Page 1 of 1

o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sat Jan 01, 2011 9:13 pm
by marky No.1
Some nice view across Morecambe Bay. Eee the good old days, times were so very hard and simple.

Bartholomew & Wise doesn't sound right (while reading local rag)
Reply
So you are going to call them Visitor & Wise?

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sat Jan 01, 2011 10:38 pm
by George Dawes
marky No.1 wrote:Some nice view across Morecambe Bay. Eee the good old days, times were so very hard and simple.

Bartholomew & Wise doesn't sound right (while reading local rag)
Reply
So you are going to call them Visitor & Wise?



know where you're coming from..

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sat Jan 01, 2011 11:36 pm
by Keith
Excellent, as was the 'making of' documentary afterwards. Wonder where the pier & sand-dunes were?

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sat Jan 01, 2011 11:52 pm
by Christies Child
Keith wrote:Excellent, as was the 'making of' documentary afterwards. Wonder where the pier & sand-dunes were?


Lytham St Annes.

Best programme on TV this Christmas and New Year. Remember many of the sketches. Laughed till I cried then also.

Probably not funny to a lot of 'younger' types, but for oldies like me, excellent harmless entertainment.

Must get myself some M&W dvds.

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sat Jan 01, 2011 11:56 pm
by Seasider9601
Fantastic drama, and a superb documentary afterwards also.

The actors playing Eric and Ernie had the voices spot on !!

"Not now, Arthur !!" :lol:

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 2:40 am
by mrpotatohead
totally fantastic, unlike 3-5 today :!:

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 10:34 am
by Keith
Christies Child wrote:Probably not funny to a lot of 'younger' types, but for oldies like me, excellent harmless entertainment.


Not sure I agree with you, I think their humour is timeless. While some of the jokes may be lost by not appreciating how big the starts were at the time, the lines are still funny.

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 10:38 am
by Plain Peter
The Xmas special is timeless.
Daniel Rigby was superb and carried the drama, too much Victoria Wood with a fag in her mouth, no need for the titilation, and some of those outside locations were a bit odd.

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 11:39 am
by Keith
Peter wrote:too much Victoria Wood with a fag in her mouth, no need for the titilation, and some of those outside locations were a bit odd.


Which bit of "titillation"? The only bit I can think of was the stripper asking for a fag when she came off stage. I think that was very relevant to the story, reinforcing the young age and their not being 'worldly wise' as well as the type of shows they were playing too, ie an audience that had come to see female flesh not comedians.

I think the outside locations were odd because we no longer have a pier to use. Sand dunes was pushing it a bit though! The sunset scene and his dad fishing (with the tide out?!?) was around the Stone Jetty I think. I'd always thought he'd grown up around Christie Avenue? Was the house 'poetic licence' or did he grow up somewhere else?

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 11:40 am
by Sammy h
There was a scene where one of them was fishing and there was no water there, just sand :lol:

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 11:52 am
by Plain Peter
Keith wrote:Which bit of "titillation"? The only bit I can think of was the stripper asking for a fag when she came off stage. I think that was very relevant to the story, reinforcing the young age and their not being 'worldly wise' as well as the type of shows they were playing too, ie an audience that had come to see female flesh not comedians.


You're right.

Keith wrote: I'd always thought he'd grown up around Christie Avenue? Was the house 'poetic licence' or did he grow up somewhere else?


Christie Avenue.
42 Buxton Street (near Trimpell sports ground).
Peacock Lane (parents house near Hest Bank Hotel). Doris and her mate went carol singing there one night, and got invited in. He was wearing sky-blue socks and no slippers apparently :)

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 4:41 pm
by Freez
Yes he was born at Buxton Street moved to Christie Avenue in one of the houses that backed onto Crusty Pie, which you can now see from the superstore car park, he then bought his parents a semi on Low Lane before eventually buying them the larger house in Hest Bank.

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 6:58 pm
by Keith
Christies Child wrote:Probably not funny to a lot of 'younger' types, but for oldies like me, excellent harmless entertainment.


Force some youngsters to watch BBC2 right now and see if they laugh!

Elton John wanted £35 and two Luton players as appearance fee :lol: The entire Luton squad isn't worth £35 now!

Re: o/t Eric & Ernie the True Story on BBC2 Now

PostPosted: Sun Jan 02, 2011 7:14 pm
by Plain Peter
"Hello, my name's Eric, and I'm from Morecambe and Heysham!"
A one-liner not lost on us, but would be on most of the population.