BBC3
1 9 6 5 - 1 9 6 6
(UK)
24 x 60 minute episodes
BBC3 was a mixture of
humorous songs, sketches and newsy satire. The son of That
Was The Week That Was and a natural successor to Not
So Much A Program - More A Way Of Life, the series was
produced and directed by Ned Sherrin, and the main presenters were
Robert Robinson, Lynda Baron and John Bird, assisted by Denis Norden,
Patrick Campbell, Alan Bennett, Malcolm Muggeridge, Leonard Rossiter,
Bill Oddie, Roy Dotrice and John Fortune.
This late-night satire show is
now chiefly remembered for allowing the first known use of The F word
on national television - An event which took place on 13
November 1965 during an interview with Kenneth
Tynan about theatre censorship. Such frank discussions mingled with
sketches, filmed inserts and music in the program plan, but the show
never achieved the heights of TW3 despite employing writers
like David Frost, Christopher Booker, John Mortimer and Keith
Waterhouse.
A one-off special called My
Father Knew Lloyd George was made by the same team and transmitted
in December 1965 featuring an imaginary news scandal at the turn of
the century.
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Robert Robinson
John Bird
David Battley
John Fortune
Bill Oddie
Alan Bennett
Leonard Rossiter
Roy Dotrice
Harvey Orkin
Lynda Baron
Norman St John Sevas
Denis Norden
Patrick Campbell
Malcolm Muggeridge |
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