Seven years after his death at the age of 62, family, friends and collegues of Les Dawson recall his life and career in the series celebrating notable British comedy figures.
This episode pays tribute to Bob Monkhouse and includes interviews with family and friends.
A celebration of the life and career of the late Jeremy Beadle, Britain's favourite TV prankster. Famous to millions as the face of practical jokes and camcorder calamities on TV, there was another side to Jeremy Beadle which was much less well known. There is no doubt that Jeremy James Anthony Gibson Beadle had the most remarkably fractured relationship with audiences throughout his career, from his early days as a DJ, journalist and concert promoter to his successful tv shows. When Game for a Laugh was at its height, 18 million people watched. Yet his prankster image made him an easy target for the press. However, his friends, colleagues and family talk about him as if he were a saint. And a very erudite one at that. Presumably the critics who vilified him for his "cruel" on-screen persona chose to ignore the fact that he raised an incredible 100 million pounds for charity during his lifetime. Friends and family tell of the presenter's private passions, and celebrity colleagues Chris Tarrant and Matthew Kelly also pay tribute to Jeremy, who died in 2008 at the age of 59.
The Inspector Morse and The Sweeney star is profiled in this edition with interviews with his widow Sheila Hancock and their three daughters.
The series pays tribute to the 1970’s police series that managed to define both the era and the genre. The show features interviews with Ray Winstone, Nick Love, Dennis Waterman, Sheila Hancock, Lynda Bellingham, Alan Ford, Billy Murray and real Flying squad officers from the seventies.