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7 results found for '"Frankie Howerd"' in Person.

  • Cilla [23/01/1971] (1971 Television)

    Series
    Cilla
    Producer
    Michael Hurll

    Music/comedy series presented by and starring Cilla Black. The show includes a comedy sketch on Romeo and Juliet written by Talbot Rothwell (screenplay writer of the Carry On films, many of which starred...

  • Frankie Howerd Show, The [25/09/1968] (1968 Television)

    Series
    Frankie Howerd Show, The
    Producer
    Peter Frazer-Jones

    A one-off special comedy sketch television programme. The episode included a take on the final scene in Othello with Frankie Howerd and Cilla Black.

  • Speak the Speech (1964 Radio)

    Series
    There is a Play Tonight: Plays of Shakespeare in Performances
    Producer
    John Powell (2)

    Second in a 3-part series examining Shakespeare in performance. Devised and produced by John Powell, the programmes are compiled with recordings from the Sound Archives featuring voices and opinions of...

  • Shakespeare Without Tears (1959 Television)

    Series
    Frankie Howerd in...
    Director
    Eric Miller

    BBC television comedy series. Billed as ‘an episode in the life of a laughing stock of television’. Howerd plays an out-of-work, frustrated, small part actor, desperate to secure a Shakespearean role....

  • Three Seasons (1958 Film)

    Travelogue. English life in Autumn, Winter and Spring. Includes sequences from the Old Vic production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream with comedian Frankie Howerd as Bottom at the play rehearsal and Titania...

  • Two Gentlemen of Verona, The (1958 Radio)

    Producer
    Raymond Raikes

    Radio version of the play arranged and produced for broadcasting by Raymond Raikes. With Frankie Howerd as Launce and Perlita Neilson as Julia. The music is composed by Anthony Bernard who also conducts the...

  • Midsummer Night’s Dream, A (1957 Television)

    Series
    Theatre Flash
    Director
    Michael Benthall

    A 15-minute extract from the stage perfomance relayed from the Old Vic Theatre, London, and presented for television by Derek Burrell-Davis.