Tommy the Toreador


4:35 pm - 6:20 pm, Thursday, July 16 on Talking Pictures TV (82)

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About this Broadcast

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A seaman on leave in Seville saves the life of a famous bullfighter, but ends up assuming his identity. The mix-up leads to his involvement in a smuggling operation - as well as ending up in the ring having to face a fearsome bull. Musical comedy, starring Tommy Steele, Sid James and Bernard Cribbins


1959 subtitles
Comedy Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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Tommy Steele (Actor) .. Tommy Tomkins
Sid James (Actor) .. Cadena
Bernard Cribbins (Actor) .. Paco
Eric Sykes (Actor) .. Martin
Kenneth Williams (Actor) .. Vice-Consul
Janet Munro (Actor) .. Amanda
Ferdy Mayne (Actor) .. Lopez
Jose Nieto (Actor) .. Insp Quintero

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Tommy Steele (Actor) .. Tommy Tomkins
Sid James (Actor) .. Cadena
Born: May 08, 1913 in Johannesburg, South Africa
Best Known For: Being a member of the Carry On team.
Early-life: Born Solomon Joel Cohen in Johannesburg, South Africa, on May 8, 1913. He trained and worked as a hairdresser before serving with the South African Army during the Second World War. Determined to be an actor, he left for England in 1946 and worked in repertory theatre before he started making his mark on the British film industry.
Career: James became known in the film trade as 'one-take James' and was constantly in demand for small parts. His first major role was alongside Alec Guinness and Stanley Holloway in The Lavender Hill Mob (1951). His first big break came in 1954, when he became Tony Hancock's sidekick in the hugely popular BBC radio comedy Hancock's Half Hour. His next break came when he appeared on the big screen in Carry On Teacher (1959). He went on to make 19 Carry On films and various stage and TV spin-offs. On the small screen, he enjoyed success in the sitcoms Hancock's Half Hour, Citizen James, George and the Dragon and Bless This House. He was touring in a stage version of The Mating Season when he suffered a fatal heart attack on April 26, 1976. He was 62.
Quote: 'All I can do is play myself.'
Trivia: James's well-publicised affair with Carry On co-star Barbara Windsor was dramatised in the 1998 stage play Cleo, Camping, Emmanuelle and Dick, and the 2000 TV adaptation Cor, Blimey! His trademark in the Carry On films was his dirty laugh.
Bernard Cribbins (Actor) .. Paco
Born: December 29, 1928 in Oldham, Lancashire
Best Known For: Voicing The Wombles and appearing in Doctor Who.
Early-life: Born on December 29, 1928, in Oldham, Lancashire. His mother, Ethel, worked in a mill as a cotton weaver, while his father, Jack, was a general labourer. He began acting in his early teens, playing junior roles at his local theatre after being spotted taking part in a charity fund-raiser. After leaving school at 14, Cribbins was taken on by Oldham Rep as an assistant stage manager, during which he also played small roles while earning 15 shillings a week. He took a break from his career to do national service in the Parachute Regiment.
Career: After appearing on stage for many years, Cribbins finally made his film debut in 1957's Davy, before going on to work alongside some of British cinema's biggest names in such films as Two-Way Stretch, She, Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150AD, Casino Royale (the 1967 version), and Frenzy. He's also starred in several Carry On movies. Cribbins has also worked extensively in projects aimed at youngsters, making a record number of appearances on Jackanory (17), voicing The Wombles, and appearing in The Railway Children. More recently, he's featured in Coronation Street and the revamped Doctor Who. Over the years, he's also had his own TV show and three hit records, including Right Said Fred. He refuses to slow down, and has the lead role in CBeebies show Old Jack's Boat.
Quote: 'I've done everything except a Western - and I've never been in a circus.'
Trivia: Cribbins was awarded an OBE in 2011 for services to drama. During the 1960s, he narrated the Tufty Fluffytale series of public information films about road safety.
Eric Sykes (Actor) .. Martin
Born: May 04, 1923 in Oldham
Best Known For: His self-titled sitcom.
Early-life: Eric Sykes was born in Oldham on May 4, 1923. His mother died in childbirth, his father, a cotton-mill worker, remarried. He had an older brother and a younger half-brother. In his autobiography, Eric reveals how, as a child, he was 'always hungry and always cold'. He first became interested in entertainment as a career during his time in the Royal Air Force Special Liaison Unit during the Second World War, where he worked with Flight Lieutenant Bill Fraser. After demob, he moved to London and at the end of his first week, Eric bumped into Fraser, who was starring at the Playhouse Theatre and asked his old pal to write for him.
Career: Sykes provided scripts for Fraser and Frankie Howerd, before moving on to radio shows such as Educating Archie and Variety Bandbox. In 1955, he wrote and directed the spoof Pantomania, beginning his career in TV. By 1957 he was almost totally deaf, forcing him to lip-read his fellow actors so he didn't miss his cues. The 1960s saw him team up with Hattie Jacques for the first time since his radio days, and their comedy partnership lasted until her death in 1980. As well as his eponymous sitcom, Sykes other credits include silent comedy The Plank (which he also directed), Curry and Chips, and The 19th Hole, as well as various stage plays and such movies as Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines, The Others, and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. He died on July 4, 2012, at the age of 89.
Quote: 'I'm proud of being a vaudevillian, the last of my line. Entertainment is too aggressive these days, all 'in your face'.'
Trivia: Married Edith Milbrandt in 1952. They had three daughters, Catherine, Susan and Julie, and a son, David.
Kenneth Williams (Actor) .. Vice-Consul
Born: February 22, 1926 in London
Best Known For: Being a member of the Carry On team.
Early-life: Kenneth Charles Williams was born in London on February 22, 1926. He joined the Army in 1944 and first performed on stage in the Combined Services Entertainment alongside Stanley Baxter and Peter Nichols.
Career: After leaving the Army, Williams landed work as a professional actor in repertory companies. On the strength of his performance in a production of Saint Joan, he was hired by a radio producer to do voice characterisations in radio comedy Hancock's Half Hour. His popularity on radio soared in the 1950s and 1960s when he starred with Kenneth Horne in Beyond Our Ken and Round the Horne. Williams also appeared in a number of revues on the stage in the West End, but he was best remembered for his comedy roles on the big screen in the Carry On films. He appeared in 25 of the Carry On films between 1958 and 1978. When the film work dried up, he became a regular on TV talk shows. He died on April 15, 1988 at the age of 62.
Quote: His catchphrase: 'Oh, stop messing about.'
Trivia: The posthumous publication of his diaries and letters caused controversy because he had criticised a number of his fellow performers.
Janet Munro (Actor) .. Amanda
Ferdy Mayne (Actor) .. Lopez
Jose Nieto (Actor) .. Insp Quintero
John Paddy Carstairs (Director)

Before / After

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