Categories
Maid Marian and Robin Hood

Maid Marian and Robin Hood #17

The Adventures of Robin Hood 

Episode 15: The Wager

Introductory minstrel song: “When Robin makes a bet be sure, Normans are the losers; he proves to Friar Tuck that sometimes, beggars can be choosers!”

Regular Cast

Sir Robin of Locksley – Richard Greene

Maid Marian – Bernadette O’Farrell

The Sheriff of Nottingham – Alan Wheatley

Little John – Archie Duncan

Friar Tuck – Alexander Gauge 

Victor Woolf and Willoughby Gray, who played a variety of roles throughout the series, also featured, this time playing false monks.

Yet again, no Sheriff of Nottingham or Maid Marian. Their presence certainly adds to the stories, so I felt something was lacking in this one. Little John didn’t appear either.

Original air date: 1 January 1956

Screenplay: Warren Howard

Director: Bernard Knowles 

Plot: Robin bets Friar Tuck that he can obtain more money by begging than the Friar can by other means. 

A story about false beggars and false monks. The false monks was a good idea, but I reckon a story about genuine beggars would have been more interesting. 

Standout scene: Robin’s escape from the sheriff’s men, the main action sequence in this episode.

Sword fights – 0. Bow fights/bow skills – 1.

Running total: Sword fights – 13. Bow fights/bow skills – 13.

🏹🏹🏹

Geoffrey Keen

In The Wager, Geoffrey Keen played a “blind” beggar. He is best remembered for his portrayal of Sir Frederick Gray in six James Bond films between 1977 and 1987: The Spy Who Loved Me, Moonraker, For Your Eyes Only, Octopussy, A View to a Kill and The Living Daylights. In a long and distinguished career he appeared in over 100 film and television productions.

🏹🏹🏹

Coming soon, my Adventures of Maid Marian series

Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #54

Saturday 26 October 1963

British scientists are planning a new-style “rocket” power station, to cope with sudden electricity shortages. The station will work just like one of the huge rockets that put men into orbit – except that it will be fixed to the ground. It will produce a 150 mph jet from which heat will be extracted to make electricity.

The Vatican Council in Rome has voted overwhelmingly for a fixed date for Easter, replacing the 381 year old calendar currently used.

A potato grown by Mrs Glaves of Staxton weights 5lbs 3oz.

Time often stands still in the Devon village of Combe Martin because so many pigeons sit on the minute hand of the church clock. Villagers, who have missed buses because of the birds, are demanding action. The Rector, Reverend Frederick Lovell said, “We might have to shoot them.” (My note: presumably, he was talking about the pigeons, not the villagers).

Football: England’s 2 – 1 friendly win against a Rest of the World team was even more remarkable because the referee was Scottish.

The BBC suffered a setback in its plans to start colour television in Britain early in 1965. For a meeting of broadcasting experts failed to agree on a standard method of televising colour throughout Europe. Instead, the experts ordered experiments on the three methods – American, French and German – under consideration.

Television highlights: The Avengers – Death of a Batman. Thank Your Lucky Stars with the Beatles, the Searchers and Tommy Quickly. Charlie Drake Show.

Radio highlights: There Goes That Song Again. Play – The Seventh Wave. 

Weather: sunny spells. Outlook – similar. 15c, 59f.

Sunday 27 October 1963

A special village is to be built in Richmond, Yorkshire for twelve troublesome families so that they can only disturb each other. A spokesman said, “These families smash everything possible in a normal house, so the inside of their new houses will have the strongest possible fittings without any frills.”

More and more lorry drivers are taking a 14-hour cruise with their loads across the North Sea as Britain’s trade with Europe increases. The drivers get a five-course meal, duty free cigarettes and a night’s sleep. Then they are on the road again, boosting our economy.

Girls should not abandon hope of going to the alter before they reach the age of 35, for now there is a surplus of men right up to the 30-34 age bracket. For the age group 20-24 there are 104 men for every 100 women. For 25-29 there are 106 men for every 100 women. And for 30-34 there are 103 men for every 100 women. 

When should Christmas begin? Northern housewives reckon that it starts too soon and should be banned from department stores until early December. They also complained that toys were not robust enough and soon fell apart. Christmas cards for charities were acknowledged as a good idea, providing that at least half the proceeds reached the designated charity.

Football Results: First Division – Arsenal 4 Nottingham Forest 2, Burnley 1 Sheffield United 2, Everton 1 Spurs 0, Ipswich 1 Liverpool 2, Leicester 4 Blackburn 3. Top three – Sheffield United, Manchester United, Liverpool.

Television highlights: Auto-Mechanics – carburettors and air filters. Fireball XL5 – Space Magnet. International Football – Hungary v Austria.

Radio highlights: Fifteen 45s in Thirty Minutes. Music Magazine.

Weather: cloudy, sunny periods, warm.

Monday 28 October 1963

Bill Brown, Spurs’ Scotland international goalkeeper, was hit by a dart at Goodison Park on Saturday. The incident could plunge Everton into more trouble  over the hooligans amongst their fans. Brown was also bombarded with marbles, stones, and rice blown through pea-shooters. Everton fans have also been involved in wrecking trains.

A police superintendent halted a stampede of 7,000 teenagers yesterday. The 7,000 were waiting outside a ticket office in Newcastle upon Tyne for tickets for two concerts by the Beatles pop song group. One girl lost her jeans in the stampede. Others were wet because someone had thrown a bucket of water over them. Some were suffering from exposure. But everyone who wanted a ticket got one.

The biggest supermarket chain in Britain will start giving trading stamps today. The stamps, issued at Fine Fare stores, will be pink. Lord Sainsbury has formed an alliance of 37,000 shops to fight the spread of stamp giving. The stamps can be swapped for gifts.

Another case of typhoid has been reported in Northampton. Nine people are in hospital because of the latest outbreak.

The condition of Michael Foot MP, injured in a car crash, continues to improve. His wife, Jill, also injured in the accident, is improving too.

Personal Advertisements: New Calcutta Restaurant, 594 Kings Road, SW6 for Indian and Pakistani curries. Also English dishes. Curries to customers’ taste. Support the Royal National Institute for the Deaf by purchasing our gay and charming Marion Foster Christmas cards.

Television highlights: The Way We Live – an experiment in social understanding. Dancing Club. Kitchen Party with Annie Ross and Alfred Marks.

Radio highlights: Spanish for Beginners. Pops at the Piano.

Weather: some sunny spells. Outlook – rain likely. 12c, 54f.

Tuesday 29 October 1963

Norman Parker, who shot his gun-loving, pro-Hitler girlfriend Susan Fitzgerald was cleared of capital murder yesterday. However, he was found guilty of manslaughter and jailed for six years. Parker said of Susan, “She admired Hitler and the American fascist Lincoln Rothwell, and collected books and photographs of their activities. She admired all acts of violence and cruelty.” Dr Desmond O’Neill, a psychiatrist, said that Susan was “unstable”. Parker shot Susan after accusing her of two-timing him.

“I’m just longing for the day when one of these screaming mobs of hysterical teenagers breaks through the police cordon guarding those precious Beatles. Then maybe we will have a rest from them and their wretched fans. And the policemen can then go back and do their proper jobs.” – K Henriques, Epsom, Surrey.

Schoolteacher Robert George is making a map of Britain – a flea map. When it is finished, Mr George will have a handy guide to the whereabouts of all types of British fleas. Meanwhile, a big drugs firm has asked Mr George to help them find a “flea-bite cure”.

Christine Keeler has returned to court. Facing perjury charges, she wore a lime-green suit. An interested man in the public gallery was Clacton holiday-camp photographer Colin King – Christine’s father. He divorced her mother 13 years ago. Every so often, Mr King smiled at Miss Keeler. She did not return his smiles.

Escaped mink in Cardiganshire are catching trout in the River Teifi and killing poultry. Farmers and anglers have declared war on the mink.

Television highlights: World in Action – the repair racket. International Concert Hall – Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No 4. Professional Boxing.

Radio highlights: Folk Songs of Australia. Haworth Before the Brontes.

Weather: some drizzle. Outlook – little change. 11c, 52f.

Wednesday 30 October 1963

The BBC’s plan for its second television channel: Sunday nights – music and drama, Monday – straight family entertainment, Tuesday – adult education, Wednesday – encore night, for viewers who have missed a good programme, Thursday – for minority tastes, Friday – straight family entertainment, Saturday – no sport and an alternative to the present evening shows.

Coalminers in Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire have been reassured that computers that will be introduced in the new year will calculate their wages “as fairly as any pay clerk”.

Christine Keeler met her father yesterday, for the first time in seventeen years. She chatted with holiday-camp photographer Colin King – once known as Keeler – over coffee in her new £10,000 Marylebone house. Miss Keeler said after, “We discussed how very much alike we are. We got on very well, but haven’t made plans to meet again.”

There is no further cause for anxiety over the condition of Mr Michael Foot, MP for Ebbw Vale, who was seriously injured last week in a car crash.

“In the eighteenth century, the affluent went on the Grand Tour of Europe and brought back the Elgin Marbles of a Titian as a souvenir. The European traveller of today is more likely to bring back 200 cigarettes and a bottle of liqueur, with an au pair to follow on the next train.” – Sir Donald Anderson, chairman of P & O.

Agony Aunt: “Wondering” from Stockport writes, “Two years ago, I went out with Bill and taught my parrot to say, ‘I love darling Bill’. This makes my present boyfriend Jim very mad. What should I do?” Jane Adams’ reply, “Teach the parrot to say, ‘I love darling Jim’.

Television highlights: Make a Note – pop entertainment with Val Doonican. Sportsview – Newport v All Blacks, rugby union highlights. What’s Next in Men’s Fashion?

Radio highlights: Come into the Parlour. Sounds Topical. 

Weather: cloudy, rain at times. Outlook – little change. 11c, 52f.

Thursday 31 October 1963

Beauty specialist Micheline Lugeon, who was yesterday jailed for a year for her part in a horse-doping plot, was trapped because of the shape of her legs. Lugeon, 26, who spied for the dope gang, has thin and unshapely legs – in contrast to the rest of her figure. Witnesses, doubtful about her facial appearance, recognised her legs.

Detectives investigating the Great Train Robbery traced the history of ten Pipkin beer cans after a palm print was found on a can at the gang’s hideout farm, a court heard yesterday. The palm print belonged to club owner Robert Welch. The cans were sold in a local shop the day before the train robbery. So far, nineteen people have been arrested in connection with the robbery.

Mrs Isobel Portway pulled her lavatory chain and received an electric shock. Water from a leaking pipe had dripped into the fuse box causing a short-circuit. Mrs Portway had just spent a year in hospital. She is the second woman to receive an electric shock from a lavatory chain in recent weeks.

The number of British servicemen killed during World War Two – 244,723. The number of people killed on British roads so far this century – 275,000.

The Beatles are going to make a film. Shooting will start in February when the beat group return from a Paris date. Playwright Alun Owen will write the screenplay. John Lennon and Paul McCartney are working on numbers for the film.

What a day for the Welsh! Twenty-five thousand of them went wild with delight yesterday when Newport Rugby Union Football Club defeated the New Zealand All Blacks by three points to nil. This is only the third match the All Blacks have lost to British club sides in five tours. Their other conquerors? Swansea and Cardiff. The ecstatic fans invaded the pitch, then rushed to the pubs.

Television highlights: Dr Kildare – return of the medical series. The Beggar’s Opera. Man From Interpol.

Radio highlights: Round Britain Quiz. Your Songs and Ours.

Weather: rain at times. Outlook – similar. 12c, 54f.

Friday 1 November 1963

The British people are reliable, conscientious, hard-working and pleasure-loving. Who says so? The British people. However, the people of Germany, France, the Netherlands, Italy, Belgium and Luxembourg reckon that the British are cold, stiff, disciplined and scientific.

West Ham Council has been attacked by the RSPCA for scattering drugged corn to get rid of pigeons. Some of the drugged birds were then shot with air rifles, others fell into the river and drowned, and more were brought into family homes by cats. A spokesman for the RSPCA said, “The council’s actions are barbaric.”

In comparison with the Common Market countries, British homes lead the field in television sets and transistor radios. One in three British households owns a car – that figure is 50% in Luxembourg and 40% in France. Britain dominates when it comes to lawnmowers – 50% of British homes own a lawnmower. Across the English Channel that figure is 7%.

Britain’s domestic water consumption will treble in the next 25 years the Royal Society of Health was told in Swansea yesterday.

False teeth lost by Mr E Willmott of Forest Green, Nailsworth, Gloucestershire while swimming on holiday at Looe, Cornwall, have been found by the police – and he was wearing them again yesterday.

Fantastic precautions were taken at London Airport yesterday when the Beatles, Britain’s top pop group, arrived home after an eight-day tour of Sweden. Police rushed the Beatles through a crowd of over 1,000 screaming teenagers. Such events are now becoming commonplace.

Television highlights: Friday Night – new series of plays about the north of England. Roving Report – Corsica. Town and Around.

Radio highlights: The Tune’s The Thing. A Visit to China.

Weather: showers. Outlook – similar. 12c, 54f.

Available for order and pre-order, my Swinging Sixties Mystery Series

https://books2read.com/u/bMqNPG

Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #53

Saturday 19 October 1963

A man without a face has been smuggled into 10 Downing Street and made premier-designate of Great Britain. The long-suffering public has been invited to go into battle led by a cipher – a man existing solely in the imaginations of the posher members of the Tory hierarchy and a handful of knicker-bockered, pheasant-shooting cronies. The arbitrary elevation of Lord Home to prime minister is designed to hide the cracks in the Tory Party. Lord Home is smiling tonight. But the man in Great Britain with the biggest grin is Labour leader Harold Wilson.

Ronald “Buster” Edwards and his wife June, sought by Scotland Yard in connection with the Great Train Robbery, are believed to be in Norway where employees at a hotel recognised them. The employees noticed June because she changed her hair colour from jet-black to vivid red.

Beauty specialist Micheline Lugeon wanted racehorses to boost her business, she told a doping-plot trial jury yesterday. The idea was to name racehorses after her beauty creams, she claimed. Miss Lugeon denied having anything to do with the doping of racehorses. The case continues.

Meat prices are easier this week, but fish prices are high because of the bad weather. There are very few plumbs about and those available are not nice enough for dessert. Vegetables are rather dreary this week, but leeks are good value at 8d. Cucumbers are up to their highest price yet – 2s 6d.

Mexico City will stage the 1968 Olympics, the International Olympic Committee announced today. It will be the first time the Olympics will be held in Latin America. The committee will vote today to exclude South Africa from the Olympics because of racial discrimination.

Television highlights: Juke Box Jury with Susan Hampshire and Dusty Springfield. The Avengers – The Nutshell. Robin Hood – The Truce.

Radio highlights: Old Time Music. Pop Track.

Weather: sunny spells. Outlook – rain at times. 18c, 64f.

Sunday 20 October 1963

Lights low, excitement high, and 500 youngsters standing toe to toe, shaking in a delirium of rhythm. Nothing special, really, just another jump night on Eel Pie Island. Eelpiland – as the kids have shortened it – an island on the Thames near Twickenham – is the place for the with its. It’s further out than far. It’s the living end.

Beauty Queen Maureen Gay lifts the lid on the beauty queen business. “In a contest in the north, a judge said to me, ‘You have a smashing chance tonight. I think I could guarantee it if we had lunch, just the two of us…’ I thanked him sweetly and said no. If you want the big money, you’ve got to go along with them, or you don’t stand a chance. Some of the contests are rigged. It’s a fact, and all the girls know it.”

A queue nearly a mile long was waiting when doors opened for the Motor Show at Earl’s Court yesterday. Some local residents complained that they could not get out of their houses. By noon, 117,501 people had paid for admission. A final attendance figure of over 500,000 is anticipated, reflecting the enthusiasm and optimism of the car industry.

Britain is experiencing its biggest ever boom in home movies, a fast-growing world of zoom lenses, pistol grips, blower coolers and projectors. Sales of cine-cameras have zoomed from 10,000 in 1959 to 150,000 last year. And this year they will top the 200,000 mark. 

Football Results: First Division – Aston Villa 2 Arsenal 1, Chelsea 1 Sheffield Wednesday 2, Liverpool 1 WBA 0, Nottingham Forest 1 Manchester United 2, Sheffield United 3 Birmingham 0, West Ham 4 Everton 2. Top three – Manchester United, Spurs, Sheffield United. The top ten teams are still within two points of each other.

Television highlights: Keeping Fit. Auto-Mechanics – carburettors. Play – Funny Noises With Their Mouths featuring Michael Caine. 

Radio highlights: Salute to Nelson. Concert – Beethoven. 

Weather: cloudy at first, brighter later.

Monday 21 October 1963

Other countries have industrial riots and army revolts. Britain has Beatle drives. This crowd gathered outside the TV studios in Birmingham where the Beatles were recording next Saturday’s Thank Your Lucky Stars. The crowd, mostly girls, chanted, “We want the Beatles!” They screamed every time a face appeared at an upstairs window.

The Tory Party’s joint-chairman, Mr Iain Macleod, has refused a seat in Prime Minister Lord Home’s new Cabinet. So has Mr Enoch Powell. The refusal of Mr Macleod in particular has thrown the Tory Party into complete disarray. Both men felt that it was wrong to select a prime minister from the House of Lords.

Postman John Smith rang the church bell at Llangendeirne yesterday to raise the alarm about an invading army of officials, and the villagers duly rushed to their stations, barricading the main road. This “war” is over a plan to build a reservoir above the village. On this occasion, with old farm machinery and bales of hay, the villagers blocked the land surveyors, and they vowed to “resist to the end”.

Communist East Germany went to the polls yesterday to select a new People’s Chamber of 434 deputies. There were no opposition candidates.

Personal Advertisements: Margs come home, all forgiven – Bri’s. Sheila Crall – please write, Ken and Vic. 

Television highlights: The Sound of Brass – National Brass Band Festival. Play of the Week – The Funambulists with Judi Dench and Francis Matthews. The Plane Makers starring Patrick Wymark and Patrick Magee.

Radio highlights: Paul Temple and the Jonathan Mystery. Men of Brass.

Weather: sunny spells, rain, windy, rather warm. Outlook – similar. 18c, 64f.

Tuesday 22 October 1963

The big beat of the Beatles, Merseyside’s top pop group, has been blamed by a college headmaster for a slump in homework standards. Mr Alfred Stevenson of Adelaide Private College, Ilfracombe  has appealed to all parents to switch off the pop music programmes on Radio Luxembourg so children can do their homework in silence.

Thirteen people were injured when two cars collided at Middleton Dale, Derbyshire yesterday.

It has taken two years, a musical sex-change and the emotional impact of Miss Shirley Bassey to get it into Britain’s top ten disc bestsellers – a doleful, soulful song called I (Who Have Nothing). Many have recorded the song, but it’s Miss Bassey, the stormy songstress from Tiger Bay, who has “got inside it” and with the assistance of Mr George Martin, a slim and talented music man, produced the definitive version.

Three out of every four homes in Britain now receive ITV programmes. Of 17,017,000 homes 12,814,000 now have two-channel televisions. And 83% of British homes now have a television set.

From the supermarket shelves: bread without holes – manufacturers say that the holes let the air in and the flavour out. Instant milk – just stir white powder into cold water (like wartime rations). Quick-frozen crepe suzettes – two plastic bags containing the crepes and their sauce are plunged into boiling water for ten minutes.

Television highlights: Badger’s Bend. World in Action – housing. University Challenge.

Radio highlights: Let’s Take a Spin. Dancing Party.

Weather: rain at times. Outlook – changeable. 15c, 59f.

Wednesday 23 October 1963

Labour MP Michael Foot is seriously ill in hospital after a car accident. Doctors and nurses are fighting to save his life. Mr Foot’s wife, Jill Craigie, who was driving the car when it crashed at a notorious black-spot, is said to be in a satisfactory condition.

London County Council will spend £2,000 on teaching machines for experimental use in schools.

Agony Aunt: “Cautious” from Liverpool writes, “About a year ago, I had a very big win on the Pools. I told no one, except my immediate family. I kept my job, and apart from a new home and car, we live modestly. Now, my teenage children are pressing me for all sorts of expensive things. I believe that they should continue with their jobs and not let the money make any difference to their way of life. Since the Pools win, our family has been at loggerheads.” Jane Adams’ advice, “Seek expert advice, and give your children a chance to develop their personalities, broaden their minds, and learn the value of money.”

Agony Aunt: “Young Husband” writes from Croydon, “I’m fond of my wife, but she drives me wild at mealtimes with her constant chit-chat. I wish she’d shut up.” Jane Adams’ reply, “Mealtime chit-chat is a part of family life. It sounds as if you need a landlady, not a wife.”

An unknown comedian has been invited to appear on Sunday Night at the London Palladium. He is Jimmy Tarbuck, who sports a Beatles-style haircut. From Liverpool, Mr Tarbuck went to school with George Harrison and John Lennon of the Beatles.

Television highlights: Attenborough and Animals. Home and Away – FA Centenary Film. Talent of Tomorrow – the Robbins Report on Higher Education.

Radio highlights: Round Britain Quiz. Aspects of the Renaissance.

Weather: rain or drizzle. Outlook – changeable. 16c, 61f.

Thursday 24 October 1963

British women will go on wearing stiletto heels – because they have short legs. Colonel Geoffrey Noakes, president of the National Association of Shoe Repair Factories, made this comment at the International Shoe Repairers’ Congress in Blackpool. He added, “Women want to be propped up in the air. The good news is, new materials have the ability to stand up to the strain of buxom females.”

The condition of Mr Michael Foot MP, seriously injured in a car crash, remains unchanged.

Seven cases of typhoid were confirmed in the Bedford area yesterday. Four families are affected. A health spokesman said, “There is no cause for alarm.”

Sheep rustlers have stolen about 2,500 sheep from North Riding farms over the past year.

A West Berliner, who climbed over the Wall into East Berlin after a quarrel with his wife, was sent back by the Communists the next day.

The Beatles have left for a five-day tour of Sweden, which means a well-earned respite for our police forces because wherever the Beatles go screaming teenagers and police officers are sure to follow. Meanwhile, a tv programme featuring the Beatles, The Mersey Sound, will be repeated to all regions on Wednesday, November 13, at 7.40pm.

Television highlights: Amateur Boxing – Scotland v Bulgaria. The British Association Granada Lectures. Crackerjack.

Radio highlights: Top of the Form. International Concert for United Nations Day.

Weather: warm and sunny, mist and fog early and late. Outlook – mainly dry. 18c, 63f.

Friday 25 October 1963

The Ancient Britons used Stonehenge as a “robot brain”, an American scientist has claimed. Professor Gerald Hawkins of Boston University said that Stonehenge enabled Ancient Britons to predict the seasons and the eclipses of the Sun and the Moon. Furthermore, for this purpose Stonehenge was extremely accurate.

Chemists are about to abandon their scruples, for the centuries-old method of weighing medicines by scruples, grains, drams and ounces is to be abolished and replaced by metric units. 

The price of sugar hit a new post-war record yesterday – £102 10s a ton. Shop prices are expected to rise to around 2s per 2lb bag. Storms in Cuba are responsible for the sugar crisis.

Mr Michael Foot, Labour MP for Ebbw Vale, who was badly injured in a car crash on Monday, was said to have “slightly improved” in hospital at Hereford.

Guests at today’s oyster feast in Colchester will eat turkey, ham, beef and pork because oysters are in short supply at the moment.

Ten town criers will roam towns in the West Country for three weeks shouting out the night’s programmes for Westward television.

Juke Box Jury is losing viewers. In October, 3,222,000 homes tuned into the programme compared with 4,314,000 homes in January this year.

Television highlights: The Rare Ones – the last strongholds of the great mammals. Richard the Lionheart. Supercar.

Radio highlights: El Alamein Reunion. Pick of the Week.

Weather: dry, cloudy. Outlook – no change. 14c, 57f.

Available for order and pre-order, my Swinging Sixties Mystery Series

https://books2read.com/u/bMqNPG

Categories
Maid Marian and Robin Hood

Maid Marian and Robin Hood #16

The Adventures of Robin Hood 

Episode 14: The Highlander

Introductory minstrel song: “Strange tales are told of Robin Hood, but strangest far of all the lot; is when he met Wild Duncan, a very canny Scot!”

Regular Cast

Sir Robin of Locksley – Richard Greene

Maid Marian – Bernadette O’Farrell

The Sheriff of Nottingham – Alan Wheatley

Little John – Archie Duncan

Friar Tuck – Alexander Gauge 

Guests: Little John – Rufus Cruikshank, standing in for the injured Archie Duncan

Victor Woolf and Willoughby Gray, who played a variety of roles throughout the series, also featured.

Original air date: 25 December 1955

Screenplay: Eric Heath (pseudonym of Ring Lardner Jr.) 

Director: Ralph Smart 

Plot: The mysterious Duncan of Stoneykirk, a Highlander, arrives in Sherwood Forest. There, he meets Robin Hood and flirts with Maid Marian, who responds by unfurling her hair within seconds of meeting Duncan, turning Robin Lincoln Green with envy. 

Standout scene: Maid Marian and Duncan of Stoneykirk flirting.

No Sheriff of Nottingham again in this episode. Duncan of Stoneykirk dominated, to the extent that the incidental music played in the episode replaced the traditional Robin Hood song over the end titles.

Another excellent episode, fun with a genuine sense of mystery. Also, an insight into the Scottish political scene and their struggle to overcome oppression.

Furthermore, another good episode for Marian. She featured in a number of scenes, not as a Lady of the Manor, but as a woman keen to display that she could hold her own with the men.

Sword fights – 2. Bow fights/bow skills – 1.

Running total: Sword fights – 13. Bow fights/bow skills – 12.

🏹 🏹 🏹

Coming soon, my Adventures of Maid Marian series

Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #52

Saturday 12 October 1963

Lord Home has joined the Tory leadership race. Rab Butler is the favourite to replace Harold Macmillan. However, Lord Home is emerging as a dangerous rival to Mr Butler, Lord Hailsham and Reginald Maudling. Lord Home won a standing ovation at the Tory conference for his speech “the priceless prize of peace”.

Scotland Yard detectives have arrested a couple in connection with the Great Train Robbery. They are Walter Smith and his wife Patricia of Shoreditch. Fifteen other people are accused in connection with the robbery.

Motorists who open car doors in a dangerous manner will be liable to stiffer penalties under new regulations made yesterday. The rules governing the carrying of passengers will also be strengthened. At present, passengers can travel in the boot, or on the roof – providing they do not block the driver’s view. And on vehicles registered after 1 September 1965, all flashing indicators must be amber.

The United Nations Assembly voted 106 – 1 against South Africa’s racial segregation policy. Only South Africa voted for the policy.

Girls are showing an interest in soccer. Professor John Cohen explained. “The professional footballer is more glamorous and successful than ever before. This attracts the girls. You even find them hanging around at mid-week training sessions. The game is secondary. It’s the players they admire. The attraction can be the way a player rolls up his sleeves before the kicking starts.”

Television highlights: Grandstand – including the closing speech at the Conservative Party Conference. Espionage – spy series. The Avengers – Man With Two Shadows.

Radio highlights: Play – Comfort Me with Apples. Records. 

Weather: mainly dry. Outlook – mainly dry. 17c, 63f.

Sunday 13 October 1963

The ringing of the church bells in the little Welsh hamlet of Llangendeirne will be the signal for 200 people to start a protest against a plan to build a dam above their village. The local vicar, Rev G A Williams said, “After the recent Italian dam disaster, we feel even more conscious about the danger that threatens us.”

It’s National Old Folks Week. What can you do to help? Here are some suggestions. For many elderly people, the world shrinks because energies and fitness are no longer what they were. A small thing – smile, gift, letter, visit – can mean so much in a world grown small.

Just invented – a new variable switch for electric cookers which, it is claimed, will give a much wider range of cooking heats than at present.

A power breakdown set off burglar and fire alarms for six hours in Southend, yesterday.

The GPO has warned against sending fireworks through the post. Senders can be prosecuted. 

A parson’s son is the latest recruit to the pop parade. Stephen Sholt, singing as Jonny Douglas, has made a private recording, You Have Gotta Play it Rough, and hopes to interest agents. His father, Rev James Sholt, said, “Personally, I think pop music is loathsome and a filthy row. But I wish Stephen every success.” 

Football results: First Division – Bolton 3 Stoke 4, Fulham 0 Nottingham Forest 0, Ipswich 1 Chelsea 3, Sheffield Wednesday 3 West Ham 0, WBA 4 Aston Villa 3. Top three – Manchester United, Spurs, Blackburn (two points separate the top ten teams).

Television highlights: Home Dressmaking. Auto-Mechanics – the engine. Sunday Night at the London Palladium with the Beatles. 

Radio highlights: Join in and Swing. My Oedipus Complex.

Weather: sunny, risk of rain later. Outlook – mainly dry.

Monday 14 October 1963

Young motorbike fans talk about old age: “You’ve just got to accept it. It’s the same with a bike. When your rods start knocking, you’ve had it.” – Brian Miles, 17. “I don’t know any old people, never spoke to one.” – Richard Lewis, 18. “Let’s face it, old people are blooming barmy.” – Albert Sutton, 19. “When I’m old, I’ll tell ya what I think about it, but I hope I’m not around.” – Steve Clark, 18.

Beatles fans in Palladium battle with the police. Five hundred screaming teenaged girls besieged the Beatles at the London Palladium yesterday. Two inspectors leading a force of twenty sergeants and constables walked slowly towards the girls. The twisting, shouting fans held their ground, then backed away. The fans brandished pictures and record sleeves of their idols. The Beatles wanted to go outside, but the management said it was too dangerous. So, they popped their heads around the stage door. There was a tremendous screech as the girls flung themselves at the gate, but the police held them back.

The police set up crash barriers in Paris as thousands of Parisians queued outside the home of Edith Piaf, the singing star who died on Friday, to pay their last respects. Her funeral is today.

Every 41 seconds between January 1 and September 30 an Automobile Association member broke down somewhere on Britain’s 195,336 miles of roads. Major causes were electrical faults, 37%, fuel shortage, 23%, and defective tyres, 17%.

Personal Advertisements: Jim, please write – Rene. Gas, wtr, htrs, fr, £2. Gip 3601. The Victors are on their way!

Television highlights: Kitchen Party with Fanny Cradock. World in Action – the Tory crisis. Here and Now – Shooting and Shotguns.

Radio highlights: Talking About Music. News – new nightly bulletin.

Weather: sunny spells, cloudy later. Outlook – rain, bright spells. 17c, 63f.

Tuesday 15 October 1963

Engine driver Jack Mills, who was coshed during the Great Train Robbery, was yesterday presented with £25 6s and a Certificate of Courage and Resource by British Railways. Mr Mills has not been able to work since the attack.

A young wife complained that she was chained to the sink, morning, noon and night, while her husband engaged in his passion for playing the trombone. The wife, Mrs June Arnold, sought a divorce, and the divorce was granted on the grounds of cruelty.

The roast beef of Old England is in danger of losing its flavour. The taste is being sacrificed for tenderness. This is done through barley-fed beef as opposed to grass-fed. If this trend continues the British family might lose its taste for British beef.

Twenty-five East Germans, including two border guards, escaped to the West at the weekend.

In a survey of twenty people, eight said that their beds squeak. One reason is that people are spending their money on upgraded televisions instead of buying new beds. Divan-type beds are less likely to squeak than bedsteads. Competition for new beds is likely to increase with the introduction of new cars, refrigerators and washing machines.

After two weeks of broadcasts, the BBC has announced that it will drop its pop music programme, Music to Midnight, and, in the new year, replace it with a series of plays, Just Before Midnight. A BBC spokesman said, “We think there will be a larger audience for these plays.”

Television highlights: Town Meeting of the World – the Christian Revolution. No Hiding Place. Dial Rix – farce with Brian Rix.

Radio highlights: Time For Laughter. Expanding Christendom.

Weather: cloudy with drizzle. Outlook – sunshine and showers. 15c, 59f.

Wednesday 16 October 1963

Latest Tory leadership odds: Rab Butler 5/4 against, Lord Hailsham 6/4, Lord Home 5/1, Reginald Maudling 8/1. 

The Queen is replacing her television sets, upgrading to the new 625 lines. She has thirty sets at Buckingham Place and twenty at Windsor Castle. All have been hired, not bought.

An “Automatic Quartermaster”, which will deal with Army paperwork, will be opened by the War Minister Joseph Godber today. This Super Computer, cost £500,000, can read 1,000,000 characters a minute, which means that it could read the Bible in three minutes.

Liverpool is set to become a holiday hotspot, thanks to the Beatles and other pop groups with the Mersey Beat. Hundreds of teenagers have written to guest houses in the city, asking about accommodation. A British Railways spokesman said, “It would not be surprising if we started running excursions soon.”

The bell ringers of Oakham, Rutland will ring a Rutland Surprise – a peal of more than 5,000 changes, lasting 23 hours 20 minutes – on Saturday, when Britain’s smallest county celebrates its successful battle to remain independent.

Football Results: First Division – Arsenal 4 Tottenham 4. Everton 4 Sheffield United 1. European Cup Winners’ Cup – Manchester United 6 Willem II 1 (aggregate 7 -2), Inter Cities Fairs Cup – Sheffield Wednesday 4 DOS Utrecht 1 (aggregate 8 – 2).

Television highlights: What Next in Windows? – Discussion. Preview of the Motor Show with Sterling Moss. Professional Wrestling from Huddersfield.

Radio highlights: Aspects of the Renaissance. The Pop Art of Soccer.

Weather: sunny spells. Outlook – changeable. 14c, 57f.

Thursday 17 October 1963

A £12,000,000 order for four Concord supersonic airliners was announced yesterday by the British Aircraft Corporation. A BAC spokesman said that the order placed by American Airlines brings the total of US orders to thirteen. Deliveries are expected to begin in 1970.

Many of the BBC’s top executives are bitterly opposed to presenting controversial and outspoken programmes on television, such as That Was The Week That Was. Mr Hugh Carleton Greene, the BBC’s director general, is happy with this policy, but other executives, like Sir David Milne, believe the BBC should maintain high standards of taste on television.

The Beatles have been invited to join the Royal Command Performance at London’s Prince of Wales Theatre on 4 November. Marlene Dietrich, at 58 the world’s most glamorous grandmother, is on the bill too. She will sing Where Have All the Flowers Gone? Other stars include Dicky Henderson, Harry Secombe, Tommy Steele and Charlie Drake.

The colour this season is red. Buyers report that red clothes for women are walking out of the stores four times as fast as any other colour. And the most sought after shade of all is scarlet. The reason? Red is flattering and cheering. And it gets you noticed.

Patricia Idenden of London writes: “I think it is very unjust of you to insinuate that the Beatles will be “here today, gone tomorrow”. This, of course, is absolute rubbish. When I am 80 I will still remember the world’s greatest group along with many others younger than I!”

Television highlights: Amateur Boxing – London v Paris. Magic Circle Festival. The Saint.

Radio highlights: Churchill Book Extracts. Science Survey. 

Weather: rain then sunny periods. Outlook – changeable. 14c, 57f.

Friday 18 October 1963

The new prime minister will be named today with Mr R A Butler the favourite to get the job. His closest challenger appears to be Lord Hailsham. Ahead of the announcement, Tory “kingmakers” visited Mr Harold Macmillan, who is recovering in hospital after his recent illness.

A well-known solicitor was arrested yesterday by detectives investigating the Great Train Robbery. The solicitor, John Denby Wheater, will appear in court in Aylesbury, Bucks today charged with conspiring with nine other men already in custody to stop the mail train with intent to rob, and harbouring, assisting and maintaining Leonard Dennis Field – one of the men in custody. Brian Field, the managing clerk of Wheater’s firm, is also in custody.

The big Telstar link-up on Tuesday between New York, Rome and London proved that television is still in its infancy, can be a tricky toy, and dangerous when taken too earnestly. Four top churchmen discussed Christian Unity. However, much of the discussion was two-sided because the link to Rome was lost twice, for a total of twenty minutes. Until the technology improves, maybe the broadcasters should feature something lighter, like the Beatles.

Merchant seaman Michael Fish has admitted that he invented the story about a nail being driven into his head to cure his headache. “I’d been drinking rather heavily,” he said, “and met two former shipmates in a pub. There was a bit of a free-for-all and one of the men hit me with a cribbage board, which had a nail in it for scoring. When I came round, I felt the nail in my head.” A police spokesman said, “We would like to interview these two men.”

Napoleon Bonaparte’s bed was sold for £3,800 at Sotheby’s yesterday. It was bought by Mrs O Alber of Switzerland.

Television highlights: Boyd QC – legal series with Michael Denison. South of Panama – a journey through South America. Roving Report – Indonesia.

Radio highlights: Peter Murray Show. Speedy Disc Show.

Weather: sunny intervals, mostly dry. Outlook – changeable. 17c, 63f.

Available for order and pre-order, my Swinging Sixties Mystery Series

https://books2read.com/u/bMqNPG