The Likely Lads
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The Likely Lads was a British TV sitcom created and written by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais. Twenty episodes were broadcast by the BBC, over three series, between 16 December 1964 and 23 July 1966.
The show was set in Newcastle upon Tyne, North East England and followed the friendship of two working class men in their early 20s, Terry Collier (James Bolam) and Bob Ferris (Rodney Bewes).
After growing up, going to school and the Scouts together, Bob and Terry are now working in the same factory, Ellison's Electrical, alongside the older, wiser duo of Cloughie and Jack. The show's gritty yet verbose humour derived largely from the tensions between Terry's cynical, every-man, working class personality and Bob's ambition to better himself and move to the middle class.
As Bob and Terry were two average working class lads growing up in the industrial North East, their hobbies were beer, football and girls. They were canny, which is to say street-wise, yet they stumbled into one scrape after another as they struggled to enjoy the Swinging Sixties on their meagre incomes.
After the TV show ended, sixteen of the twenty television scripts were adapted for radio by James Bolam, and broadcast in two series during 1967 and 1968. Produced by John Browell, the radio adaptations were recorded at the Paris Studios in Lower Regent Street, London using the original television cast. Series 1 was broadcast on the BBC Light Programme, then Series 2 on the recently launched BBC Radio 2.
Collected here are the 16 BBC Radio episodes.
- Addeddate
- 2018-10-14 17:30:44
- External_metadata_update
- 2019-03-29T19:52:54Z
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- LLRBJB
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- Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.6.3
- Year
- 1967
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Ed 999
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July 2, 2019
Subject: One of the best ever sitcoms of the Sixties
Subject: One of the best ever sitcoms of the Sixties
Just to make it clear, these are from the radio show, broadcast in 1967 and 1968, which only had these 16 episodes: two series of 8 episodes each. There were more tv episodes, so some sources suggest there are 20 episodes -- there were, on the telly, but not on the radio.
This recording of 'Goodbye to All That' is in any case actually the tv soundtrack, because I couldn't find the radio version. I posted these originally, but someone somewhere objected, which is odd because there are no surviving episodes in the Sound Archive so the Beeb can't market this radio show commercially.
That was anyway some years ago: the 50 year broadcast copyright term on these has expired since. So these episodes are now public domain.
This recording of 'Goodbye to All That' is in any case actually the tv soundtrack, because I couldn't find the radio version. I posted these originally, but someone somewhere objected, which is odd because there are no surviving episodes in the Sound Archive so the Beeb can't market this radio show commercially.
That was anyway some years ago: the 50 year broadcast copyright term on these has expired since. So these episodes are now public domain.
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