Hark at Barker | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy |
Created by | Alun Owen |
Written by |
|
Starring | Ronnie Barker Josephine Tewson David Jason Frank Gatliff |
Theme music composer | John Gregory |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 15 |
Production | |
Producer | Humphrey Barclay |
Running time | 25 minutes |
Production company | London Weekend Television |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 11 April 1969 21 August 1970 | –
Related | |
Six Dates with Barker |
Hark at Barker is a 1969 British comedy series combining elements of sitcom and sketch show, which starred Ronnie Barker. It was made for the ITV network by London Weekend Television.
Each show began with a spoof news item read by Barker as the announcer. He would then introduce the main part of the programme, a lecture to be given by Lord Rustless (also Barker) on a different topic each week from his stately home, Chrome Hall. Helped and hindered by Rustless' secretary (Mildred) Bates, his Butler Badger, his bad-tempered Cook, his incoherent gardener Dithers and (in Series 2) his buxom, near-mute maid Effie, these lectures invariably degenerated into farce, and were frequently interrupted by comic sketches on location or in the studio which also starred Barker in differing roles.
Barker reprised the role of Lord Rustless in the BBC series His Lordship Entertains, and played very similar characters in Futtock's End and the Two Ronnies specials The Picnic and By the Sea.
The Chrome Hall sequences were written by "Peter Caulfield" (a pseudonym of Alan Ayckbourn). During the first season, the sketches were written by Barker under his pseudonym "Gerald Wiley", generally with separate sketch contributions from one or both of the team of Graeme Garden and Bill Oddie. (Some of the Garden/Oddie sketches reprised material from I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again, and another was a forerunner of The Goodies episode "Bunfight at the OK Tea Room"). There were also other occasional sketch contributors during season 1, notably Eric Idle who contributed material to episode 3.
For season 2, sketch material was written by Gerald Wiley and Bernard McKenna.
Series 1 (11 April 1969 – 30 May 1969) - Produced in black and white
Series 2 (10 July 1970 – 21 August 1970) - Produced in colour
All Star Comedy Carnival Christmas Special (25 December 1970) - Produced in black and white due to the ITV Colour Strike
All episodes exist on their original 2 inch Quad b&w and PAL colour videotapes bar "Rustless on Law" from series 2, which only exists as a 16 mm b/w telerecording. The series was released on Region 2 DVD in 2008 by Network DVD, and are also included in The Ronnie Barker Collection along with Six Dates With Barker .