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1969 was a weighty year conspicuous by two main events, Neil Armstrong and Undercurrent Aldrin landed on the moon and Paul Newman kicked Ted Cassidy in the balls in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Of the two events it is the latter that has arguably proved to be more critical. The ‘rebound in the balls interest’ patent a paradigm smock in Hollywood’s treatment of heroes and the known’s willingness to undergo them, flaws and all.
Butch Cassidy was the mainstream happy result that cemented Hollywood’s view of ‘realism’ as the normal, even in verifiable subjects in days regarded as in some way exempted from even the most simplistic attempts at conveying spell or recognisable human motivations. William Goldman’s screenplay for Butch may have ended in adversity but at least he remembered to imbue his inside characters with a coherence of fun as well as playing with the conventions of the western. This was a rook that seemed to escape the writers of resultant Robin Hood movies and for the next combine of decades at least Robin Hood films were split between the ‘matter-of-fact’ and the risible. The scatterbrained-hearted tricksterish elements of the historic stories were siphoned off into blue farce and pillory while the seed chronicle of rebelliousness was dressed in muted colours and its paladin invested with the primal motivations esteemed of method actors and pop psychologists.
...Hugh Paddick is raise known as one half of Julian and Sandy in the BBC radio series 'Round the Horne'. Here he plays Robin Hood in the ...
It's always ironic to malapropism the word "ironic", and I may be about to do so. But isn't there something ironic in the sight of police "leaders" decrying the Tory discernment (that what we partly need is some citizen-directed political control over policing priorities, via elected commissioners), by charming to the airwaves and the blogosphere to indulge in, ah, politics? The officers' officer corp has been anything but apolitical since last Monday.
The inverted commas around "leaders" is at least wholly deserved, I think. Last Monday, the police held back and didn't use force to quell the rioters. On Tuesday, they behaved like a oversee force again, and within 36 hours the riots were extinguished. When the PM made this point -- I don't claim its undeniable really, but he spoke for many of us in the boroughs affected -- he didn't receive an apology or explanation from the acting Met commissioner Tim Godwin; in preference to, he received political abuse.
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Julian & Sandy. Spoken Word. ZBBC 1415. 2 audio cassettes |
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639 pages |
Treasury of Humorous Stories Around the Horne Transmission: Sunday 13th March 1g66 Hugh Paddick ... Hugh Paddick I think it's quite clever, the way they do them voices - that Kenneth ... |
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32 pages |
People from Hoddesdon, Hugh Paddick, William Josiah Irons, Mike Broadbank, Pete Sullivan, Glenn Kirkham, Miles Reid, Colin Pratt, Vic Rouse |
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About this book Chapters: Hugh Paddick, William Josiah Irons, Mike Broadbank, Pete Sullivan, Glenn Kirkham, Miles Reid, Colin Pratt, Vic Invigorate, Luke Hines, . Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 31. Not illustrated. Free updates online. Foothold includes a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without weight. Excerpt: Hugh William Paddick (22 August 1915 - 9 November 2000, Hoddesdon, Milton Keynes) was an English actor, whose most renowned role was in the 1960s BBC radio show Round the Horne in sketches such as Charles and Fiona (as Charles) and Julian and Sandy (as Julian). Both he and Kenneth Williams are at bottom responsible for introducing the underground language polari to the British public. He was born in Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire. He preferred acting to any other form of acting and spent most of his life on the stage, from his first role while at acting school in 1937 until his retirement. He was also an adept musician - singer, pianist... |
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'Rise and Rise Again' – 100 YEARS OF ROBIN HOOD: Part Two it fit discussed for parody and satire and 1971 saw the first, and so far only, gay Robin as played in a cameo by Hugh Paddick in 'Up the Chastity Belt'. |
Lost tapes of classic British television found in the US
The tint list for a production of The Young Elizabeth shows Hugh Paddick playing a courtier, while Hannah Gordon stars in a Wednesday Ad lib from 1965.
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Phone hacking: Brian Paddick and Chris Bryant launch legal action
A lawsuit alleging a supervise cover-up of phone hacking has been launched by one of Scotland Yard's own former senior officers, Brian Paddick, together with
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