These Local Issue stamps were issued in 1995 by St Mary's in the Scilly Isles as part of a joint Omnibus issue to commemorate the 35th Anniversary (1960-1995) of Coronation Street. On this particular stamp is the great Ena Sharples (Violet Carson)
Hi there and welcome to Ado's Blog. I am obsessed with nostalgia, especially 1960s & 1970s nostalgia and I enjoy nothing more than reflecting on days and times that have sadly long since gone! So join me, as I take a nostalgic gander down Memory Lane and celebrate all things past and occasional present, both good and bad! (All images used that are copyrighted are copyrighted to their respective publishers and are only used here for review purposes.)
Thursday, 21 July 2011
Picture Show & TV Mirror - Angie Dickinson (1960)
This edition of Picture Show & TV Mirror dates back to 1960 and featuring as its cover is the glamorous Angie Dickinson.
The Seekers EP (1965)
THE SEEKERS: The Seekers EP (Original 1965 UK black & blue Columbia label 4-track 7" vinyl EP with intact push-out centre, featuring; A World Of Our Own, Sinner Man, I'll Never Find Another You and Open Up Them Pearly Gates.)
Z Cars - 309 Ford Zephyr (1965)
This was the 309 Ford Zephyr from the classic Cop series, Z Cars. This white Z Cars Ford Zephyr was made by Tri-ang under the spot on brand and was produced back in 1965.
Totally Tiswas! - The Dying Fly (1978)
Yes folks, I'm going Totally Tiswas again and taking a look back at the phenomena that was the Dying Fly!
Chris Tarrant reads out a letter from a viewer back in 1980 asking what on earth has happened to The Dying Fly?.......All of a sudden, chaos ensued in Studio 3 at ATV Centre and both adults and children would lay on their backs and participate in the manic, Dying fly. This chaos and pandemonium is what made the ultra, excellent Tiswas stand out from the prim & proper Swap Shop.
The Dying Fly was often featured on the great Tiswas. It was first introduced by Comedian Jasper Carrot when he appeared on the show back in 1978. The rest as they say is, History!
This is definitely what they wanted!
Happy Days Action Figure - Potsie Webber
This is the Action Figure of Happy Days heart-throb, Potsie Webber played by Anson Williams in blue jeans and Jefferson High jacket.
Fawlty Towers - Series One, Episode Three - The Wedding Party (1975)
Basil is disgusted when two young lovers, Alan and Jean, begin 'hanky-pankying' under his very nose while checking in. He becomes convinced that they and two other guests (a couple called the Lloyds) are engaged in group sexual misbehaviour, somehow also involving Polly. Meanwhile, circumstances conspire to put him in apparently compromising situations whenever they are around.
A heatwave has hit Torquay, bringing Basil's incompetence - not to mention his intolerance - to an all time high. When he realises that the two young lovers Alan and Jean, who are checking in, aren't married, he tries to force them into single rooms on separate floors. Meanwhile, Mrs. Peignoir, an attractive French antique dealer, seems to have taken a shine to Basil, much to Sybil's annoyance. Alan returns to the lobby and asks Basil if he knows whether any chemists are still open. Basil initially assumes he wants to buy condoms, then when Alan says he wants batteries Basil - still assuming it must be sex-related - tells him that is "dis-gusting". When Alan explains that he wanted batteries for his electric razor, Basil tries to save the situation.
Later that evening, Mrs. Peignoir arrives home and drunkenly trips over Basil as he crouches on the floor picking up her purse that she has dropped, ending up sitting on him. At that moment Alan and Jean also arrive, witnessing what appears to them to be a very intimate situation. Later that same night Manuel, who had been out celebrating his birthday, returns home drunk with his umbrella (a birthday gift from Basil) outside Basil and Sybil's door and accidentally hits Basil over the head with the umbrella. As Basil crumples to the floor in pain, Manuel drunkenly sits over him, saying "Mr Fawlty, I love you, I love you ...." and once more Alan walks in on the situation. Then Basil strangles Manuel.
Jean's mother and stepfather Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd arrive next morning. Basil soon notices strange going-ons between the Lloyds, Jean, Alan, and Polly. For example, Basil accidentally walks in on Jean hugging Mr. Lloyd, and not realising that they are family he tries to keep Mrs. Lloyd from the room where he saw them embracing. He shows her the kitchen, where Manuel is sleeping off the previous night's celebration in the linen basket. Finally he lets her up to the room, only to discover Polly (a family friend of the Lloyds) is now hugging Mr. Lloyd. He again distracts the now very edgy Mrs. Lloyd by showing her another room, explaining that the Lloyds' room is not as nice. When Mrs. Lloyd enters the room, she realises that it is exactly the same as the one Basil showed her. As he is leaving the room, Basil hears loud moaning noises from Alan and Jean's room and Polly hurries out, dressing herself (she has been trying on a dress Jean made for her and the moaning was because Jean had been massaging Alan's shoulders).
Thinking the worst, Basil prepares to fire Polly and tells the Lloyds to leave. Sybil explains that they are one family and that Polly went to school with Jean, and has known them for years. He argues with Sybil about apologising to them, saying sarcastically "No, no, I suppose it's all my fault, isn't it?" But Sybil insists and advises him to "Tell them you made a mistake." So he rehearses the apology (to Sybil, to Polly, to himself and to empty space) "I'm so sorry, I made a mistake", but by the time he reaches the guests' room, the sentence has become "I'm so sorry, but my wife has made a mistake!"
Sybil's good friend Audrey has split up from her husband, much to Basil's irritation as she's constantly on the phone and repeating the phrase 'Ooh, I know'. She goes to visit Audrey the following day and, as Major Gowen puts it, "listen to all that rubbish" while consoling her friend. A flirtatious Mrs. Peignoir tries to charm Basil that night while Sybil is away, and he is very jumpy in the evening. As he tries to undress someone keeps knocking at his door, and he believes it to be Mrs. Peignoir trying to seduce him again. However when he realises it is actually Sybil returned early, he opens the door and unconvincingly says "Oh, what a terrible dream," trying to explain his previous whispers to Mrs. Peignoir (as he thought) to go away. Sybil, however, doesn't notice his odd behaviour, as she tells Basil that she has heard a burglar downstairs. Both are unaware that it is actually Manuel, who has awakened from the linen basket, still hung over. Basil quietly creeps downstairs in his underwear and hits 'the burglar' over the head with a frying pan. Manuel is revealed unconscious, and Basil crouches over him in the foyer. Just as Basil realizes who it is, Alan, Jean and the Lloyds walk into the hotel, where they are confronted by the sight of Basil apparently lying on top of Manuel with no trousers on. They creep past, bemused by his behaviour, and Mr Lloyd, slightly drunk, says to Basil "We've been to a wedding". In frustration and humiliation, Basil draws back the frying pan for a final vengeful clout ...