Steptoe & Son
Steptoe and Son, one of the comedy highlights of 1960's
BBC TV featured two rag and bone men and their run-down
junkyard.
Wilfrid Brambell was the quarrelsome and grubby Albert Steptoe
and Harry H Corbett (he added the H to distinguish himself from
Sooty's handler) was his restless son Harold.
While Harold continually fought to escape his junkyard life and
better himself (and 'pull a bird' ) wily old Albert always managed
to turn the situation around to restrain Harold's rebellious urges
to suit his own selfish and lonely existence.
Written by Hancock mentors Galton and Simpson, the show started
life as an episode of Comedy Playhouse and sprang from Ray
Galton's schooldays when he used to go totting, and in the hands
of Brambell and Corbett it ran for 12 years attracting an audience
of no fewer than 22 million at its peak.

This was despite the language, which was pretty daring for the
time - Lew Grade reputedly banned the show from his home.
Even Hercules, the Steptoe's horse, achieved stardom.
A genuine
rag and bone man's horse - he belonged to Shepherd's Bush brothers
Arthur and Chris Arnold - he was often recognised by children on
his rounds and offered carrots and sweets.
Brambell (who died in 1985, three years after Corbett), went to
great pains to enjoy playing Steptoe senior.
For the part of the
revolting Albert, he wore a special set of worn-down blackened
false teeth which he insisted were kept in a glass of his favourite
drink - gin and tonic.
In the early 1970's the US purchased the series and adapted it
into the all-black sitcom Sanford and Son.
Meanwhile, Dutch
TV translated the BBC series into Stiefbeen en Zoon, while
in Sweden it became Albert og Herbert.
There were two feature film spin-offs, Steptoe and Son
(1972) and Steptoe and Son Ride Again (1973).

|