American, I apologize. I don’t like the way my compatriots behave any more than you do. I often muse that people are acting like actors on sit coms. Sorry.

  • @larkatmic
    @larkatmic Год назад +21

    Ahhh. The slower paced and quiet pause of 1970s TV storytelling and broadcasting. It sure beats the ear assaulting rushed abrasive ness and degenerate dark story content of today.

    • @thadtuiol1717
      @thadtuiol1717 Месяц назад +1

      From a time when half the country wasn't Americanised ADHD iphone doomscrollers.

  • @nickwalter9630
    @nickwalter9630 Год назад +1

    Touch of the Fawlty Towers about all this.

  • @roslynaubrey7766
    @roslynaubrey7766 Год назад +2

    Great, but why that timer???

  • @swanvictor887
    @swanvictor887 Год назад +2

    Good Lord! Mrs. Warbouys! AND Pauleen Quirk & Linda Robson! Were they conjoined twins lol.

  • @benjaminclasper9355
    @benjaminclasper9355 Год назад +1

    The scene at 43:40 the scene when outside couple come in, does anyone get the feeling a lot of the other people dining at the restaurant are staring them down judgemental stares as if they’ve never seen anyone in different clothing from theirs. The woman in the background at 44:05 definitely shows that I think in the blue dress staring daggers at them , it’s like saying to her “Oi you keep your nose out of other people’s business and affairs and get on with your own.” It’s also like “what the heck are you staring at eh?”

  • @Seaprincess6077
    @Seaprincess6077 Год назад +4

    Didn't his menu sound FABULOUS! Proper going-out-to-dinner-best-frock food not the sort of twiddled morseld we get nowadays.

  • @kattydover6356
    @kattydover6356 Год назад +1

    The pubs were great though!!

  • @paulgarrod1066
    @paulgarrod1066 2 года назад +20

    Peter Barkworth was a great actor (Telford's Change) but a great pity about the needless intrusive timer

    • @roslynaubrey7766
      @roslynaubrey7766 Год назад +1

      I so agree and so glad someone said so! What was the point of it?

  • @darrendodd6674
    @darrendodd6674 3 года назад +11

    It seems that Ted is now getting success with his tomatoes and, as a result, has moved away from the dreaded tomatoe chutney to more of life's delicate perks. He's definitely made progress.

    • @clareshaughnessy2745
      @clareshaughnessy2745 3 года назад +3

      Ah, but that was just the weather. Not enough sun that summer to ripen ‘em.

    • @thadtuiol1717
      @thadtuiol1717 2 года назад +6

      @@clareshaughnessy2745 Nonsense, the summer of '76 was famous for being incredibly hot and sunny!

    • @clareshaughnessy2745
      @clareshaughnessy2745 2 года назад +1

      @@thadtuiol1717 lol, that’s true actually!!!

    • @ria1636
      @ria1636 2 года назад +1

      Tomato. Lol

  • @gardenroom65
    @gardenroom65 3 года назад +3

    He lives in Folkestone

  • @bronwynbrown2693
    @bronwynbrown2693 2 месяца назад

    Don't no what the nomber going around on the screen ,

  • @bronwynbrown2693
    @bronwynbrown2693 2 месяца назад +1

    I loved the 1970 80s 90, dont like 200 it crap ,all cards no cash pay on ph ,extra, no ,and love the movie,s and sures, in those times, keep coming thank,s 😊

  • @roysaxon2619
    @roysaxon2619 Месяц назад

    Standards have fallen. No quality drama like this anymore.

  • @mungomuff9716
    @mungomuff9716 2 года назад +4

    The Vicker has a passing resemblance to David Walliams..

  • @lindabiggs3905
    @lindabiggs3905 3 года назад +9

    Mrs Warboys, one foot in the grave,,

    • @dilly1863
      @dilly1863 3 года назад

      One Foot in the Grave stars Janine Duvitski, Angus Deayton, Annette Crosbie, Richard Wilson!

    • @ppotter
      @ppotter 2 года назад +4

      @@dilly1863 and Doreen Mantle as Mrs Warboyes.

  • @stephenwitherington879
    @stephenwitherington879 2 месяца назад

    At around 45.00, PB informs two who have reservations that they are inappropriately dressed. This reminds me of a 'stuffy' US restaurant, some years ago, which adopted the same policy. Funny, isn't it, that, when Clint Eastwood turned up in his jeans, the proprietors found nothing wrong! Perhaps Clint has 'restaurant presence', unless, of course, he pointed his Magnum 45 (the most powerful handgun in the world) straight at them. That'd do it!

    • @thadtuiol1717
      @thadtuiol1717 Месяц назад +1

      Standards matter. Unless you want the whole world to resemble a Florida Walmart

    • @stephenwitherington879
      @stephenwitherington879 Месяц назад

      @thadtuiol1717 My point, as you are well aware, is how two-faced the majority of people are. That's right, if a movie star, billionaire, statesman, & so on turned up at Barkworth's place, or any other establishment, it would be she'll be right & no worries. It's called picking & choosing, in direct opposition to the logical approach 'all or none'. It isn't an issue of standards, quite simply the capacity to be sufficiently influenced by some but not by others. It's called discrimination.

    • @kibbylollabee1259
      @kibbylollabee1259 12 дней назад

      @@stephenwitherington879It’s called Privilege; and the British have refined it to an Art.

  • @mattmanjack
    @mattmanjack 25 дней назад

    I was hoping for a happy ending g😢

  • @rosemarywilliams9969
    @rosemarywilliams9969 Год назад +1

    😮So this was middle class... interesting!

    • @thadtuiol1717
      @thadtuiol1717 Месяц назад

      Yes, back when we still had one.

  • @rosemarywilliams9969
    @rosemarywilliams9969 Год назад +2

    🤢 that's sick server girl with the nose blowing... this is why I say a protection prayer with every meal if I eat out🙏

  • @benjaminclasper9355
    @benjaminclasper9355 Год назад +1

    I wonder how some of the wives at the restaurant got lumbered with some of those husbands in the first place. 🙂

  • @petewoodroffemusic
    @petewoodroffemusic Год назад +2

    Everyone has a public school accent and uses upper class language (apart from the servants ofcourse!)

  • @missiontent111
    @missiontent111 Год назад +2

    All of these plays from this period featured endless drinking of alcohol.

    • @AntPDC
      @AntPDC Год назад

      Nowadays it's hard "recreational" drugs and Big Pharma-prescribed mass-medication dulling the natural senses of children and adults. ADHD my bottom: the USA is now Ritalin Nation. Cheers!

  • @2msvalkyrie529
    @2msvalkyrie529 Год назад +7

    Oh ! A St Georges flag in opening scene . Wouldn't be allowed by BBC today . Not " diverse " enough and might offend new Britons..

    • @carolthomas8528
      @carolthomas8528 Год назад

      Maybe it’s to celebrate Shakespeare’s birthday.

    • @JJ21210
      @JJ21210 Год назад +2

      Yes, be snide about diversity (which is the hallmark of Nature) -- that really shows you in a great light.

    • @mattdavies7398
      @mattdavies7398 Год назад +1

      Msvalkyrie, don't be a prig.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 4 месяца назад +2

      Why are you upset.? You know it's true...?
      Look at the fuss about Keir Starmer giving a speech with Union Jack in background..?!?

  • @cindersmolloy6584
    @cindersmolloy6584 4 месяца назад

    An indictment of a man being too good and too accommodating. He is taken advantage of by practically everyone through his weakness. Very well portayed and could easily have been overdone. Now at a srage where he has to start again from scratch with a child he may not have planned.

  • @AntPDC
    @AntPDC Год назад +1

    Have these women no respect for male privacy, and shameless springing of "surprises" as part of their instinctive manipulations?

    • @TenTenJ
      @TenTenJ 4 месяца назад +1

      Male privacy? Are you referring to having an affair while one is married? It was a surprise birthday party so how would she know?

  • @mikemyers8064
    @mikemyers8064 2 года назад +1

    👍🏻

  • @fraseredk7433
    @fraseredk7433 3 года назад

    Is that Arthur Daley?

    • @pornlove99
      @pornlove99 3 года назад

      No... Sh1t hed

    • @fraseredk7433
      @fraseredk7433 3 года назад +1

      @@pornlove99 i was referring to Mr Jones not Richard. Passing resemblance

  • @benjaminclasper9355
    @benjaminclasper9355 Год назад +1

    And Susan never said she wanted someone to keep her in horses and clothing everything else as you said you old hazbeen.

  • @pmullins1495
    @pmullins1495 Год назад +1

    This grass is growing too s l o w l y.

    • @TenTenJ
      @TenTenJ 4 месяца назад

      Did you watch The Saturday Party? It’s kind of the part one of this play. And if you had watched that, this entire second play would be fascinating.

  • @electrictofumuffins6384
    @electrictofumuffins6384 Год назад

    What a collection of cnuts. They're so desperate for fools gold and meanwhile trach the only thing they have of real value. Very good production. Thank you.

  • @deegeraghty9426
    @deegeraghty9426 Год назад +1

    What a miserable man! Had everything, had nothing.

  • @abcmyrie
    @abcmyrie Год назад

    19:32

  • @keithnaylor1981
    @keithnaylor1981 3 года назад +4

    Wow another classic play, best stick something annoying and distracting on the screen!

  • @crystalawen
    @crystalawen Год назад +1

    ‘You’re a reed’ ...!

  • @paulgrieve7031
    @paulgrieve7031 2 года назад

    Shades of Fawlty what!

  • @chrisrainbow2393
    @chrisrainbow2393 Год назад

    Supurb

  • @suzyp7178
    @suzyp7178 Год назад

    For the price of a duck.

  • @thadtuiol1717
    @thadtuiol1717 Месяц назад

    This just shows how bad native-born British service industry workers were during the 70s. Thankfully, we then had mass immigration and now we have lots of great waiters, cooks and bartenders.

  • @benjaminclasper9355
    @benjaminclasper9355 Год назад

    Gosh the daughter Emma in the story seems very much kind of jumping the gun especially the fact that she arranged this dinner at her father’s restaurant in the country without much permission from the rest of the family and without her mother knowing and she’s got a sarcastic kind of classy cheekiness about her and just very kind of an adult thinking that she’s the arranger for all of this and kind of vivacious in a manipulative sort of way tricking with her mother, and as well did the thought not strike any of the family members especially the children that their father may have divorced and that he had remarried in a way it is Richard’s fault I think partly with him to blame just that he must have been desperate to be in a relationship with another woman but then again it should be a free country for him shouldn’t it as he had divorced anyway previously from his wife Jane but then it’s understandable on one hand why seeing his new wife there would be a shock and the family would be disappointed and as well I would have thought that Richard would have informed Jane or Emma that his current wife would perhaps visit later on and join them and it doesn’t seem much of a family occasion by the end of the play with Richard’s new wife dropping by like that and nothings mentioned about Richard’s new wife really for most of the play before as if they really didn’t know that much before even though they left each other I would have thought they could have stayed in contact with each other with telephoning each other perhaps.

    • @Sharon-vq3bf
      @Sharon-vq3bf Год назад +2

      Richard did not divorce or remarry. The last scene with Jane indicated that they would be in touch with lawyers.

  • @anthonymee2599
    @anthonymee2599 2 года назад +1

    A middle class 1970s borefest Hoorah!!!!!

    • @Bevity
      @Bevity 2 года назад +7

      Indeed, but sometimes an old borefest is comforting.

    • @andersdottir1111
      @andersdottir1111 2 года назад +11

      What are you doing here.
      Be off with you.

    • @soniavadnjal7553
      @soniavadnjal7553 2 года назад +8

      @@Bevity nothing with Peter Barkworth in it is boring.

    • @Bevity
      @Bevity 2 года назад +1

      @@soniavadnjal7553 I was just saying in general ...

    • @Louise_xxx
      @Louise_xxx 4 месяца назад

      You're the uneducated bore!!😂😂😂

  • @IwasBlueb4
    @IwasBlueb4 Год назад +1

    What a stupid story...all about nothing..

    • @twinkle3026
      @twinkle3026 Год назад +6

      If you read between the lines and you look behind the facade, you'll find there is a lot going on. x

    • @harmoniabalanza
      @harmoniabalanza Год назад +5

      If you actually paid attention to the dialogue you'd see it's very much about something. But obviously something you know nothing about and of which you can't see the importance. Ho hum. But if you are older than 30, I feel very sorry for you.

    • @capesofwraith
      @capesofwraith 4 месяца назад +2

      A slice of life then.

    • @normabyde4766
      @normabyde4766 3 месяца назад

      @@harmoniabalanza. Being much older than 30, this play is entirely reminiscent of the ‘ dining out’ huge dinking ( and driving) ethos of those days.

    • @normabyde4766
      @normabyde4766 3 месяца назад

      Linda Robson and Pauline Quirke in early roles.