Bergerac: My Name's Sergeant Bergerac


5:10 pm - 6:20 pm, Wednesday, January 14 on U&Drama +1 (60)

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About this Broadcast

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My Name's Sergeant Bergerac
Season 8, Episode 2

Part two of two. A forger posing as Bergerac enquires about the bank account of a known con-man and is later abducted by a pair of criminals. Crime drama, guest starring Tony Robinson and John Bluthal, with John Nettles


subtitles
Detective/Thriller Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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John Nettles (Actor) .. Jim Bergerac
Terence Alexander (Actor) .. Charlie Hungerford
Sean Arnold (Actor) .. Barney Crozier
Tony Robinson (Actor) .. Shlomo Denkovitz
John Telfer (Actor) .. Willy Pettit
David Kershaw (Actor) .. Ben Lomas
John Bluthal (Actor) .. Edward Emanuelson
Derren Nesbitt (Actor) .. Dennis Swain
John Milne (Writer)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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John Nettles (Actor) .. Jim Bergerac
Born: October 11, 1943 in St Austell, Cornwall
Best Known For: Playing Jim Bergerac.
Early-life: John Vivian Drummond Nettles was born on October 11, 1943, in St Austell, Cornwall. He was adopted at birth by a carpenter and his wife, who was a cleaner. John later discovered his biological mother was an unmarried Irish nurse who died of tuberculosis at the age of 28. Despite these humble beginnings, he won a scholarship to study philosophy and history at Southampton University. He trained to be a teacher, but drifted into acting after appearing in a touring version of the play Camus during his time at university.
Career: While appearing in amateur drama productions, Nettles was spotted by an agent who arranged work for him at the Royal Court Theatre. He made his debut as a standard bearer in Macbeth, opening doors for Alec Guinness. His first movie was The Red, White and Black in 1970. His big break came in 1972's A World At War, followed by a four-year stint in The Liver Birds. Nettles became a household name thanks to Bergerac, which ran for 10 years until 1991. TV projects since include Romeo And Juliet, The Hound of the Baskervilles and Midsomer Murders. He has also provided the narration for such programmes as Airport and The Hunt.
Quote: "I live in the tranquility and splendour which befits someone of my seniority."
Trivia: Nettles received an OBE in 2010.
Terence Alexander (Actor) .. Charlie Hungerford
Born: March 11, 1923 in London
Best Known For: His role as Charlie Hungerford in BBC detective drama Bergerac.
Early-life: Terence Joseph Alexander was born in London on March 11, 1923. The son of a doctor, he grew up in Yorkshire. He started acting in the theatre at the age of 16. During the Second World War he served in the British Army with the 27th Lancers and was seriously wounded in Italy.
Career: Alexander quickly established himself as a character actor and went on to appear in more than 300 films, TV movies and series episodes. He mostly had bit parts and fame did not come to him until later in life when he landed the role of lovable rogue and would-be tycoon Charlie Hungerford in Bergerac in 1981. He played the part for 10 years and it made him a household name. After Bergerac, he starred alongside Rik Mayall in The New Statesman. He died on May 28, 2009 at the age of 86.
Quote: On his early interest in becoming a priest: "I realised that celibacy wasn't for me".
Trivia: He was an amateur numerologist and the number 23 was very significant to him.
Sean Arnold (Actor) .. Barney Crozier
Tony Robinson (Actor) .. Shlomo Denkovitz
Born: August 15, 1946 in London
Best Known For: Playing Baldrick in the Blackadder series and fronting Time Team.
Early-life: Tony Robinson was born in Hackney, London, on August 15, 1946, and brought up near Epping Forest. His father was a civil servant and his mother took part in amateur dramatics. He caught the acting bug at the age of 12 when he landed the role of the Artful Dodger in a West End production of Oliver! After leaving school with four O-levels, he studied at the Central School of Speech and Drama.
Career: Robinson's first TV appearance was on the children's show Play Away in 1971, and he made his film debut in 1975, with a small part in the John Wayne movie Brannigan. He featured in Channel 4 satire Who Dares Wins in 1983, but his big TV break came that same year when he played Baldrick in The Black Adder, which ran for six years. In 1989, he wrote and starred in Bafta award-winning children's series Maid Marian And Her Merry Men. Five years later, he began presenting Channel 4's archaeology series Time Team and has since hosted The Worst Jobs In History and documentaries about figures including Macbeth and Boudica. Away from TV, he has toured the country with his one-man show and is a prolific children's author.
Quote: "In the UK virtually all of our landscape has been continually worked and reworked by human beings for thousands of years. Our country is like a big trifle of history."
John Telfer (Actor) .. Willy Pettit
David Kershaw (Actor) .. Ben Lomas
John Bluthal (Actor) .. Edward Emanuelson
Derren Nesbitt (Actor) .. Dennis Swain
George Gallaccio (Producer)
Michael Brayshaw (Director)
John Milne (Writer)

Before / After

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