Round the Horne is a BBC Radio comedy programme that was transmitted in four series of weekly episodes from 1965 until 1968. The show was created by Barry Took and Marty Feldman, who wrote the first three series. The fourth was written by Took, Johnnie Mortimer, Brian Cooke and Donald Webster. Round the Horne starred Kenneth Horne, with Kenneth Williams, Hugh Paddick, Betty Marsden and Bill Pertwee. [1] The following list shows the dates of first broadcasts and some of the principal items in each programme.
Series 1: 1965 | ||
1 | 7 March | Including:
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2 | 14 March | Including:
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3 | 21 March | Including:
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4 | 28 March | Including:
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5 | 4 April | Including:
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6 | 11 April | Including:
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7 | 18 April | Including:
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8 | 25 April | Including:
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9 | 2 May | Including:
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10 | 9 May | Including:
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11 | 16 May | Including:
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12 | 23 May | Including:
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13 | 30 May | Including:
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14 | 6 June | Including:
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15 | 13 June | Including:
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16 | 20 June | Including:
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Series 2: 1966 | ||
1 | 13 March | Including:
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2 | 20 March | Including:
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3 | 27 March | Including:
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4 | 3 April | Including:
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5 | 10 April | Including:
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6 | 17 April | Including:
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7 | 24 April | Including:
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8 | 1 May | Including:
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9 | 8 May | Including:
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10 | 15 May | Including:
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11 | 22 May | Including:
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12 | 29 May | Including:
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13 | 5 June | Including:
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Series 3: 1967 | ||
1 | 12 February | Including:
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2 | 19 February | Including:
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3 | 26 February | Including:
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4 | 5 March | Including:
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5 | 12 March | Including:
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6 | 19 March | Including:
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7 | 26 March | Including:
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8 | 2 April | Including:
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9 | 9 April | Including:
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10 | 16 April | Including:
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11 | 23 April | Including:
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12 | 30 April | Including:
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13 | 7 May | Including:
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14 | 14 May | Including:
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15 | 21 May | Including:
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16 | 28 May | Including:
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17 | 4 June | Including:
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18 | 11 June | Including:
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19 | 18 June | Including:
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20 | 25 June | Including:
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Series 4: 1968 | ||
1 | 25 February | Including:
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2 | 3 March | Including:
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3 | 10 March | Including:
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4 | 17 March | Including:
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5 | 24 March | Including:
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6 | 31 March | Including:
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7 | 7 April | Including:
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8 | 14 April | Including:
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9 | 21 April | Including:
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10 | 28 April | Including:
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11 | 5 May | Including:
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12 | 12 May | Including:
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13 | 19 May | Including:
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14 | 26 May | Including:
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15 | 2 June | Including:
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16 | 9 June | Including:
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(Kenneth Horne was unwell and did not take part in this programme.) [3]
Kenneth Charles Williams was an English actor. He was best known for his comedy roles and in later life as a raconteur and diarist. He was one of the main ensemble in 26 of the 31 Carry On films, and appeared in many British television programmes and radio comedies, including series with Tony Hancock and Kenneth Horne, as well as being a regular panellist on BBC Radio 4's comedy panel show Just a Minute from its second series in 1968 until his death 20 years later.
Barry Took was an English writer, television presenter and comedian. His decade-and-a-half writing partnership with Marty Feldman led to the television series Bootsie and Snudge, the radio comedy Round the Horne and other projects.
Julian and Sandy were characters on the BBC radio comedy programme Round the Horne from 1965 to 1968 and were played by Hugh Paddick and Kenneth Williams respectively, with scripts written by Barry Took and Marty Feldman. According to a BBC Radio 4 programme on the characters, they were named after the writers Sandy Wilson and Julian Slade.
Charles Kenneth Horne, generally known as Kenneth Horne, was an English comedian and businessman. He is perhaps best remembered for his work on three BBC Radio series: Much-Binding-in-the-Marsh (1944–54), Beyond Our Ken (1958–64) and Round the Horne (1965–68).
Martin Alan Feldman was a British actor, comedian and writer. He was known for his prominent, misaligned eyes. He initially gained prominence as a writer with Barry Took on the ITV sitcom Bootsie and Snudge and the BBC Radio comedy programme Round the Horne. He became known as a performer on At Last the 1948 Show and Marty, the latter of which won Feldman two British Academy Television Awards including Best Entertainment Performance in 1969.
Round the Horne is a BBC Radio comedy programme starring Kenneth Horne, first transmitted in four series of weekly episodes from 1965 until 1968. The show was created by Barry Took and Marty Feldman, who wrote the first three series. The fourth was written by Took, Johnnie Mortimer, Brian Cooke and Donald Webster.
Betty Marsden was an English comedy actress. She is particularly remembered as a cast member of the radio series Beyond Our Ken and Round the Horne. Marsden also appeared in two Carry On films, Carry On Regardless (1961) and Carry On Camping (1969).
Rambling Syd Rumpo was a folk singer character, played by the English comedian and actor Kenneth Williams, originally in the 1960s BBC Radio comedy series Round the Horne.
Beyond Our Ken is a BBC radio comedy programme first broadcast between 1958 and 1964. It starred Kenneth Horne, with Kenneth Williams, Hugh Paddick, Betty Marsden Bill Pertwee, and, as announcer, Douglas Smith. The title is a play on the name Kenneth and the familiar expression "beyond our ken".
Hugh William Paddick was an English actor. He starred in the 1960s BBC radio show Round the Horne, performing in sketches such as "Charles and Fiona" and "Julian and Sandy". He and Kenneth Williams were largely responsible for introducing the underground language polari to the British public.
Richard Bernard Murdoch was an English actor and entertainer.
Take It from Here is a British radio comedy programme broadcast by the BBC between 1948 and 1960. It was written by Frank Muir and Denis Norden, and starred Jimmy Edwards, Dick Bentley and Joy Nichols. When Nichols moved to New York City in 1953, she was replaced by June Whitfield and Alma Cogan. The show is best remembered for introducing The Glums. Through TIFH Muir and Norden reinvented British post-war radio comedy – amongst other influences, it was one of the first shows with a significant segment consisting of parody of film and book styles, later used extensively in programmes such as Round the Horne and in many television comedy series.
Much-Binding-in-the-Marsh was a comedy show broadcast from 1944 to 1950 and 1951 to 1954 by BBC radio and in 1950–51 by Radio Luxembourg. It was written by and starred Richard Murdoch and Kenneth Horne as officers in a fictional RAF station coping with red tape and the inconveniences and incongruities of life in the Second World War. After the war the station became a country club and finally the show became the chronicle of a newspaper, The Weekly Bind.
Stop Messing About was a BBC radio series broadcast in 1969 and 1970. Forced by circumstance into being a follow-up to Round the Horne, it retained a number of key talents from the previous show, with Kenneth Williams as the new show's main star.
Stephen Anthony Critchlow was a British actor, known for his work in the theatre and appearances on radio series such as Truly, Madly, Bletchley, The Way We Live Right Now, and Spats, along with radio episodes of Torchwood, and Doctor Who. He has also appeared in Kenneth Williams: Fantabulosa! as Kenneth Horne, Red Dwarf Red Dwarf XI as computer generated space ship captain Edwin Herring, Hattie as the Carry On film director Gerald Thomas and appeared in the West End version of The 39 Steps.
Just a Minute is a BBC Radio 4 radio comedy panel game, hosted by Sue Perkins since 2021. For more than fifty years, with a few exceptions, the programme was hosted by Nicholas Parsons. Throughout that time, Parsons appeared on every show, though occasionally as a panellist rather than as chairman. Following Parsons' death, Perkins assumed the host's chair permanently, starting with the 87th series. Just a Minute was first transmitted on Radio 4 on 22 December 1967, three months after the station's launch. The programme won a Gold Sony Radio Academy Award in 2003.
This is a list of events in British radio during 1969.
Oh! What A Carry On! was a 1971 compilation album of songs performed by actors from the Carry On... film series, and released on the budget Music For Pleasure label. Many were novelty songs with most, such as those by Jim Dale, having previously been released as singles. None were recorded specifically for this album or had any direct relationship to the Carry On films. For example, Kenneth Williams' songs as Rambling Syd Rumpo, which Gramophone magazine described as the best on the album, were taken from Round the Horne and Jim Dale's songs had been hits in the 1950s.
Charles Barry Johnston, also known as Barry Alexander, is a British writer, audiobook producer, radio presenter and songwriter. He is the eldest son of the BBC cricket commentator Brian Johnston. He was a member of the British vocal group Design in the 1970s and later presented radio shows on KLOA-AM in California, US and on BBC Radio in the UK. He is now an award-winning producer of audiobooks and has also edited and written several books, including biographies of Kenneth Horne and of his father, Brian Johnston.
This is a list of events from British radio in 1965.