Show 38: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Italictitle}} {{Infobox Goon Show episode | title = Harry Stars in His First Television Commercial' | series = The Goon Show | image = | image_alt = | caption = | series_no = 2 | episode = 21 | writer = *Spike Milligan *Larry Stephens | editor = Jimmy Grafton | producer = Dennis Main Wilson | music = *Max Geldray: *''Trust in Me'' *Elling...")
 
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*[[Stanley Black]] and The BBC Dance Orchestra
*Max Geldray:
*Max Geldray:
*''[[Trust in Me (1937 song)|Trust in Me]]''
*''[[Trust in Me (1937 song)|Trust in Me]]''

Revision as of 15:16, 21 July 2024

"Harry Stars in His First Television Commercial'"
The Goon Show episode
Episode: no.Series: 2
Episode: 21
Written by
Produced byDennis Main Wilson
Music
Editing byJimmy Grafton
Recording
Number
SLO 9638
First broadcast17 June 1952 (1952-06-17)
Episode Order
← Previous
"Show 37"
Next →
"Show 39"
The Goon Show series 2
List of episodes

The series 2 shows didn't have 'official' episode names per se, but for ease of reference using the show number and Handsome Harry sketch name is to differentiate them.

The show had now changed its name from Crazy People to "The Goon Show, featuring those crazy people…"

Show 38 (aka Harry Stars in His First Television Commercial) is an episode from The Goon Show. It is the twenty-first show in the second series.

The show recording session was on Sunday, 15 June 1952 at 9pm and was recorded at The Paris Cinema, 12 Lower Regent Street, Central London.

The first British public broadcast was on the Home Service on Tuesday, 17 June 1952 at 9.30pm (except Scotland and Northern Ireland). It reached a peak listenership of 2.2m.

The show's repeat was broadcast the following Thursday at 7.30pm, 19 June 1952 on the Light Programme to an audience of 4.7 million listeners.

Sketches

Music

Show Trivia

  • From Monday 9 June, Peter and Max were on the bill at the Finsbury Empire, while Dennis was now producing another radio show; this was All Star Bill for which the scripts came from Jimmy Grafton and the music was performed by Robert Busby’s Revue Orchestra.
  • Michael Bentine was taken ill and unable to attend the recording of The Goon Show on Sunday 15;
  • Pureheart was omitted from several sections of the script at short notice, with the bulk of the programme – all except the opening Harry/Blatt item – being a spoof of the 1933 novel Lost Horizon which featured Major Bloodnok and Harold Secombe discovering the secret of eternal life in Shangri-La. This would form the basis of the episode Shangri-La Again in 1955. When broadcast on Tuesday 17, this show was not taken by Scotland which instead scheduled Scotland Sings.

Technical

Originally recorded on SLO 9638. (33⅓ rpm, coarse-groove 16" disk recorded at Broadcasting House). [1]

References

  1. ^ Kendall, Ted (2017). The Goon Show Compendium Vol 13 (Booklet 1). BBC Worldwide. p. 28. ISBN 9781785298776.