Steptoe And Son: A Perfect Christmas (Christmas 1974) Full Version

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  • Опубликовано: 24 дек 2012
  • Re-edited to include the missing scenes omitted from the dvd release.
    According to the BBC the original tapes have sustained damage so to this is the reason why the ones that are available on dvd are the edited versions
  • ПриколыПриколы

Комментарии • 885

  • @johnnykennedy4669
    @johnnykennedy4669 Год назад +75

    Far and away the finest sitcom in history. It had absolutely everything.

  • @eamonward9036
    @eamonward9036 3 года назад +29

    Happy memories when TV was good ☺😊

  • @gazza2933
    @gazza2933 4 года назад +40

    Superb comedy with two superb actors.
    The like of which we will never see again.
    Many thanks for posting. 👍🏻

    • @geoffpoole483
      @geoffpoole483 4 года назад +3

      Brambell and Corbett were actors first and foremost. Situation comedies in which comedians become actors aren't usually as successful.

  • @enzed6498
    @enzed6498 4 года назад +155

    Those were the days.Can we have them back please.

    • @helbentable
      @helbentable 3 года назад +22

      If only, end of a wonderful era sadly.

  • @davidneal9368
    @davidneal9368 2 года назад +32

    They certainly don't make programs like this anymore. Classic

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 9 месяцев назад +1

      Not when everyone whinges about feeling happy

  • @charliepeebles2531
    @charliepeebles2531 2 года назад +37

    This is a stunning illustration of the absolute genius of Galton and Simpson. Two characters, one storyline, one scene and they made 45 minutes of high quality comedy out of it. In the history of television, very few have ever been able to do something like that.

  • @innercircle341
    @innercircle341 4 года назад +171

    The 70s what a time to be alive, greatest decade for me

    • @Ailuj234
      @Ailuj234 2 года назад +6

      Me too. Loved the ‘70s, my Norton 750 Commando and all the discos!

    • @thehangmancometh1813
      @thehangmancometh1813 2 года назад +7

      it was pretty grim the extreme weathers, the economic down turns, trade unions casing mayhem. But i heard the birds were better looking back then and has a bit more dignity and self respect.

    • @BongWeasle
      @BongWeasle 2 года назад +5

      1977 Punk Rock. Glory days.

    • @1960dave1960
      @1960dave1960 2 года назад +1

      @@luxulyandalish6483 How come you were were born in the later 60s -early 70s, were you born twice…..???👶🏻👶🏻

    • @DeltaJazzUK
      @DeltaJazzUK 2 года назад +17

      @@thehangmancometh1813 Yes, it was really tough. One man's wage brought up a family and paid a mortgage. Plenty of council houses for those who couldn't afford to buy. Proper sick pay. Free education and a full grant to go to university. Full employment with skilled jobs available not just burger flipping and part time zero hr contracts. Highest happiness index ever recorded for British people. And the best comedy and music ever made. Terrible. Absolutely terrible.

  • @clairebaron1419
    @clairebaron1419 3 года назад +31

    At 44 years of age I bloody love this programme. My stepdad was nicknamed steptoe by me also liked this programme to. I used to take the piss out of him. He fixed everything with sellotape including his pants 🤣🤣🤣.

  • @grahamturner6119
    @grahamturner6119 2 года назад +10

    Better than than the crap on TV now adays not bothering to renew my TV licence

  • @chrisevans5259
    @chrisevans5259 6 лет назад +268

    Comedies from the 60's, 70's and 80's were brilliantly written and portrayed Britain and the world at the time, great actors fine tuned their craft in classic comedies like (steptoe&son, Porridge, Open all hours, Rising Damp, On the Buses, The Good life, Dads Army, George & Mildred etc..) the list is endless , then the brilliant Only Fools& Horses in the 1980s. It was a golden age of great comedy that we laughed at, cried at, and savoured over 3 glorious decades. I miss those golden days of Great Comedy.

    • @eamonward9036
      @eamonward9036 3 года назад +15

      So true we miss them happy times 😢😢

    • @Eleventhearlofmars
      @Eleventhearlofmars 3 года назад +23

      They’re so good that they still get shown at least every Christmas and bank holidays even though there are hundreds of channels today, just shows how watered down and crap tv comedy has become with various things effecting it.

    • @BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne
      @BibTheBoulderTheOriginalOne 3 года назад +5

      Let us all thank god for RUclips....

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 3 года назад +2

      @@dezertfox3681 I wonder what the world of the 1970s would have thought of Chris Morris Jam?

    • @stevesouthall4718
      @stevesouthall4718 2 года назад +4

      Loved those days of brilliant comedy don't think we will never see the likes ever again

  • @flappospammo
    @flappospammo 3 года назад +138

    Steptoe was a brilliant show , a 2 hander, incredible, superb acting - stunning script. A masterpiece

    • @eiruggriffiths8491
      @eiruggriffiths8491 2 года назад +10

      Absolutely top calss comedy from brilliant writer's. Far better than the rubbish we get today

    • @danw1374
      @danw1374 Год назад +6

      Proper classically trained actors and brilliant scriptwriting. It doesnt get any better.

    • @andrewcrossen3909
      @andrewcrossen3909 Год назад

      ​@@eiruggriffiths8491

  • @davidhayes2309
    @davidhayes2309 3 года назад +18

    Steptoe and Rising Damp
    BEST EVER.
    Will never be beaten.
    Pure class💎💎

    • @vsculpt
      @vsculpt 3 года назад +3

      I don't think anything could ever beat George And Mildred!!! Pure Genius.

    • @bretttobin9632
      @bretttobin9632 2 года назад

      It ain't half hot mum
      Dads Army (Although different sort of humour)

  • @bigteno4597
    @bigteno4597 2 года назад +15

    Loved watching these on Christmas Day evening whilst chewing on a selection box!!

  • @foothand1595
    @foothand1595 Год назад +11

    Every Xmas 🎄 I Watch this Classic well before it’s Time Definitely oldSkool

  • @carlrayson3104
    @carlrayson3104 4 года назад +67

    Watching this is the most Christmassy thing I'm going to do this year.

    • @andrewdaley3081
      @andrewdaley3081 2 года назад +4

      It's going to be even less christmassy this year. 🇬🇧👍 Barr humbug 😁

  • @JanelleBoo24
    @JanelleBoo24 3 года назад +23

    Harry H. Corbett Gone too soon, RIP

  • @jamesdunne1846
    @jamesdunne1846 4 года назад +51

    Probably the best Christmas special of any sitcom. A suitable end to a great series.

  • @chrisevans5259
    @chrisevans5259 4 года назад +190

    Merry Christmas to everyone who's watching this comedy classic in 2019 🎄🎀🎁❄

    • @JaythePandaren
      @JaythePandaren 4 года назад +6

      Chris Evans happy Christmas to you too

    • @liberaldriller9884
      @liberaldriller9884 4 года назад +7

      Merry Christmas Chris 👍👍😀😀😀

    • @vladimirlustblood9694
      @vladimirlustblood9694 4 года назад +5

      Happy Christmas to you all

    • @gazza2933
      @gazza2933 4 года назад +4

      All the best Chris! 🍻

    • @CDash162
      @CDash162 4 года назад +5

      We're all starting Christmas Early lol. Thanks Chris. Merry Christmas to you hun.

  • @JoshuaCraigStrain
    @JoshuaCraigStrain 2 года назад +62

    Probably the greatest sitcom series ending ever !! Not only does Harold finally win after losing this battle for over 10 years straight , but - Albert's happy and none the wiser !! WIN WIN !! TRULY BRILLIANT !

    • @markhughes6803
      @markhughes6803 2 года назад +6

      Was this the last ever episode?

    • @Puppy-ew4be
      @Puppy-ew4be 2 года назад +3

      I hope Harold told him what happened after he got back from Switzerland.

    • @Puppy-ew4be
      @Puppy-ew4be 2 года назад +5

      @@markhughes6803 Sadly yes

    • @markhughes6803
      @markhughes6803 2 года назад +4

      @@Puppy-ew4be Iv watched this hundreds of times never new that

    • @JoshuaCraigStrain
      @JoshuaCraigStrain 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@markhughes6803Yup

  • @vashna3799
    @vashna3799 11 лет назад +448

    About a million times better than any UK sitcom on the screens today.

  • @yellowbelly06
    @yellowbelly06 3 года назад +66

    Love the in-joke where he says ‘all them [Christmas shows] are recorded in October’ and you get the laughter of recognition from the studio audience.

  • @belenhernandezbenavente3420
    @belenhernandezbenavente3420 4 года назад +156

    You, British, master the art of comedy. Nothing like English sense of humour...
    Greetings from a Spanish fan 💕😄🇪🇸

    • @colinp2238
      @colinp2238 3 года назад +2

      The irony of Wilfred Bramble claiming to be proud to be British is he was from South Africa.

    • @capcompass9298
      @capcompass9298 3 года назад +1

      @@colinp2238 Then he was Britannic.

    • @susansherlock7474
      @susansherlock7474 3 года назад +9

      @@colinp2238 it is spelt Brambell and he was born in Ireland...

    • @colinp2238
      @colinp2238 3 года назад +1

      @@susansherlock7474 Yes thanks that was after a lot of beer but he was from Dublin and so not British I think Corbett was born in Asia where his father served in the army.

    • @Puppy-ew4be
      @Puppy-ew4be 3 года назад +2

      @@colinp2238 I thought he was Irish.

  • @davidjames81
    @davidjames81 3 года назад +64

    Harry was absolutely superb playing against Wilfred what a pairing the best ever , thank you chaps!

    • @Cheepchipsable
      @Cheepchipsable 2 года назад +1

      Pity they didn't like each other and Harry became trapped by the character.

    • @davidjames81
      @davidjames81 2 года назад +11

      @@Cheepchipsable I don’t believe they didn’t like each other , I knew his cousin David in Manchester and would tell me bits about Harry Corbett his war service etc left him as a chain smoker because of his nerves and maybe caused his heart problem also how he couldn’t get out of being the rag n bone man , even when he had a part in carry on screaming they played the Steptoe music, he said on of his favourite roles was in Trey Gilliam’s Jabberwocky where he as able to really let rip playing the squire he was a consummate actor his relationship with Wilfred was good and they made a huge living out of Steptoe even touring Australia several times but they did clash but had a lot of respect for each other , he told me Wilfred Was devastated when Harry died .

    • @thedisabledwelshman9266
      @thedisabledwelshman9266 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Cheepchipsable that is a complete myth actually.

    • @sallyjoan
      @sallyjoan 2 месяца назад

      No it is not.​@@thedisabledwelshman9266

  • @carolspencer468
    @carolspencer468 4 года назад +56

    Event the theme tune gives me a warm feeling! I've seen every episode and it never gets old

  • @karatefella
    @karatefella 4 года назад +62

    Brilliant writing by Galton and Simpson. Humour mixed with poignancy.

  • @daz3b560
    @daz3b560 7 лет назад +113

    2 of the finest comedic actors ever!!!

    • @petebest22
      @petebest22 4 года назад +6

      Rightly said 👍

    • @Whatthaonabout
      @Whatthaonabout 4 года назад +2

      Shame one was a Nonce!

    • @BIadesMan
      @BIadesMan 4 года назад +3

      Macky M was the old 1 a nonce

    • @Whatthaonabout
      @Whatthaonabout 4 года назад +1

      @@BIadesMan Yes m8

    • @BIadesMan
      @BIadesMan 4 года назад +2

      Raimon DIxon fuck knows , I asked Makey M who was the nonce,the old one was⚔️

  • @JoshuaMSP1995
    @JoshuaMSP1995 5 лет назад +129

    An absolute masterclass from Harry Corbett in this episode.

    • @danwall6662
      @danwall6662 2 года назад +15

      Don't forget the "H", otherwise we will be watching Sooty!

    • @sMansGuitars
      @sMansGuitars Год назад +1

      @@danwall6662 "Hello boys and girls!!" Both Harry Corbetts well deserved their gongs.

    • @ifgow
      @ifgow Год назад

      @@sMansGuitars HC got his in error as it was originally supposed to be one for HHC, but the middle H got lost in the paper trail so both ended up getting one.

  • @cazweston1148
    @cazweston1148 2 года назад +6

    Christmas 1974, too young to remember this was just 11 days old😀. Classic comedy watched a few repeats.

  • @unasperanza9803
    @unasperanza9803 5 лет назад +32

    That's real acting, no gimmicks or other characters with catch phrases, comedic and emotional .

  • @brianw9242
    @brianw9242 2 года назад +13

    Gosh What memories! Remember it so clearly from 1974 - the poignant parts when it is revealed Albert was an illegitimate child are so moving . Brian

  • @jameshill7729
    @jameshill7729 3 года назад +86

    pure comedy perfection there will never be another steptoe and son class

    • @michaelhayes1068
      @michaelhayes1068 3 года назад +16

      Even then , no matter how tough things were, there was always hope and a smile...and now it's all gone , and gone horrible wrong ...
      Just look around you, 😎

    • @susanhill8332
      @susanhill8332 3 года назад +10

      @@michaelhayes1068 Yes, I am looking all around me and I don't like what I see☹️

    • @michaelhayes1068
      @michaelhayes1068 3 года назад +4

      @@susanhill8332
      Life and love are much the same, they go hand in hand , until you have experienced them you truly dont understand..there for there not missed, and if we miss and see the change , I guess we are richer for knowing of them.. and the possibilities of enriching others lives and thoughts lay in our hands ....
      Respectfully 😎

    • @OscarModzz
      @OscarModzz 3 года назад +4

      Top class this stuff not the same these days

    • @mk2dubster
      @mk2dubster  3 года назад +3

      @Michael Myers Sanford and son is second rate to this

  • @benbim540
    @benbim540 4 года назад +34

    so finally Harold gets the girl and rides of into the night. A great end to a wonderful show. RIP, GUYS.

    • @therebel4332
      @therebel4332 3 года назад +2

      And Albert thinks he's pulled a fast one 😀 Its brilliant

  • @davidtomlinson6138
    @davidtomlinson6138 2 года назад +6

    Brilliant , I was 14 when I first watched this , days of great tv 👍🤗🎅🎄❄☃️

  • @rickykilby4672
    @rickykilby4672 2 года назад +14

    The pathos in steptoe and son is very apparent to me.On the one hand you have harold yearning for a better life,away from father and yet he knows,deep down he could never leave him.They really do love each other, underneath the petty squabbling and it's to galton and Simpson's great credit that they combine the humour and the pathos in such a way that makes the show hugely entertaining.

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 9 месяцев назад +1

      They're very similar to Clove and Ham in Samuel Beckett's Endgame

  • @davidcraig6328
    @davidcraig6328 2 года назад +12

    Must say Steptoe and Son was then and still is my favourite all time British comedy.

  • @bawhatever5260
    @bawhatever5260 3 года назад +9

    These are the best TV memories alongside other TV momentos! Better than the TV of today

  • @marccas10
    @marccas10 2 года назад +6

    We watch this every Christmas.

  • @Wolshanze
    @Wolshanze 5 лет назад +23

    Two of the best character actors this countries every produced period !

  • @BRUTUALTRUTH
    @BRUTUALTRUTH 4 года назад +33

    amazing that the topics the old man is discussing is STILL current and relevant x

    • @oldskoolfool141
      @oldskoolfool141 4 года назад +4

      Even more so, it's gone from 'embarrassed to be British' to offensive to even refer to yourself as such, at least back then England wasn't fighting for its very existence

    • @danw1374
      @danw1374 Год назад +1

      Things dont really change all that much.

  • @andyforshortbutnotforlong5351
    @andyforshortbutnotforlong5351 Год назад +18

    A masterpiece, loved the chemistry between Harry H & Wilfrid. 2 absolute legends 🤩🤩

    • @misterr279
      @misterr279 Год назад +2

      Ironically they hated each other off camera

    • @andyforshortbutnotforlong5351
      @andyforshortbutnotforlong5351 Год назад +3

      @@misterr279 so the story goes, but Harry’s daughter said they got on just fine.

    • @StephanieLaerkeAndersen
      @StephanieLaerkeAndersen Год назад

      @@andyforshortbutnotforlong5351 They didn’t hate each other. They worked together very well, and they respected each other even off-camera. It was one of those rumours that was started by the papers. Wilfrid Brambell and Harry H Corbett went on tour as well, worked together perfectly well and enjoyed their spare time together between shows in Australia, I believe it was. As the years rolled on, Harry H Corbett was particularly frustrated because he felt that he was becoming typecast, and the newspapers twisted what he’d said, and claimed that he hated working with Wilfred Brambell, which was not true.

    • @jessiejames7492
      @jessiejames7492 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@misterr279it was not true. They fell out when they were doing a tour in australia. Few shows a day, few days a wk. it got too much. Then wildrid brambell started drinking, not appearing fr work, getting drunk. That was the straw that broke the camel’s back. That ended their chemistry fr good. Watch the documentary: steptoe and son. Scandals and secrets. A very honest documentary by the people close to them, worked with them. They made television history. On any night S&S was telecast millions of people would stay home and watch. Harold wilson even had to call the director of BBC then to ask them to reschedule the telecast on his election polling day. One of BBC’s staff joked’He didnt win by a wide margin’😀😀

  • @leslierodgers2347
    @leslierodgers2347 5 лет назад +26

    Brilliant comedy duo, Couldn't find another 2 actors to take there place's. Thanks for all the laughter,

  • @stephenwilliams4801
    @stephenwilliams4801 4 года назад +34

    Still funny after all those years....😂😂😂

  • @Ravedaze.
    @Ravedaze. 4 года назад +50

    In 1974 our Christmas decorations were exactly the same 🤣

    • @zentil267
      @zentil267 4 года назад +5

      Yh I remember hsving to make those paper chains lol

    • @sharries.1297
      @sharries.1297 3 года назад +1

      Same here 😆

    • @Ravedaze.
      @Ravedaze. 3 года назад +5

      @@sharries.1297 yeh We had fuck all in the 70,s but we were happy

    • @Oakleaf700
      @Oakleaf700 3 года назад +1

      Paper vintage decorations from 1960's 70's are quite collectable..Nostalgia sells. Glass baubles too.

    • @Ravedaze.
      @Ravedaze. 3 года назад +1

      @@Oakleaf700 I thing the glass ones didn’t last long considering there was 8 In my family lol

  • @sheilagravely5621
    @sheilagravely5621 2 года назад +9

    Dec.26,2021. Boxing day. It's not the same at Christmas without my britcoms. God bless everyone and merry Christmas to y'all. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏👍🏻👍🏻🎅🤶🍭🎄❄☃️⛄🌲

  • @yeovil50
    @yeovil50 7 лет назад +73

    When old man Steptoe says at 35.25 , " well you didn't have to did you , you've got a Father " the emotion on his face is so touching .

    • @Derwent03
      @Derwent03 7 лет назад +22

      Michael Yeovil that was the genius of the writers and actors. Funny one moment - heart breaking another.

    • @jessiejames7492
      @jessiejames7492 6 лет назад +12

      ye . they were the best of british comedy

  • @emmapeart6101
    @emmapeart6101 Год назад +7

    Absolutely love steptoe and son. Great comedy, brilliant actors. Timeless classics 🤣.

  • @bennetpeter1968
    @bennetpeter1968 2 года назад +5

    brought up on this in the 70s loved it

  • @martinduffy6422
    @martinduffy6422 3 года назад +15

    Harry h corbett had so much talent unbelievable skill!!

  • @alisonkaye914
    @alisonkaye914 3 года назад +18

    The best comedy on tv by far not like the rubbish nowadays

  • @georgeprior1546
    @georgeprior1546 4 года назад +15

    Merry Christmas all! ❤🎄🌇
    Steptoe And Son ❤

  • @qpulse
    @qpulse 10 лет назад +22

    I agree Vashna3799. The old classic British comedys were first class. Steptoe & Son, On the Buses, Open all Hours, Only fools and horses. All could make you laugh. The modern "comedys" would bring tears to a glass eye :)

  • @chrislouca9758
    @chrislouca9758 Год назад +3

    Miss all the fantastic Christmas specials when I was a kid. Steptoe and son ,carry on Christmas, black adders Christmas Carol, knowing me knowing yule ,

  • @jeremyhaines4481
    @jeremyhaines4481 3 года назад +21

    Brilliant comedy and excellent writing

  • @jackismith4538
    @jackismith4538 3 года назад +15

    Thanx for showing this,great comedy sadly long gone,nothing worth watching these days. Pure comedy classic.....Love it. 👍🤣😂

  • @Merlin-lc4zu
    @Merlin-lc4zu 3 года назад +7

    The BBC and ITV have got a treasure trove of brilliant comedies from the golden age of the 60s,70s and 80s that will never see the light of day unless we watch RUclips quite simply because they are so terrified of offending someone.They are not dated in fact the topics covered are as relevant today as they were back in the day.Something has gone terribly wrong in this paranoid.dystopian,easily offended World over the last 20 years and i for one feel sorry for those who will never know what it was like back when we were spoilt for choice.You can trawl through hundreds of channels today and not find a decent comedy.

  • @83IronRyan
    @83IronRyan 5 лет назад +62

    I love how Harold finally had it his way. And he expected his dad to double cross him at the train station. The end of something wonderful. RIP my brothers.

    • @therebel4332
      @therebel4332 5 лет назад +11

      Best way to end it,, Harold got his win and Albert was none the wiser lol.

    • @JoshuaCraigStrain
      @JoshuaCraigStrain 4 года назад +12

      One of the few HAPPY endings for BOTH of them !!

    • @simonhunter8261
      @simonhunter8261 4 года назад +5

      He won one outher time in upstairs down stairs when Albert claims to have put his back out🤣 watch it for a Good laugh

    • @therebel4332
      @therebel4332 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@simonhunter8261Id hardly call that a win for Harold,, he was fooled for weeks waiting on Albert hand and foot. Albert was eventually going to make a mistake.

    • @simonhunter8261
      @simonhunter8261 2 месяца назад

      ​@therebel4332 your right sorry my mistake forgot about that having not watched it in ages

  • @vashna3799
    @vashna3799 3 года назад +12

    That dog swear box makes me laugh the way Harold handles it

  • @robp2282
    @robp2282 5 месяцев назад +4

    They were perfect together! The chemistry was so genuine. Whether they were at each others throats or showing genuine concern for each other, they were perfect!

  • @ProjectFlashlight612
    @ProjectFlashlight612 6 лет назад +61

    Sad, that this should be the end, even though the show had to finish at some point. Two quite unique and brilliant double acts, one writing one acting...making history. We miss you.

    • @scruffy281
      @scruffy281 4 года назад +2

      Was this the last episode?

    • @steveo7165
      @steveo7165 4 года назад +2

      They did make 2 film versions😊

    • @w1lf1ewoo
      @w1lf1ewoo 4 года назад +3

      The carried on with the radio show for a few year or two after this

    • @HammyMansell80
      @HammyMansell80 4 года назад +5

      @@steveo7165 this was the last TV episode....The films were made between Series 7 and 8 (1972/1973).

    • @sandrajovic9304
      @sandrajovic9304 4 года назад +5

      Disagree with the sad part. I felt the opposite and super happy for Harold. Time to leave the nest. Plus, the kid raising the parent thing, I *get* it.

  • @jeanlilymanwaring7125
    @jeanlilymanwaring7125 2 года назад +5

    Wonderful - what a series !

  • @mrk.dilkington
    @mrk.dilkington 4 года назад +9

    "Bathroom on every landing!"
    "How would you know?, you were only there a fortnight!" Classic genius. 😂😂

  • @elaineputland8458
    @elaineputland8458 4 года назад +13

    Love it when Harold gets excited when he sees his toy bus!!! 😃

  • @paulgilson2347
    @paulgilson2347 3 года назад +4

    Thankyou for this, great episode and uncut!

  • @aarondingain9006
    @aarondingain9006 2 года назад +10

    After all these years it's still bloody funny

  • @widbear3703
    @widbear3703 5 лет назад +43

    A masterclass in comedy mixed with deep pathos. Bears comparison with great literature, to be honest. I feel embarrassed to be British nowadays, but not for reasons Albert Steptoe would have mentioned.

    • @oldskoolfool141
      @oldskoolfool141 4 года назад +1

      Excuse me for asking but why would you be embarrassed to be British?

    • @Mrfairchap
      @Mrfairchap 3 года назад +6

      @@oldskoolfool141 Boris Johnson is one good reason, I would assume.

    • @BerzerkSquid
      @BerzerkSquid 3 года назад +1

      you should be embarrassed yourself, your generation let it happen

  • @leeenglandland2978
    @leeenglandland2978 4 года назад +17

    I cannot believe it, I have just watched this episode 25/9/19 and Albert say's when we're abroad we'll find to which tour firm has collapsed and Thomas Cook has just gone into administration 45 year's later !

  • @Eleventhearlofmars
    @Eleventhearlofmars 6 лет назад +33

    I had a mate in school in late 70s who did the best impression of the old man ever lol, he was one of them kids who had an old mans face when he was 11-12 ha

    • @Puppy-ew4be
      @Puppy-ew4be 3 года назад

      Was his name Jamie Vardy?

    • @Eleventhearlofmars
      @Eleventhearlofmars 3 года назад +1

      @@Puppy-ew4be lol no. It wasn’t Jeremy corbyn either. 😁

    • @Puppy-ew4be
      @Puppy-ew4be 3 года назад

      @@EleventhearlofmarsCorbyn would have been the leftie geography teacher with non-leather patches on his corduroy jacket.

    • @Eleventhearlofmars
      @Eleventhearlofmars 3 года назад

      @@Puppy-ew4be I had a physics teacher who used to wear those cardigans lol, usually in some brown shade with shit brown armpads on the elbows. 🙄😂

  • @Mrphilharmonic
    @Mrphilharmonic 2 года назад +33

    Political correctness has destroyed real comedy. The whole point of comedy was to BE politically incorrect. Now we can't laugh at anything anymore, least of all ourselves. So sad.

    • @Porch.monkey.slayer
      @Porch.monkey.slayer Месяц назад +3

      Only bcs people followed the made up pc rules! if nobody followed them what they gunna do? Chuck everyone in prison? its not a law or act of parliament so why did everyone decide they had to obey it all!?!? i was an 80s kid and a spade will always be a spade.. i say what i like and like what i bloody well say 😂

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 Месяц назад +2

      I laugh at whatever I find funny which includes pitch-black humour

    • @beaufighter245
      @beaufighter245 4 дня назад

      ​@@Porch.monkey.slayersame here👍. Too many melts looking for how they can be offended.

  • @mattyfilmgeek
    @mattyfilmgeek 7 лет назад +119

    Aaaarrrrooold!!!!!.....a true British comedy classic, so many great comedies in the 70s...Porridge, Rising Damp, Fawlty Towers, Are You Being Served, George & Mildred, Love Thy Neighbour, Bless This House, Please Sir etc etc...the list is endless and I'm a huge fan of them all...great days 😊

    • @derby1884
      @derby1884 6 лет назад +14

      Don't forget On The Buses!

    • @afrafernandes4680
      @afrafernandes4680 5 лет назад +4

      Yea... not forgetting more like Mind your language Fresh fields and French fields, Grace and favour , May to December, only when i laugh.

    • @martinpowell5769
      @martinpowell5769 5 лет назад +6

      Matt, Absolutely correct my friend, now we have nothing- perhaps recently, Phoenix nights with Peter Kay was wonderful- also Only fools & horses probably
      the best ever

    • @stevesingh3705
      @stevesingh3705 5 лет назад

      Martin Powell I found another one by mistake, called don’t drink the water

    • @stevesingh3705
      @stevesingh3705 5 лет назад

      It’s a spinoff from on the buses

  • @courtneybeer7650
    @courtneybeer7650 8 лет назад +82

    I've been watching these with my dad since I was 9 and now I'm 16

    • @michaelgrace1298
      @michaelgrace1298 5 лет назад +4

      How was your 18th?

    • @pommiebears
      @pommiebears 5 лет назад +7

      Courtney Beer still watching now you’re 18? Lol! I’ve been watching these since I can remember.....I’m 44 now! Catch up! Lol!

    • @elliswright9907
      @elliswright9907 5 лет назад +13

      Courtney Beer I watched these with my mum at nine now im watching them on my own at 59 with lovely memories too 😆enjoy them as we did.

    • @kevinbaird7277
      @kevinbaird7277 4 года назад +4

      You will be watching these with your grand children in 50 years time, I have no doubt that you will not be the only one.

    • @Steve20127
      @Steve20127 4 года назад +5

      @@pommiebears . So have I and I'm 67!!

  • @tobyaughnotobi3919
    @tobyaughnotobi3919 2 года назад +5

    Just watched it, absolutely superb. Loved this back in the day, just one of the amazing comedies from yesteryear.

  • @handsometripod.6546
    @handsometripod.6546 4 года назад +11

    Can't think of a favourite comedy from that era, they were all fantastic. Rising damp, porridge, love thy neighbour, etc. 👍

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 2 года назад +5

    “Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”― Tennessee Williams..

  • @smithpm81
    @smithpm81 12 дней назад +1

    OUTSTANDING comedy, so happy i was a part of this history of TV and alive at this time

  • @tonychuter4830
    @tonychuter4830 6 лет назад +72

    The fools and horses of its day...because of the PC brigade we will not see the likes of this again..a great British comady we all loved...

    • @stingray4real
      @stingray4real 5 лет назад +2

      Steptoe And Son inspired John Sullivan to write Only Fools And Horses when Wilfred Bramble appeared in one the Only Fools And Horses episode.

    • @joshmurphy8345
      @joshmurphy8345 5 лет назад +6

      @@stingray4real he wasn't in only fools & horses

    • @mk2dubster
      @mk2dubster  5 лет назад +6

      He was cast in an episode of Citizen Smith as the elevator operator

    • @Eleventhearlofmars
      @Eleventhearlofmars 4 года назад +1

      mk5dubster yep, that was John Sullivan written comedy, I think the guy above is getting mixed up with OFAH.

  • @123Scears123
    @123Scears123 7 лет назад +33

    I was 16 when this was aired for the first time. I wish I was 16 again!
    Thanks for the posting!

    • @michaelfenn4479
      @michaelfenn4479 4 года назад

      Sad you wish to go back.....f you were 1 again youd probably hate it ha

    • @davidtomlinson6138
      @davidtomlinson6138 4 года назад +4

      I was 13 at the time of this , loved it ,great stuff 🎄 🎅 😁

    • @davidwolstenholme3672
      @davidwolstenholme3672 3 года назад +2

      well martin im nearly 77 and i would hate to be young in this evil world and worse is to come before its burnt up

    • @patrickpaganini
      @patrickpaganini 2 года назад

      @@aspirer7268 That's poetic. At least we share tragedy with everybody who came before us.

  • @triciamcquillan8011
    @triciamcquillan8011 8 месяцев назад +1

    Absolutely wonderful !!! Thank you.

  • @garyproffitt5941
    @garyproffitt5941 2 месяца назад +2

    Harry H. Corbett OBE (28 February 1925 - 21 March 1982) was an English actor and comedian, best remembered for playing rag-and-bone man Harold Steptoe alongside Wilfrid Brambell in the long-running BBC television sitcom Steptoe and Son (1962-1965, 1970-1974). His success on television led to appearances in comedy films including The Bargee (1964), Carry On Screaming! (1966) and Jabberwocky (1977).
    Early life
    Corbett was born on 28 February 1925,[1] the youngest of seven children, in Rangoon, Burma,[1] (now Myanmar) where his father, George Corbett (1885/86-1943), was serving as a company quartermaster sergeant in the South Staffordshire Regiment of the British Army, stationed at a cantonment as part of the Colonial defence forces.[citation needed] Corbett was sent to Britain after his mother, Caroline Emily, née Barnsley, (1884-1926)[2] died of dysentery when he was eighteen months old. He was then brought up by his aunt, Annie Williams, in Earl Street, Ardwick, Manchester and later on a new council estate in Wythenshawe.[1] He attended Ross Place and Benchill Primary Schools; although he passed the scholarship exam for entry to Chorlton Grammar School, he was not able to take up his place there and instead attended Sharston Secondary School.
    Corbett enlisted in the Royal Marines during the Second World War, and served in the Home Fleet on the heavy cruiser HMS Devonshire. After VJ Day in 1945, he was posted to the Far East, where he was involved in quelling unrest in New Guinea and reportedly killed two Japanese soldiers there whilst engaged in hand-to-hand fighting. He was then posted to Tonga, but deserted and remained in Australia before handing himself in to the Military Police. His military service left him with a damaged bladder following an infection, and a red mark on his eye caused by a thorn, which was not treated until late in his life.
    Career
    Upon returning to civilian life, Corbett trained as a radiographer[1] before taking up acting as a career, joining the Chorlton Repertory theatre.[4] In the early 1950s, he added the initial "H" to avoid confusion with the television entertainer Harry Corbett, known for his act with the glove-puppet Sooty.[4] He joked that "H" stood for "hennyfink", a Cockney pronunciation of "anything". In 1956, he appeared on stage in The Family Reunion at the Phoenix Theatre in London.
    From 1958, Corbett began to appear regularly in films, including an 'American' film Floods of Fear (1958), filmed at Pinewood, coming to public attention as a serious, intense performer, in contrast to his later reputation in sitcom. He appeared in television dramas such as The Adventures of Robin Hood [4] (as four characters in episodes between 1957 and 1960) and Police Surgeon (1960). He also worked and studied Stanislavski's system at Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop at the Theatre Royal in Stratford, London.
    In 1962, scriptwriters Galton and Simpson, who had been successful with Hancock's Half Hour, invited Corbett to appear in "The Offer", an episode of the BBC's anthology series of one-off comedy plays, Comedy Playhouse, written by Galton and Simpson. He played Harold Steptoe, a rag-and-bone man who lives with his irascible widower father, Albert (Wilfrid Brambell) in a dilapidated house attached to their junkyard and stable for their cart horse, Hercules. At the time, Corbett was working at the Bristol Old Vic, where he appeared as Macbeth.
    The programme was a success and a full series followed, continuing, with breaks, until 1974, when the Christmas special became the final episode. Although the popularity of Steptoe and Son made Corbett a star, it damaged his serious acting career, as he became irreversibly associated with Steptoe in the public eye. As a result, severe typecasting forced him to come back to the role of Harold Steptoe over and over. Before the series began, Corbett had played Shakespeare's Richard II to great acclaim; however, when he played Hamlet in 1970, he felt both critics and audiences alike were not taking him seriously and could only see him as Steptoe. Corbett found himself receiving offers only for bawdy comedies or loose parodies of Steptoe.[1]
    Production of the sitcom was stressful in the last few years, as Brambell was an alcoholic, often ill-prepared for rehearsals and forgetting his lines and movements. A tour of a Steptoe and Son stage production in Australia in 1977 proved a disaster due to Brambell's drinking.
    The television episodes were remade for radio, often with the original cast; it is these that were made available on cassette and CD. After the series of Steptoe and Son had officially finished, Corbett and Brambell played the characters again on radio (in a newly written sketch to tie in with the Scottish team's participation in the 1978 World Cup), as well as in a television commercial for Kenco coffee. The two men reunited in January 1981 for one final performance as Steptoe and Son in a further commercial for Kenco.
    Other work
    Steptoe and Son led Corbett to comedy films: as James Ryder in Ladies Who Do (1963); with Ronnie Barker in The Bargee (1964), written by Galton and Simpson; Carry On Screaming! (1966); the "Lust" segment of The Magnificent Seven Deadly Sins (1971); and Terry Gilliam's Jabberwocky (1977). There were two Steptoe and Son films: Steptoe and Son (1972) and Steptoe and Son Ride Again (1973). In 1966 he appeared as a narrator in four episodes of the BBC children's television series Jackanory, and he also had the leading role in two other television series, Mr. Aitch (written especially for him, 1967) and Grundy (1980). Corbett had a supporting role in the David Essex film Silver Dream Racer (1980), and also appeared in the film Hardcore (1977). In addition, he had a supporting role in Potter (1980) with Arthur Lowe on the BBC.
    Corbett recorded multiple 45rpm records, most of which were novelty songs based upon the rag-and-bone character, including "Harry, You Love Her" and "Junk Shop". He recorded a number of sea shanties and folk songs. In 1973, he recorded an album titled Only Authorised Employees To Break Bottles which was a "showcase of accents", with songs from Corbett in a range of accents, including Liverpudlian, Brummie and Mancunian; the title echoes a notice which is visible in the bottle-smashing scene in the film 'The Bargee'. The album was recorded in 1973 and released in 1974 on the Torquay, Devon-based RA record label with support from seventies folk band 'Faraway Folk': RALP Including the album, he released over 30 songs.
    Personal life
    Corbett married twice, first to the actress Sheila Steafel (from 1958 to 1964), and then to actress Maureen Blott (stage name Crombie) (from 1969 until his death in 1982), with whom he had two children, Jonathan and Susannah. Susannah is an actress and author, and has written a biography of her father, Harry H. Corbett: The Front Legs of the Cow, which was published in March 2012. Steafel published her autobiography When Harry Met Sheila in 2010.[4]
    Political views
    Corbett was a Labour Party campaigner, and once appeared in a party political broadcast,[8] and was a guest of Prime Minister Harold Wilson.[5] The television character Harold Steptoe appears as the Labour Party secretary for Shepherd's Bush West in the sixth series episode, "Tea for Two". In 1969, Corbett appeared as Harold Steptoe in a Labour Party political broadcast, where Bob Mellish had to argue against Steptoe's accusation that all parties are the same.
    As Prime Minister, Wilson wished to have Corbett appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE). Corbett was included with his namesake, the Sooty puppeteer Harry Corbett, in the 1976 New Year Honours.
    Health problems and death
    A heavy smoker all his adult life, Corbett had his first heart attack in September 1979. According to his daughter, Susannah, he smoked 60 cigarettes a day until the heart attack, after which he cut down to 20. He appeared in pantomime at the Churchill Theatre, Bromley, within two days of leaving hospital. He was then badly hurt in a car accident. The injuries to his face were obvious when he appeared shortly afterwards in the BBC detective series Shoestring. Other work included the film Silver Dream Racer, with David Essex, and a Thames Television/ITV comedy series Grundy, both in 1980. In the latter, Corbett played an old man discovering the permissive society after a lifetime of clean living.
    Corbett's final role was an episode of the Anglia Television/ITV series Tales of the Unexpected, entitled "The Moles". Filmed shortly before his death, it was broadcast two months later, in May 1982.
    Corbett died of a heart attack on 21 March 1982,[1] in Hastings, East Sussex. He was 57 years old. He is buried in the graveyard at St Michael the Archangel church at Penhurst, East Sussex. The headstone inscription, chosen by his wife Maureen, reads "The earth can have but earth, which is his due: My spirit is thine, the better part of me", from William Shakespeare's Sonnet 74. Maureen was buried alongside him in 1999. Corbett is commemorated in the name of the Corbett Theatre at the East 15 Acting School at Loughton.

  • @heleng6968
    @heleng6968 Год назад +7

    I couldn't stop laughing when Harold came in and was being sarcastic about the decoration's 🤣🤣🤣

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 9 месяцев назад

      I don't blame him. Tatty garbage

  • @lesleyhubble2976
    @lesleyhubble2976 5 лет назад +27

    Always found this pair sad, if you look beneath it, it was clever writing. Two people who had wasted lives and couldn't live without each other. The son never did anything with his life and blamed the old boy and the old boy wouldn't let him go.

    • @michaelfenn4479
      @michaelfenn4479 4 года назад +7

      Harold did a fair bit....but wanted a better life...al ert held him back with guilt....but in the end, harol loved his dad and stayed

    • @gavinstarling8737
      @gavinstarling8737 4 года назад +4

      This is such dark, cruel and depressing 'comedy'. Always made me feel so sad.

    • @kevcatnip7589
      @kevcatnip7589 4 года назад +3

      very predictive too,,,,familes pushed together through hardship

    • @dannywestern831
      @dannywestern831 3 года назад +7

      All great comedies have a sadness to them

    • @vantheman1238
      @vantheman1238 Год назад +2

      How perceptive of you Lesley thank goodness you gave us the rundown on Steptoe and Son 🤦‍♂️I mean where would we be without your breakdown of the show. Genius 😂😂😂

  • @oldskoolfool141
    @oldskoolfool141 4 года назад +33

    35.20 "you've got a father", killer delivery, to choke you up like that in the middle of all the jokes, G&S's writing combined with Harry H and Wilfs skills really was bottled lightning

  • @yamahattr6006
    @yamahattr6006 4 года назад +16

    Watching Christmas eve 2019 happy Christmas and a happy New year to all watching 😀🍺🍾🍷🇬🇧

    • @yamahattr6006
      @yamahattr6006 4 года назад +1

      @The Joker yes thanks the raising damp episodes were so good I haven't seen them for ages I love The Likely Lads as well from that era Sweeney professionals tv is rubbish today I just watch RUclips old school happy New year mate

    • @yamahattr6006
      @yamahattr6006 4 года назад

      @The Joker yes on the buses and George and Mildred were excellent all the best

  • @Nellyontheland
    @Nellyontheland 3 года назад +9

    I must have missed this one or the repeat when I were a kid because this is unseen by me.
    BRILLIANT. Comedy, pain, pathos. The joy of this is that it gives to both characters. It's Christmas so we all win. Brilliantly done.
    One thing I really enjoyed are the dramatic pauses. Today we never see a lull without something else going on. At times they are not waiting for a laugh from the audience but waiting for dramatic effect.
    Like I said. Brilliant.
    Thanks for airing.

  • @samholden4171
    @samholden4171 4 года назад +13

    Back when i used to love Christmas,now it's not the same😟🎄☃️

  • @graemehancocks4171
    @graemehancocks4171 6 лет назад +14

    A remarkably clear picture. Excellent!

  • @Crh198
    @Crh198 3 года назад +5

    Love it great comedy and the picture quality is great to

  • @zennor_man
    @zennor_man 5 лет назад +10

    Superbly written & fine performances from Wilfred & Harry H........this stands so well as classic comedy..

  • @garyproffitt5941
    @garyproffitt5941 2 месяца назад +2

    Henry Wilfrid Brambell (22 March 1912 - 18 January 1985) was an Irish television and film actor, best remembered for playing the grubby rag-and-bone man Albert Steptoe alongside Harry H. Corbett in the long-running BBC television sitcom Steptoe and Son (1962-1965, 1970-1974). He achieved international recognition in 1964 for his appearance alongside the Beatles in A Hard Day's Night, playing the fictional grandfather of Paul McCartney.
    Early life
    Brambell was born on 22 March 1912 in Dublin, the youngest of three sons born to Henry Lytton Brambell (1870-1937), a cashier at the Guinness Brewery, and his wife, Edith Marks (1879-1965), a former opera singer. His two older brothers were Frederick Edward Brambell (1905-1980) and James Christopher Marks "Jim" Brambell (1907-1992).[citation needed]
    Brambell's first experience as an actor was as a child, entertaining the wounded troops during the First World War. After leaving school, he worked part-time as a reporter for The Irish Times and part-time as an actor at the Abbey Theatre before becoming a professional actor for the Gate Theatre. He also did repertory at Swansea, Bristol, and Chesterfield.[1]
    In the Second World War, he joined the British military forces entertainment organisation ENSA.
    Acting career
    This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
    Find sources: "Wilfrid Brambell" - news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)
    Brambell had roles in film and television from 1947, his first being an uncredited appearance in Odd Man Out as a tram passenger. His television career began during the 1950s, when he was cast in small roles in three Nigel Kneale/Rudolph Cartier productions for BBC Television: as a drunk in The Quatermass Experiment (1953), as both an old man in a pub and later a prisoner in Nineteen Eighty-Four (1954), and as a tramp in Quatermass II (1955).
    He played Jacob, an immigrant from eastern Europe selling newspapers in Paris, in an episode of Maigret entitled "A Man of Quality", first broadcast on 12 December 1960.
    All of these roles earned Brambell a reputation for playing old men, despite being aged in his 40s. He appeared in the short film series Scotland Yard in the episode, "The Grand Junction Case". He appeared as Bill Gaye in the 1962 Maurice Chevalier/Hayley Mills picture, In Search of the Castaways. He was heard on the original London cast recording of the long-running West End stage musical The Canterbury Tales in which he starred at London's Phoenix Theatre.
    He also released two 45-rpm singles, "Second Hand"/"Rag Time Ragabone Man", that played on his Steptoe and Son character, followed in 1971 by "Time Marches On", his tribute to the Beatles.
    Brambell was featured in many prominent theatre roles. In 1966, he played Ebenezer Scrooge in a musical version of A Christmas Carol. This was adapted for radio the same year and was broadcast on the BBC Light Programme on Christmas Eve. Brambell's booming baritone voice surprised many listeners: he played the role straight, true to the Dickens original. In 1971, he starred in the premiere of Eric Chappell's play, The Banana Box, in which he played Rooksby. This was adapted for television under the name Rising Damp, with the character of Rooksby renamed Rigsby and played by Leonard Rossiter. Brambell also played Bert Thomson, an Irish widower, in the film Holiday on the Buses; the character in question started a close friendship with Stan Butler's mother, Mabel.
    Steptoe and Son and A Hard Day's Night
    It was Brambell's ability to play old men that led to his casting in his best-remembered role as Albert Steptoe, the irascible father in Steptoe and Son, a man who, when the series began, was said to be in his sixties, even though Brambell was only aged 50 in 1962 (thirteen years older than Harry H. Corbett, who played his son Harold). The series began as a pilot on the BBC's Comedy Playhouse, and its success led to the commissioning of a full series. It ran from 1962 to 1974, including a five-year hiatus. A constant thread throughout the series was Albert being referred to by Harold as a "dirty old man"; for example, when he was eating pickled onions while taking a bath and retrieving dropped ones from the bathwater. There were also two feature film spin-offs, a stage show, and an American incarnation titled Sanford and Son, some episodes of which were almost exact remakes of the original British scripts.
    The success of Steptoe and Son made Brambell a high-profile figure on British television and earned him the supporting role of Paul McCartney's grandfather in the Beatles' first film, A Hard Day's Night (1964). A running joke is made throughout the film of his character being "a very clean old man", in contrast to his being referred to as a "dirty old man" in Steptoe and Son. In real life, he was indeed nothing like his Steptoe persona, being dapper and well-spoken. He notably spoke with a distinct received pronunciation accent, in strong contrast to both his Cockney Steptoe accent and his native Irish accent, which he would use where the role dictated. In 1965, Brambell told the BBC that he did not want to do another series of Steptoe and Son, and in September that year, he travelled to New York City to appear in the Broadway musical Kelly at the Broadhurst Theatre. It closed after a single performance.
    Later career
    After the final series of Steptoe and Son concluded in 1974 Brambell had some guest roles in films and on television. He and Corbett also undertook a tour of Australia and New Zealand in 1977, in a stage production based on Steptoe and Son. He achieved recognition in many films.
    In 1982 he appeared in Terence Davies's film Death and Transfiguration, playing a dying elderly man who finally comes to terms with his homosexuality. His performance in this short film, a segment of The Terence Davies Trilogy (1983), won him critical acclaim.Brambell appears throughout the full 24-minute piece, but he does not speak a single word.
    Personal life
    In 1982, Brambell appeared on BBC News paying tribute to Corbett, after the latter's death from a heart attack.
    In 2002, Channel 4 broadcast a documentary film, When Steptoe Met Son, about the off-screen life of Brambell and his relationship with Corbett. The film claimed that the two men detested each other and were barely on speaking terms after the Australian tour. The claimed rift was supposedly caused in part by Brambell's alcoholism and supposedly evidenced by the pair leaving the country on separate planes. The claim was disputed by the writers of Steptoe and Son, Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, who rejected any hatred or conflict.[6] Corbett's nephew released a statement in which he said that the actors did not hate each other: "We can categorically say they did not fall out. They were together for nearly a year in Australia, went on several sightseeing trips together, and left the tour at the end on different planes because Harry was going on holiday with his family, not because he refused to get on the same plane." They continued to work together after the Australian tour on radio and adverts, with it being generally accepted that the relationship between the two actors was under its greatest strain during the tour, though Brambell and Corbett soon settled their differences "fairly amicably", and in the spring of 1978 performed a short BBC radio sketch entitled Scotch on the Rocks.
    Brambell was married to Mary Josephine Hall (known as "Molly") from 1948 to 1955.[9] They divorced after she gave birth to their lodger's baby in 1955.[10]
    In 1962 Brambell was arrested and accused of persistently importuning in a toilet in Shepherd's Bush, but was conditionally discharged.[11][12] Decades after his death it was claimed that Brambell was homosexual[10][13] but Brambell himself asserted "I'm not a homosexual ... The very thought disgusts me."[12]
    Death
    Brambell died of cancer at his home in Westminster,[14] London, aged 72, on 18 January 1985. He was cremated on 25 January 1985 at Streatham Park Cemetery, where his ashes were scattered. Just six people attended his funeral: his brother, his partner Raymond, Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, a BBC representative, and Maureen Corbett, the widow of Harry H. Corbett.

  • @richardhill9549
    @richardhill9549 4 месяца назад +1

    The Christmas just before I was born. Now 47 and still not seen a sitcom like it.

  • @SuperKauser
    @SuperKauser 5 лет назад +29

    Old is gold xx

  • @miladydewinter7770
    @miladydewinter7770 2 года назад +2

    Not seen this episode before - brilliant - thanks for posting.

    • @johnseven3695
      @johnseven3695 2 года назад +1

      the Christmas episodes are great

  • @martinplatt5928
    @martinplatt5928 4 года назад +10

    I remember this so well.....colour TV in our house......great memories.

    • @Gambit771
      @Gambit771 4 года назад +2

      Did you pay your pound to have a wireless licence?

    • @martinplatt5928
      @martinplatt5928 2 года назад

      @@Gambit771 Ten shillings not a pound

    • @Gambit771
      @Gambit771 2 года назад

      @@martinplatt5928 It was combined with a TV licence for £2 and you seem to not have remembered that your comment was about having a TV so I split the difference.

  • @Truth77772
    @Truth77772 2 года назад +2

    This was a magical era..........................lucky enough to appreciate it even though i was a kid!

  • @marieconnolly3965
    @marieconnolly3965 6 лет назад +159

    This brings back some fond memories, and much funnier than the current tripe.

    • @russellthompson9271
      @russellthompson9271 4 года назад +6

      There are hardly any sitcoms on the tv these days anyway!

    • @MOGGS1942
      @MOGGS1942 4 года назад +4

      @@russellthompson9271 Prime Ministers questions ?

    • @shanedarby4104
      @shanedarby4104 3 года назад +2

      Hahahaha hahah
      Hahahaha hahah
      Haaaahhh

  • @davegadge1
    @davegadge1 Год назад +3

    RUclips was made for this! Thanks for posting!

  • @chuckmoney1688
    @chuckmoney1688 2 года назад +1

    Although I watched these as a child on a BW baird TV, with constant vertical drift problems, I'd have those days everytime.

  • @Greenpoloboy3
    @Greenpoloboy3 2 года назад +3

    Born after this time but this is better than todays rubbish :)

  • @douglasmilton2805
    @douglasmilton2805 4 года назад +7

    Everything that's great about Steptoe and Son can be found in the very first episode, The Offer. It's hilarious but the end is heartbreaking - you just know that Harold's never going to get away. Thanks for this posting!

    • @Puppy-ew4be
      @Puppy-ew4be 3 года назад +2

      Hmm, not quite. Most of the Steptoe episodes in the 60's were about how much smarter the father was and how naive the son was, rather than the father holding the son back. The latter came to the fore more in the 70's. Plus the first series was like most comedy first series, not quite the finished product until series 2.

    • @earfortrance3776
      @earfortrance3776 2 года назад +1

      @@Puppy-ew4be there are many great episodes but my fave is certainly Any Old Iron you will never see it on tv tho coz its too PC. yeah your right tho it hit full swing at like the end of series 2

  • @fodsaks
    @fodsaks 6 лет назад +75

    Have you noticed that the best Christmas episodes are the ones set in the grimmest surroundings?
    Steptoe, Porridge, Rising Damp...

    • @jrgboy
      @jrgboy 6 лет назад +7

      Yes it's 'things can only get better', same as all the soaps, all death & destruction, if it all ran smoothly there would be nothing to laugh at..

    • @MrHimlay
      @MrHimlay 4 года назад +2

      All classic Greek tragedies.

    • @Gambit771
      @Gambit771 4 года назад +3

      @leslie graham I wonder if it is a coincidence that things improved after you left.

    • @patrickpaganini
      @patrickpaganini 4 года назад

      @leslie graham I'm in NZ too. 70s could be grim in London, but the TV made up for it!

    • @shanewilkes3690
      @shanewilkes3690 4 года назад +3

      Only fools and horses

  • @shirleyprice2436
    @shirleyprice2436 5 лет назад +50

    So un-political correct!!! Love it. I have the box set along with other 1960’s/70’s and 80’s sitcoms . Pure genius.

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 9 месяцев назад

      Politically correct is another name for boring

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@TheTigerStephen The passing decades have no identity anymore. Just empty years leading to nothing