Categories
Maid Marian and Robin Hood

Maid Marian and Robin Hood #10

The Stage, 8 September 1955

The Adventures of Robin Hood

Episode 8: The Knight Who Came to Dinner

Introductory minstrel song: “In days of old when Knights were bold, and practised arts of chivalry; there lived no sadder sight I’m told, than Sir Richard of the Lea!”

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 

*Joan of the Blue Bull Inn – Simone Lovell

*Didn’t feature in this episode 

Original air date: 13 November 1955

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

Director: Ralph Smart

Plot: Robin Hood assists Sir Richard of the Lea, a knight down on his luck.

Suspension of disbelief time – Marian pretends to be “Donald of Tewkesbury” for a few scenes, to avoid association with Robin Hood.

Although Friar Tuck is under suspicion, he is not yet outlawed. This episode strongly features his obsession with food. Another episode where Friar Tuck has more screen time than Robin Hood, the writers clearly warming to his character. Greed a theme of this story – Friar Tuck with food, and the corrupt Abbot Franklyn with money.

Robin closes a dice game when Marian is winning. Nice character insight.

Standout scene: Sir Richard of the Lea’s gratitude when Robin Hood gives him a large sum of money, thus saving his castle and honour. Ian Hunter conveyed this in a truly touching manner.

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

Running total: Sword fights – 6. Bow fights/bow skills – 6.

Ian Hunter (1940)

Ian Hunter played Sir Richard of the Lea in this episode and future episodes. His film career began with Not For Sale in 1924 and ended with The Mystery of the Indian Temple in 1963. In the intervening years he appeared in numerous films, 1934 – 1943 being his most productive period.

Between 1935 and 1938 Ian Hunter was paired in seven films with Kay Francis. One of his standout roles was as King Richard the Lionheart in the 1938 film The Adventures of Robin Hood.

A promotion for Ilford Film, May 1956

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1963

Social History 1963 #46

Saturday 31 August 1963

Great Train Robbery. Detectives are looking for Bruce Reynolds, his wife Frances, and Barbara and John Daly. Frances and Barbara are sisters. Reports suggest that Mrs Daly, who is pregnant, and her husband stayed at a seaside hotel. They arrived in a racing green Jaguar and paid their bill, £99 18s, all in fivers.

The Daily Mirror asked its readers where they would hide £250,000 in fivers. The most popular answers: in Steptoes’ junk yard; under wallpaper; in a churchyard; under concrete; in the deep freeze; in dustbins; up the chimney.

In the near future, Britain will have its own “switchboard” in Space. Communication satellites should be launched by 1970. The satellite plan will cost £200,000,000. Post Office experts believe that the number of transatlantic calls, now about 1,800,000 a year, will increase fourfold by 1970 and elevenfold by 1980.

Bristol Council wants to install 2,500 parking meters in the city. The Motorists’ Protection Association described the plan as an example of the “increasing persecution of motorists”. 

The Mods – the really with-it teenagers – are ditching the Twist for a hip-swinging dance called the Blues. Marie Cartmell, professional dance demonstrator, said, “You relax all over, put on a deadpan face and drift into a blues beat. No touching your partner. Then you swing your hips and start twitching – hands, feet and head. You could call it the St Vitus dance.”

Cricket: Yorkshire have won the County Championship. Glamorgan, Somerset, Sussex and Warwickshire are in the top five with one round of matches left.

Television highlights: Sir Francis Drake. Grandstand. Juke Box Jury.

Radio highlights: The Future of Spain. The Music Men.

Weather: rain, windy and cool. Outlook – little change. 17c, 63f.

Sunday 1 September 1963

Great Train Robbery. Scotland Yard are tracking down clues found at Leatherslade Farm. In particular, they are keen to trace the origins of six lots of curtains. Detectives are also looking for seven people – four men and three women, including Roy John James, aka The Weasel.

Violence at the latest Rangers v Celtic football match has led to calls for automatic jail sentences of at least six months, possibly a year. Police were showered with cans and beer bottles. Fighting, swearing, drunken soccer fans are becoming a blight on the game.

The decline in the Co-op is due to drabness and mediocrity, an article in the Socialist Commentary said. Too many societies are ignoring the increasing affluence and sophistication of members, and the fact that not only capitalists buy and drive cars.

The Bow Group of Young Tories recommends that the retirement age should be abolished. Employment Exchanges should have jobs specifically for the elderly because work is the best occupational therapy for old people, the Young Tories insist.

Over 50,000,000 ties are sold in Britain each year. The majority are bought for men by women.

Football: Match of the Day – Leicester 7 Arsenal 2. Other results – Liverpool 1 Blackpool 2, Manchester United 5 Everton 1, Spurs 4 Nottingham Forest 1. Top three after three games – Leicester, Manchester United, Spurs. No team has a 100% record. 

Television highlights: The Frank Ifield Show. Deaf Sunday – a service of dedication. Play – Plain Jane.

Radio highlights: Race Horse Doping Feature. Guitar Recital.

Weather: sunny spells, showers and thunder.

Monday 2 September 1963

Great Train Robbery. In their search for John Daly and Bruce Reynolds, detectives have switched their attention to Scotland. Reports suggest that the men have been seen with their wives. An underworld tip-off revealed that Daly and Reynolds would leave their wives, if necessary. Daly’s wife has an eighteen month old daughter, and is expecting another child this month.

French riot police were called in at Calais last night when hundreds of angry British holidaymakers hammered at the quayside gates demanding space for their cars on cross-Channel ferries. The chaos was caused by “chance it” motorists who hoped to find space on the ferries – which were already fully booked. The AA said bad weather on the Continent was to blame.

Two hundred and fifty tourists were “sealed off” in a Hungarian hotel yesterday because of a smallpox scare. The Hungarian authorities are not releasing any details about the scare. Two Britons are believed to be at the hotel.

Fashionable women will adopt the Glistening Look this autumn. They will wear anything as long as it sparkles. If you are planning to be a femme fatale go for gold thread woven into a low-cut black camisole dress.

New Zealand is doubling its charges to British migrants. The fare for a single man is £50 instead of £25, and for families £100 instead of £50. Single women, who previously went free, will pay £50.

Personal Advertisement: Ladies and Gentlemen’s Wigs. For transformations, toupees and scalpettes, contact the Midland Hair Manufacturing Co, Ltd, Nottingham.

Television highlights: Pit Your Wits – quiz. Outlook Europe – Italy. William Tell.

Radio highlights: Poetry Reading. Music for Dancing.

Weather: showers and bright intervals. Outlook – similar. 18c, 64f.

Tuesday 3 September 1963

Great Train Robbery. Detectives are doing fingerprint checks on two Burgundy wine bottles served at a pub party. A police spokesman said, “This could be one of our strongest leads. We are making extensive investigations.” The landlord’s wife, Mrs Allard, said, “It was a very odd dinner party. The men sat apart from the women. Every time a waiter approached, the men stopped talking. One of the men – I think it was Reynolds – hid his face in his hands. He kept changing his spectacles, from horn-rimmed to rimless ones. They left a child in a car – they arrived in three cars. They talked about motor racing. They were very polite and grateful. They spent £5 on a meal and another £35 on gin and tonics at the bar.”

Four Britons are to spend the next fortnight “jailed” in Budapest’s Hotel Royal – with all expenses paid. They must not leave the hotel, not even for a minute, until smallpox quarantine regulations are lifted. Over 350 guests are also at the hotel. Austria has declared Hungary an “infectious area”. 

Police are hunting “The Stockbroker” a gunman in a bowler hat who threatened a jeweller in Stepney and escaped with thirty diamond rings worth £3,000.

Doctors, scientists and policemen flit across our television screens in haloes of glory. Engineers never do. There should be a tv series on Dr Livewire, a consulting engineer, as an antidote to Dr Kildare.

Football: in the Wolverhampton Wanderers v Stoke City match, Wolves kicked-off at the start of the game and again after half-time. Wolves won 2 – 1. Stoke said they are unlikely to lodge a complaint.

Television highlights: Swallows and Amazons – serial. A Sort of Paradise – Guatemala with Alan Whicker. Here and Now – extra-sensory perception.

Radio highlights: In Our Time – recorded memories of the Second World War. Manx Grand Prix.

Weather: cloudy with showers. Outlook – more showers. 18c, 64f.

Wednesday 4 September 1963

Great Train Robbery. Detectives have established that the people who attended a pub party, reported yesterday, were not members of the mail gang. Inquires have also revealed that mail bags recently found were not from the train robbery.

Mankind may be facing a deadly silent terror – chemicals from pesticides sprayed to increase crop yields. Biologists and wild life specialists have discovered that these pesticides are harming birds and fish. Britain is now using 100 different types of pesticides, even though not a lot is known about them.

The Government was warned that if they keep on harrying motorists they will grab “a tiger by the tail”. A spokesman for the RAC said, “It should be evident by now that the motor car is vital to our social and economic life, yet the Government implement more and more restrictions.” He added that the idea of fitting road-pricing meters to cars, charging motorists by the mile, will force people to abandon driving in despair.

Disc sales in Britain top 77 million a year. However, to prevent the “saucer effect”, you must store them properly. Records should be placed in racks, upright, away from heat. Many secondhand shops are rejecting records because they are “dished”.

The last London Transport petrol-engine bus was taken out of service in November 1950. Since then the fleet has been 100% diesel. 

Football results: First Division – Ipswich 2 Manchester United 7. Nottingham Forest 0 Liverpool 0. 

Television highlights: Chipperfield’s Circus with Shaw Taylor and Noele Gordon. Citizen 63 – the life of a police inspector. Scarlet Pimpernel.

Radio highlights: Ancient Civilisations – Mexico and Peru. Parade of the Pops.

Weather: sunny spells, rain later. Outlook – unsettled with rain. 20c, 68f.

Thursday 5 September 1963

Singing stars Lonnie Donegan, Max Bygraves and David Whitfield were puzzled last night over the case of the mixed-up beauty queen result. The three stars who judged the Miss United Kingdom final in Blackpool say that the girl who was awarded the title was not voted for by them. According to them, the winner should have been Maureen Gay, a showroom assistant from Bristol. However, organiser Eric Morley declared Diane Westbury the winner and awarded her the 1,000 guineas first prize.

Britain’s mothers are going to get Government help to trim their waistlines. Scientists in Aberdeen have discovered that the average woman had an 8Ib spare tyre after pregnancy. The scientists are trying to discover an ideal diet to avoid the unwanted fat.

Tourist officials estimate that 19,000,000 holidaymakers – two for every three Spaniards – will be flooding into Spain by 1967. This year 10,000,000 tourists are expected to visit the country, one and a half million more than in 1962.

Mrs Veronica Yates fancied a steak and kidney pudding. So she opened a tin bought at a supermarket and discovered that it contained dog food. It appears that the label had come loose and a wrong label had been stuck on the tin. The supermarket was fined £5. Mrs Yates said, “It really put me off. I don’t fancy steak and kidney pie anymore.”

Football: Match of the Day – Tottenham 4 Wolverhampton 3. Other results – WBA 4 Arsenal 0; Bolton 1 Everton 3; Blackburn 2 Sheffield United 2; Birmingham 2 Leicester 0.

Television highlights: Summer in Salzburg. Barn Dance – new series. Compact – serial.

Radio highlights: Frankly Speaking – racing driver Jim Clark talks about his life. Listeners Answer Back.

Weather: sunshine and showers. Outlook – similar. 18c, 64f.

Friday 6 September 1963

Christine Keeler was arrested by Scotland Yard detectives last night and taken to a London police station. Christine, wearing a green suede jacket over a grey skirt, tripped down the stairs and got into a waiting police car. The arrest was apparently in connection with the “Lucky” Gordon assault case.

Builder Ronald Biggs, 34, accused of taking part in last month’s Great Train Robbery, allegedly told the police, “Get on with it. You’ll have to prove it all the way. I’m admitting nothing to you people.” Biggs is the ninth person to be charged over the robbery. He told the court, “It’s all lies.”

Two hundred married women under forty who have already had one or two children are needed to try out a new pill to stop them becoming pregnant. The new-type pill will be the eighth to be officially tested by the Family Planning Association.

British scientists have made a new drug to fight smallpox. In Madras, India 1,100 people who had intimate contact with the disease were given the new drug, and only three developed – mild – symptoms of smallpox.

Five years ago there were only a handful of liquid detergents on the market. Today, there are over 100, and they account for twenty percent of the whole detergent market. In future, expect more liquid detergents to replace packet powder. 

Today’s Thought: While we are asleep, we are all equal – Cervantes. 

Television highlights: Adventure – Kon-Tiki, a voyage across the Pacific on a raft. The Marriage Lines – domestic comedy. Germany, Fathers and Sons – the barrier of silence between Germans who lived under Hitler.

Radio highlights: Records You’ll Remember. Medieval History and the Romantic Imagination.

Weather: mainly dry with sunny periods. Outlook – similar. 19c, 66f.

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Maid Marian and Robin Hood

Maid Marian and Robin Hood #9

The Adventures of Robin Hood

The broadcast order varies from source to source. I’m grateful to Nicola @gleanniucha.bsky.social‬ and her extensive research, and will follow her suggested broadcast order from now on because I believe it is the most accurate.

Episode 6: The Inquisitor 

Introductory minstrel song: “The Archbishop comes from France, King Richard’s interests to pursue; Robin takes a daring chance, to tell him what is true!”

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 

*Joan of the Blue Bull Inn – Simone Lovell

*Didn’t feature in this episode 

Original air date: 6 November 1955

Screenplay: Anne Rodney (pseudonym of Howard Koch and Anne Koch)

Director: Ralph Smart

Plot: Friar Tuck is arrested and faces judgement by the Archbishop. When Marian tells them the news, Robin and Little John race to aid their friend.

This story firmly links Friar Tuck to Robin’s band. Alexander Gauge as Friar Tuck often had long speeches to make, and he delivered them well. Indeed, his performance as Tuck is a highlight of the series. 

While Robin and Little John got on with the action, Friar Tuck’s scenes offered depth to the stories, provided medieval colour and background. As such, he was an integral character – the viewer believed in him and thus believed in Robin Hood’s world.

In this episode we discovered Friar Tuck’s first name – Alfred.

Standout scene: Friar Tuck insisting on speaking the truth. Tyrants are fearful of the truth, and prefer a world of lies, as we are witnessing in our own age.

Sword fights – 0. Bow fights/bow skills – 0. On the whole, this was a serious episode with verbal jousting replacing the sword.

Running total: Sword fights – 6. Bow fights/bow skills – 6.

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Willoughby Gray played the Inquisitor in this episode. He was a regular member of the Robin Hood troupe making 38 appearances in the series. He also featured in other television series, such as The Adventures of William Tell, on stage and in films, including his role as the King in The Princess Bride.

During the Second World War, Willoughby Gray commanded a reconnaissance unit in North-Western Europe. For his gallant and distinguished service, he was awarded the MBE.

His recommendation reads: Captain Gray has commanded a divisional patrol with outstanding success throughout the campaign. The resource and initiative shown by him at all times has resulted in a great deal of vital information reaching Army and Corps HQ much more quickly than would otherwise have been the case, in addition, he has shown great enterprise and complete disregard for his own personal safety on many occasions, notably whilst carrying out reconnaissances in the Antwerp area during the advance through Belgium. The bearing of this officer under arduous conditions and his cheerfulness and willingness to do any work delegated to him unhesitatingly have been an example to those with whom he came in contact.

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Categories
1963

Social History 1963 #45

Sunday 25 August 1963

An underworld squealer has informed Scotland Yard detectives that £1,000,000 of stolen train loot is hidden away in one fantastic hoard. The robbers only expected to steal a million, not £2,600,000, and the squealer said the gang fell out after the share-out. Members of the gang, who wanted a bigger share of the money, are threatening to shop the leaders.

Meanwhile, Mr Big, the man who planned the train raid, has left the country. The squealer told the Yard Mr Big’s name, and the Yard informed Interpol. Mr Big’s fingerprints were found at the gang’s hideout, Leatherslade Farm. 

A 40 mph boat will set out from Plymouth to Torquay on Thursday to try to prove that the roads are so dangerous and crowded it’s quicker to go by sea.

Cricket – Fifth Test Match at the Oval. England 275 and 223. West Indies 246. England failed to capitalise on their slender first innings lead, allowing the West Indies back into the game. Roared on by the crowd – the West Indies must have thought they were playing at home – their quick men Hall, Griffith and Sobers, took wickets at regular intervals, setting up a thrilling finale. 

Football – Match of the Day: Sheffield Wednesday 3 Manchester United 3. Champions Everton got off to a winning start, defeating Fulham 3 – 0. Neighbours Liverpool beat Blackburn away, 2 – 1, while Tottenham Hotspur suffered a surprise 2 – 1 defeat at Stoke City.

John Charles celebrated his return to British football with a goal in Cardiff’s 3 – 1 win over Norwich. Charles scored with a kick from ten yards inside his own half which bounced over the goalkeeper’s head into the net. Overall, attendances were down – 745,000 compared to 811,597 on the opening day last season.

Television Highlights: Robin Hood – Bride for an Outlaw. This Nation Tomorrow – advertising and society. Fireball XL5.

Radio Highlights: Pick of the Pops. The Jazz Scene.

Weather: sunshine and showers.

Monday 26 August 1963

Detectives believe that the mail train robbers have sent their share of the loot to hideaways outside London by train. The detectives are looking for large packing cases bought in the past ten days. They are also looking for Roy John James – The Weasel, Bruce Reynolds and James White.

Meanwhile, police have released six-foot Gordon Goody, 32. Goody is a hairdresser who lives with his mother. Mr Goody’s sister, Joan, said, “Gordon had nothing to do with the robbery. He came home from the police station, had a couple of cups of tea, then went straight out.” 

Eleven women footballers shut themselves in their dressing room half-way through a match yesterday and refused to play any more. The players, from Howard Harlequins of Newcastle upon Tyne claimed their hosts, the Fife Dynamites, were too rough. Fife were leading 3 – 1 at half-time. Harlequins manager, Alec Morton said, “My players are injured. And they have to go to work tomorrow. The match is off.”

Fifth Test Match, at the Oval. Rain and wind on the rest day should make the West Indies target of 253 tomorrow even trickier. In these conditions, England have a good chance of winning the match and squaring the rubber. Whatever the result, it will be a grandstand finish to a grandstand series.

Side by side, England and West Indian fans will watch the closing stages of this great test series. They will display that harmony can exist, regardless of a person’s background. They will demonstrate that people can get along together.  Cricket fans have taught the nation a lesson, one we would do well to heed. 

Television highlights: Outlook Europe – Belgium. Boxing from Birmingham. Love Story with Maxine Audley.

Radio highlights: London v Dublin Quiz. The Corruption of the Exotic – talk.

Weather: cool and showery. Outlook – similar. 17c, 63f.

Tuesday 27 August 1963

Great Train Robbery: Scotland Yard detectives seeking “The Weasel”, racing driver Roy John James, think he might have gone to Vienna. Interpol are conducting a search. The Weasel might be with his girlfriend, believed to be named Lillian.

South Africa has banned Peter Sellers’ latest comedy Heavens Above! because it shows people of different races mixing normally.

Music experts gathered in a London hotel to predict the sounds of 1964. They believe that the twang and gzing will go, to be replaced by the meaty thwong. The Midlands might still favour the twang, but Scotland and the North are likely to go for the more modern thwong. London is half twang, half thwong with a bit of gzing thrown in. And what about 1965? Listen out for the waaaaaang.

Cricket: the West Indies won the Fifth Test at the Oval by eight wickets, and the series 3 – 1. However, mere statistics do not convey the brilliance of the West Indies play and the joy of their spectators. Was this the greatest series of all time? Possibly. We should all give thanks to the West Indies and their supporters for making this a summer to remember.

The programme Look No People on ITV was so unusual. No sex, no violence, no swearing, just teapots by the dozen. – R Mumford, Kingston, Surrey.

Football: Aston Villa 1 Stoke City 3. After two games, newly promoted Stoke City are top of the First Division.

Television highlights: The Targa Florio – Sterling Moss comments on the Sicilian motor race. Radio-controlled Models. On Safari – the Herons of Nairobi. 

Radio highlights: Workers’ Playtime. People Today – Laurie Lee.

Weather: sunny periods and showers. Outlook – similar. 19c, 66f.

Wednesday 28 August 1963

Police hunting the Great Train Robbery loot have found another £10,000 in fivers, in Dorking, Surrey. The police made more than thirty raids yesterday. Meanwhile, detectives have released new pictures of Roy “The Weasel” James and Bruce Reynolds. It’s suspected that the men have gone on the run in a “hotted up” car.

The British actors trade union, Equity, has barred Christine Keeler from membership. She was going to play herself in a film, The Christine Keeler Story. Yvonne Buckingham will now play the title role. John Barrymore will play Stephen Ward. No one will play John Profumo.

The 2,500 Austin cars produced each week at the new fully-automated assembly plant at Longbridge, Birmingham, are untouched by hand until driven out of the factory.

Transport Minister Ernest Marples has rejected the idea of drivers using dipped headlights when driving by night. Even though an experiment in Birmingham was hailed as a success, Mr Marples has written it off as a failure. Last year, 72,241 pedestrians were killed by cars in Britain.

A new sink will do the washing up for you. You put the dirty dishes in hot water, turn on the machine and high pressure bubbles come up through holes in the bottom and clean the dishes. The machine will also boil clothes. Cost: £99 7s 6d.

Television highlights: Citizen 63 – inside stories of people’s lives. Stars and Garters – pub entertainment. The March on Washington – Telstar relay.

Radio highlights: Ancient Civilisations – China. The Freedom March.

Weather: cloudy with rain. Outlook – sunnier, warmer. 18c, 64f.

Thursday 29 August 1963

Great Train Robbery: Scotland Yard remains convinced that most of the stolen loot is still in Britain. The police now have four-fifths of the serial numbers of the fivers stolen. Meanwhile, detectives are keen to interview Cherry aka Sherree White and her husband James. 

Two housewives out of every five in Britain go out to work. Around 5,000,000 housewives now go out to work, an increase of 2,000,000 in five years. Working wives are the main reason for an increase in spending on TV sets, washing machines, fridges and “ready to cook” foods.

The average male manual worker receives £16 3s 1d for a forty-seven hour week. Women receive £8 3s 9d for thirty-nine and a half hours.

Britons drank nine half pints of beer a head every week last year. This places Britain fifth on the world beer-drinking table.

Two out of the five prisoners who escaped from Nottingham jail last week during a cricket coaching session have been recaptured at Lincoln.

Nearly 200 viewers phoned the BBC last night to complain about a scene in Sid James’ series Taxi! The viewers felt that a scuffle between a young taxi driver and three seamen was too violent.

Football Results: First Division – Liverpool 1 Nottingham Forest 2, Manchester United 2 Ipswich 0, Wolves 1 Tottenham 4.

Television highlights: The Marriage of Figaro (two and a half hours). Don’t Say a Word – charades with Spike Milligan and Billie Whitelaw. Cricket – Kent v West Indies.

Radio highlights: It’s Cool, It’s Hot. Book at Bedtime.

Weather: cloudy, sunny intervals. Outlook – rain then brighter. 19c, 66f.

Friday 30 August 1963

The road accident figures are getting worse. In June, 595 people were killed. The number of injured was 32,578. In the first six months of this year 156,916 people have been killed or injured. However, accidents were greatly reduced on roads subjected to the 50 mph speed limit.

A pleasure cruiser, Wee Moppie, took only four minutes longer than a 120 mph Jaguar to travel from Plymouth to Torquay yesterday. It is 32 miles by car, 40 by sea. The car, held up in traffic jams, took one hour thirty-nine minutes.

Birmingham Council is considering offering young couples “build it yourself” house-kits. The kits, for a three-bedroomed house, would cost £2,200. Gas, plumbing and electricity would be installed by corporation workmen.

Letters: West Indies captain Frank Worrell deserves a knighthood. This act of chivalry would be applauded, not only in Britain and the West Indies, but throughout the Commonwealth. Meanwhile, callers are still calling UMP for Test Match reports, even though the series has finished. The GPO estimates that over 6,000,000 calls have been made to UMP since the series started in June.

Racehorse Relko was doped when it won the Derby on 29 May. He won the race by six lengths. The Jockey Club have asked the police to investigate. The Relko investigation is part of an inquiry into widespread horse doping at race meetings.

For the first time in light comedy on the BBC, a young married couple will share a bed. The bed scene opens the episode of The Marriage Lines starring Richard Briers and Prunella Scales. Heavier dramas such as Z Cars and Maigret have already featured double-bed scenes.

Television highlights: Ready, Steady, Go! with Tippi Hedren and the Springfields. Michael Shayne – detective series. Points of View.

Radio highlights: Comment – The Edinburgh Festival. Sing and Spin – folk music.

Weather: cloudy with rain, cool. Outlook Rain clearing. 18c, 64f.

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

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Categories
Maid Marian and Robin Hood

Maid Marian and Robin Hood #8

The Adventures of Robin Hood

Episode 6: A Guest for the Gallows

Introductory minstrel song: “Old Will Stuteley cannot pay, and into prison he is cast; the Sheriff is the very one, who turns him loose at last!”

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 

*Joan of the Blue Bull Inn – Simone Lovell

*Didn’t feature in this episode 

Original air date: 25 December 1955

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

Director: Ralph Smart

Plot: The poor people can’t pay their taxes. The Sheriff’s solution – let’s hang one of them.

Health and Safety was clearly not a thing in Sherwood Forest to judge from the number of arrows flying around, bearing messages. To be fair to the television series, many of the Robin Hood films used this communication system as well.

Maid Marian doesn’t feature in this episode and Robin has an enjoyable time kissing “Lass”, played by Jan Miller. Although she appeared previously, Maid Marian is yet to make her mark on the series.

To save Will Stutely, Robin goes incognito as a market trader. The Sheriff of Nottingham meets him and fails to recognise him, a scene that requires the audience to suspend a fair amount of disbelief.

Standout scene: the exchange of Will Stutely for the Sheriff of Nottingham, followed by the Sheriff’s inevitable betrayal, and Friar Tuck’s cunning intervention.

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

Running total: Sword fights – 6. Bow fights/bow skills – 6.

Robert Desmond, pictured, played Will Stutely. He appeared opposite Richard Attenborough three times in his career, most notably as Griffith the Tailor in The Great Escape. Later, he established roles in soaps such as Compact and Crossroads, plus the obligatory appearance in The Avengers. 

Robert Desmond’s final film role, in 1967, is one for trivia fans. He appeared as Auctioneer in Calamity the Cow, which featured a young Phil Collins of Genesis fame.

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Will Scarlet – Fact or Fiction?

🖼️ Will Scarlet by Louis Rhead, 1912

In a later ballad, Robin Hood and the Newly Revived, Will appears as a finely dressed young man shooting deer in Sherwood Forest. He offers his name as Young Gamwell and is renamed Will Scarlet by Robin Hood when he accepts an invitation to join the outlaw band.

Traditionally, Will is depicted as being younger than the other outlaws. A skilled swordsman, he loves fine clothes, particularly garments made from red silk. 

There is nothing in the historical record to suggest that Will Scarlet was based on a real person. His character has evolved as balladeers and writers have developed the Robin Hood legends over time.

Using red as the signature colour for Will Scarlet, my character will have Welsh origins, and go by the name Gwilym Goch. Also, because as we all know Welshmen can sing, my character will be Robin Hood’s musician, taking on aspects of Alan-a-Dale character from the legends.

Numerous actors have portrayed Will Scarlet in films and on television. This list is far from exhaustive – it merely offers my personal highlights.

Anthony Forwood in The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men, 1952

Ronald Howard and Paul Eddington in the television series The Adventures of Robin Hood, 1955-59

Douglas Mitchell in A Challenge for Robin Hood, 1967

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Coming soon, my Adventures of Maid Marian series

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For Authors

#1 for value with 565,000 readers, The Fussy Librarian has helped my books to reach #1 on over thirty occasions.

A special offer from my publisher and the Fussy Librarian. https://authors.thefussylibrarian.com/?ref=goylake

Don’t forget to use the code goylake20 to claim your discount 🙂