Charlie Drake | Archie Andrews | Playing the Field


returned Drake to his Mick and Montmorency roots as a hapless loser forever bungling the myriad jobs handed him by the labour exchange. In the seventies Drake left, for the most part, comedy to become a reasonably respected dramatic actor appearing in such high brow productions as the BBC's 1985 Dicken's adaptation  "Bleak House", but it is as the lovable little slapstick comedian that he is and will always be best known.

Another  top television personality to transfer radio success to the small screen was Peter Brough and Archie Andrews. This enormously successful comedy duo had been entertaining radio listeners for over a decade when they made the jump to telly. Brough and Andrews were a comedy team with a difference, a difference they shared with their American radio counterparts Edger Bergen and Charlie McCarthy. That's right; Archie was a ventriloquist's dummy, and the star of the show. (It's nice to see American audiences weren't the only ones to make an unlikely star out of a radio ventriloquist, I mean who pitched these ideas? a radio ventriloquist? who would have thought? <g>) Archie's first TV exposure came while he was still hot on radio with 1956's "Here's Archie" on the BBC. It wasn't until two years later when ITV premiered "Educating Archie" (named after the hugely successful radio show that would air steadily until 1960) that Archie came, literally, to life with special effects that were remarkable for their time. Audiences marveled as a fully articulated Archie moved about doing his naughty schoolboy shtick. Along with Brough and his wooden star the series featured the ever present Irene Handl and the soon to be legendary Dick Emery

Educating Archie's television success was short lived though, not because of viewer apathy but because of a bizarre and tragic twist of fate when Brough's father passed away and Peter decided to leave show business to take over the family textile business. Thus came to an end the career of  Archie Andrews, England's greatest wooden performer.


January brings a few fresh faces to the BBC America lineup. the most interesting of which are the women's soccer drama "Playing the Field"  and the hip crime drama "Undercover Heart". Playing the Field, premiers January 3, follows the ups and downs, on pitch and off, of Yorkshire's Chesterfield Blues Women's football team. Expect heaps of sexual tension and locker room melodrama. Undercover Heart, from the producer of the very popular but, in my humble estimation rather overrated, series This Life, and starring Stephen Macintosh, focuses on the lives of three detectives as they investigate the murder of a prostitute. Undercover Heart premiers on

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