Midland Red
	 
	
	 
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	1 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  11:00am  
	 
	
	 
	 
It was a regular occurrence that stars appearing at the Hippodrome / Coventry Theatre would attend a service at Holy Trinity Church
As a chorister in those days, I met and collected autographs from, inter alia, Jimmy Clitheroe, The Kaye Sisters, Morecambe & Wise, Harry Secombe  
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	PhiliPamInCoventry
	 
	Holbrooks
	 
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	2 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  11:22am  
	 
	
	 
	 
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	dutchman
	 
	Spon End
	 
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	3 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  11:25am  
	 
	
	 
	 
I was in the audience with a coach party from the Howitzer Club! I think he was appearing as Aladdin? Every time he came on stage we were supposed to shout: "Baa, baa, galoo, galoo". I haven't the faintest idea why?
The club also gave each one of us a huge bag of sweets, far more than anyone could eat, presumably to keep us quiet. It didn't work!    
 
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	TonyS
	 
	Coventry
	 
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	4 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  12:06pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
On 29th Dec 2011  11:22am, PhiliPamInCoventry said: 
... Another favorite of mine was Mr. Pastry...
 
... and mine too! - great photo!    
What was the radio programme that featured Jimmy Clitheroe?
  
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	dutchman
	 
	Spon End
	 
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	5 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  12:21pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
It was called "The Clitheroe Kid" and was broadcast on the Light Programme on Sunday afternoons.
 
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	heritage
	 
	Bedworth
	 
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	6 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  3:21pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Jimmy Clitheroe was the oldest schoolboy in the country and he played gooseberry for years with his elder sister Susan and her boyfriend Alfie Hall. 
Believe it or not Judith Chalmers was Susan in the first series, later played by Diana Day with Danny Ross as Alfie.
The Clitheroe Kid did come from Clitheroe in Lancashire, he played the naughty schoolboy for a total of 17 series on the BBC Light programme. 
Peter Sinclair played his Scottish grandad, Patricia Burke and Renee Houston, his mother.
The scripts were generally written by the producer James Casey and Frank Roscoe. 
After a brief version on television, the Clitheroe Kid ended in 1972 following the death of Jimmy Clitheroe.
 
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	K
	 
	Somewhere
	 
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	7 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  4:17pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Can't say I really warmed to him, really.  But "Round the Horne", "The Navy Lark", "ITMA", "Archie Andrews"... Those were the days, eh?  I always listened to Round the Horne and later The Navy Lark when I came home from school for lunch.  Didn't want to go back after that!!! 
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	Dreamtime
	 
	Perth Western Australia
	 
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	8 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  4:29pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Did 'Worker's Playtime' ever visit Coventry?  Who compared that, was it Wilfred Pickles?
(it's ok, I'm just drifting back to Coventry for you folks!) 
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	K
	 
	Somewhere
	 
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	9 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  4:43pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
I would guess so... I remember "Music While You Work" being played when I was at GEC - but I don't remember it being played anywhere else that I worked.  I think the compere of Workers' Playtime was Bob Monkhouse.
Wilfred Pickles compered "Have A Go". 
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	TonyS
	 
	Coventry
	 
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	10 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  4:49pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Not sure, but I would have thought with Coventry's manufacturing base it would have hosted the programme at some stage.
Was this the show that Peter Goodwright found fame on? 
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	K
	 
	Somewhere
	 
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	11 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  4:51pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
I'm pretty sure they did - it would have been odd, if not, given the importance of it!
And - Charlie Chester, Peter Sellers, Tony Hancock, Frankie Howerd, Anne Shelton, Betty Driver, Eve Boswell, Dorothy Squires, Julie Andrews, Morecambe and Wise, Peter Cavanagh, Janet Brown, Bob Monkhouse, Peter Goodwright, Percy Edwards, Ken Dodd, Ken Platt, Elsie and Doris Waters etc... 
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	K
	 
	Somewhere
	 
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	12 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  6:11pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Just thinking about Round the Horne (It's coming... it's coming to a town near you... it's getting closer... it's nearly here!  D**n! it's gone again...       ) 
Rambling Sid Rumpo.  Sandy and Julian (would they get away with this now??)  The 80 year old nude cyclist of Polperro.  And it's all still funny!  It really was avant-garde comedy, wasn't it?
How about some of the other acts that came to the Hippodrome?
Like Hylda Baker and 'Gladys' "She knors, y'knor..."
Arthur Askey and Richard Murdoch
Mike and Bernie Winters
Max Bygraves
  
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	Midland Red
	 
	
	 
	Thread starter 
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	13 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  6:28pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
On 29th Dec 2011  5:55pm, JohnB said: 
On 29th Dec 2011  12:21pm, dutchman said: 
On 29th Dec 2011  12:06pm, TonyS said: 
What was the radio program that featured Jimmy Clitheroe? It was called "The Clitheroe Kid" and was broadcast on the Light Programme on Sunday afternoons.
  Ha ha I remember that. Used to listen to it on my way to Sunday School
  
Were you a member of the Black Hand Gang then?      
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	JohnB
	 
	Wokingham, Berkshire
	 
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	14 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  7:09pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
Ha ha - no, Corley Church Sunday School!
 
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	Adrian
	 
	UK
	 
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	15 of 327 
	Thu 29th Dec 2011  7:10pm  
	 
	
	 
	 
On 29th Dec 2011  4:17pm, KeithLeslie said: 
Can't say I really warmed to him, really.  But "Round the Horne", "The Navy Lark", "ITMA", "Archie Andrews"... Those were the days, eh?  I always listened to Round the Horne and later The Navy Lark when I came home from school for lunch.  Didn't want to go back after that!!!
 
So what year did you leave school Keith? You say you listened to them during your lunch break, yet I can only remember these programmes being broadcast on a Sunday. Around The Horne was first broadcast in the 60s as far as I'm aware... I may be wrong (I usually am).   
 
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