Budgie: Twenty-Four Thousand Ball Point Pens


12:35 am - 01:35 am, Today on Talking Pictures TV (82)

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About this Broadcast

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Twenty-Four Thousand Ball Point Pens
Season 2, Episode 8

The small-time crook gets involved in an investment scheme he is convinced will turn his fortunes around. Guest starring Alfie Bass and Kenneth Cranham


subtitles
Movie/Drama Police/Crime Drama

Cast & Crew

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Adam Faith (Actor) .. Ronald `Budgie" Bird
Alfie Bass (Actor) .. Dickie Silver
Kenneth Cranham (Actor) .. Inky Ballantine

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Adam Faith (Actor) .. Ronald `Budgie" Bird
Born: June 23, 1940 in London
Best Known For: His early singing career.
Early-life: Born Terence Nelhams-Wright in London on June 23, 1940, the son of a bus driver and an office cleaner. An entrepreneur as a youngster, he had four jobs at 14. His desire for a career in showbusiness saw him leave school a year later to work at Rank Studios as a messenger boy. He formed skiffle band the Worried Men with colleagues and began performing in local clubs. He became an assistant film editor at an advert-making company, but knew he wanted to be a professional singer.
Career: His band secured a regular place at the 2i coffee bar in Soho, the starting point for a host of big acts, including Tommy Steele and Cliff Richard. He was spotted there in 1958 by Six-Five Special producer Jack Good, who booked him for two appearances. After releasing three singles that flopped, he had a hit with What Do You Want? in 1959. A run of 11 top 20 hits over three years followed, but Faith quit singing in 1967 to concentrate on acting. His 1970 TV series Budgie was a huge success. He returned to the recording studio to produce albums for Leo Sayer and Roger Daltrey. Faith continued acting on stage, TV and in movies such as McVicar and Love Hurts. His career took an unlikely turn when he became a financial journalist in the 1980s and launched satellite TV station The Money Channel in 1999, but it flopped and was driven off air. He continued to act and perform live music. His death from a heart attack, in 2003, happened hours after leaving the stage in Stoke-on-Trent where he was appearing in the play Love and Marriage.
Quote: 'Next to breathing, eating and drinking, the most important thing is money. And since you need money to eat and drink, you could say it's the most important thing after breathing.'
Trivia: When The Money Channel closed in June 2002, Faith was declared bankrupt, owing a reported £32million.
Alfie Bass (Actor) .. Dickie Silver
Kenneth Cranham (Actor) .. Inky Ballantine
Born: December 12, 1944 in Dunfermline
Best Known For: Being a star of stage, TV and film.
Early-life: Kenneth was born in Dunfermline on December 12, 1944 to Margaret and Ronald. He trained to be an actor at the National Youth Theatre of Great Britain and Rada. His breakthrough as an actor came in the 1960s when he starred in Joe Orton's Loot in the West End and on Broadway. He made his TV debut in an episode of City 68' in 1967.
Career: Cranham's long career has seen him switch effortlessly between roles on TV, film and in the theatre. On the small screen, he is best known for playing the lead role in popular 1980s comedy drama Shine On, Harvey Moon! but he has numerous TV credits to his name. He has starred in Danger UXB, Brideshead Revisited, Inspector Morse, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, El C.I.D., Minder, Our Mutual Friend, Rome, and Doc Martin among many others. On the big screen, he has starred in Hellbound: Hellraiser II (1988), Kevin & Perry Go Large (2000), Born Romantic (2000), Layer Cake (2004), A Good Year (2006), Hot Fuzz (2007), Valkyrie (2008), Made in Dagenham (2010), and Maleficent (2014). He continues to be heavily in demand. On the stage, he is best known for playing Inspector Goole in An Inspector Calls, a play he performed in the West End and on Broadway.
Quote: On Shine on Harvey Moon: 'It was very popular in Scotland. I always thought it was because it was very like The Broons.'
Trivia: On the stage, he has a long association with the work of Harold Pinter.

Before / After

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