The shrill summons from 'the beast of Torquay' can only mean one thing - the most famous hotel in the history of comedy is once more serving its classic recipe for howls of helpless laughter. So here they are again - snobbish, boorish, disaster-prone Basil Fawlty, his vulgarly genteel wife Sybil, their cackhanded Spanish waiter Manuel and unflappable maid-of-all-work Polly. Together they ensure the funniest, best-loved sit-com of all time, a timeless masterpiece of frantic farce.
Four classic BBC TV episodes:-
Communication Problems
The Hotel Inspectors
Basil the Rat
The Builders
Written By
John Cleese and Connie Booth
First Broadcast
BBC2
19 September 1975
Number of Series
Two:
September - October 1975
February - March & October 1979
Last Broadcast
25 October 1979
AWARDS
BAFTAs for Best Sitcom & Best Light Entertainment Performance
Voted No. 1 in bfi TV 100 poll of all-time top British television programmes.
Author : Various
Performed By : Full Cast Production
BBC Audiobooks Ltd
Runtime : 1 hour 15 minutes
Type : Adult TV & Film Humor Radio Shows
Our Price : $13.49
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Author : Various
Performed By : Various
BBC Audiobooks Ltd
Runtime : 3 minutes
Type : Modern Classics TV & Film Humor British
Our Price : $4.99
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Author : Various
Performed By : Various
BBC Audiobooks Ltd
Runtime : 4 minutes
Type : Modern Classics TV & Film Humor British
Our Price : $4.99
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Author : Ray Galton and Alan Simpson
Performed By : Full Cast Production
BBC Audiobooks Ltd
Runtime : 2 hours
Type : Humor British Radio Shows Modern Classics Humor
Our Price : $18.49
Written By : Pete McCarthy
Narrated By : Pete McCarthy
Hodder & Stoughton Audiobooks
Length : 2 hours
Type : Autobiography Biographical Travel
Price : $16.75
The audio of the million-selling book - Pete McCarthy's hilarious journey in search of his Irish roots.
McCarthy's tale of his hilarious trip around Ireland has gained thousands of fans all over the world.
Pete was born in Warrington to an Irish mother and an English father and spent happy summer holidays in Cork. Years later, reflecting on the many places he has visited as a travel broadcaster, Pete admits that he feels more at home in Ireland than anywhere. To find out whether this is due to rose-coloured spectacles or to a deeper tie with the country of his ancestors, Pete sets off on a trip around Ireland and discovers that it has changed in surprising ways.
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