Going Straight: Going-Going-Gone


4:50 pm - 5:25 pm, Sunday, May 17 on That's TV (56)

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About this Broadcast

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Going-Going-Gone
Season 1, Episode 5

When an elderly lady checks into the hotel and asks for her jewellery to be put in the safe, Fletch is reminded of a scam he heard about from one of his cellmates years earlier and is convinced the conman is up to his old tricks again. Guest starring Nigel Hawthorne


Comedy Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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Ronnie Barker (Actor) .. Norman Stanley Fletcher
Richard Beckinsale (Actor) .. Lennie Godber
Patricia Brake (Actor) .. Ingrid Fletcher
David Swift (Actor) .. Mr McEwan
Nigel Hawthorne (Actor) .. Worm Wellings
Lally Bowers (Actor) .. Mrs Appleby
Nicholas Lyndhurst (Actor) .. Raymond Fletcher
Donald Morley (Actor) .. Mr Smith
Pete Postlethwaite (Actor) .. Thomas Clifford Crowther
Rikki Howard (Actor) .. Cheryl
Martin Milman (Actor) .. Policeman
Bill Wright (Editor)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Ronnie Barker (Actor) .. Norman Stanley Fletcher
Born: September 25, 1929 in Bedford
Best Known For: Porridge and The Two Ronnies.
Early-life: Ronald William George Barker was born in Bedfordshire on September 25, 1929. He developed a love of theatre as a child when he attended plays with his family, and frequently waited outside stage doors to collect autographs. He attended Donnington Junior School and then the City of Oxford High School for Boys. After leaving school, he trained as an architect but gave it up after six months. Harbouring dreams of becoming an actor, he worked in amateur dramatics for 18 months while employed as a clerk in a bank.
Career: Barker joined the Oxford Playhouse in 1951 and other theatrical work in the West End followed. His theatrical success led to radio work, and he featured in 300 episodes of radio sitcom The Navy Lark, which ran from 1959 to 1977. His big break on TV came in the late 1960s when he appeared alongside Ronnie Corbett and John Cleese on The Frost Report. Barker went on to star in Porridge, Open All Hours, and, with Ronnie Corbett, formed one of the best-loved double acts of the 1970s and 1980s as The Two Ronnies. He also appeared with Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn in the film Robin and Marian, a bleak version of the Robin Hood legend. Barker retired from acting in 1987 to run an antiques business, but returned briefly to star as Winston Churchill's butler in acclaimed 2002 TV movie The Gathering Storm, and alongside Maggie Smith in My House in Umbria in 2003. He died of heart failure at a hospice in Oxfordshire on October 3, 2005, at the age of 76.
Quote: 'The toilets at a local police station have been stolen. Police say they have nothing to go on.'
Trivia: He was awarded an OBE in 1978.
Richard Beckinsale (Actor) .. Lennie Godber
Patricia Brake (Actor) .. Ingrid Fletcher
David Swift (Actor) .. Mr McEwan
Nigel Hawthorne (Actor) .. Worm Wellings
Born: April 05, 1929 in Coventry
Best Known For: Playing Sir Humphrey Appleby in Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister.
Early-life: Nigel Barnard Hawthorne was born in Coventry on April 5, 1929. His family emigrated to South Africa when he was four. Nigel dropped out of Cape Town University before completing a broadcasting degree. He did some acting as a student and made his professional debut in 1950 in The Shop at Sly Corner.
Career: Hawthorne returned to England in 1951 and landed a job as an assistant stage manager in Buxton, Derbyshire. Later the same year, he made his London stage debut in You Can't Take It With You, but found other roles hard to come by. In 1957 he returned to South Africa and managed to secure a number of leading roles. He came back to London in 1962 and made his first West End appearance in Talking to You. He made his Broadway debut in 1974 in As You Like It and won a Tony Award in 1991 for his role in Shadowlands. In a varied career, he mixed his stage work with appearances in a number of TV shows and films. He won four Bafta TV awards for his work on Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister, and was awarded Bafta film gongs for The Madness of King George (1994) and The Fragile Heart (1996). He was nominated for an Academy Award for his work on The Madness of King George. He was knighted in 1999. He died from a heart attack on December 26, 2001 at the age of 72.
Quote: 'I wanted to be an animator, not an actor, but I wasn't any good, and I knew it. So when I first made a cartoon with Disney, which was called The Black Cauldron, it was like a dream come true.'
Trivia: He was survived by his partner, writer Trevor Bentham.
Lally Bowers (Actor) .. Mrs Appleby
Nicholas Lyndhurst (Actor) .. Raymond Fletcher
Born: April 21, 1961 in Emsworth, Hampshire
Best Known For: Playing Del Boy's gangly brother Rodney Trotter.
Early-life: Nicholas Simon Lyndhurst was born on April 21, 1961, in Emsworth, Hampshire. He was raised by his single mum Liz, but has described his father Joe as a 'gentle man, very funny, very charming'. Nicholas subsequently had little contact with Joe after turning 17. At the age of eight he decided he wanted to be an actor, and at 10 he began training while boarding at the Corona Stage Academy. Appearances in adverts paid for his studies.
Career: Lyndhurst made his TV debut in an adaptation of Heidi in 1974. He followed this with roles in The Prince and the Pauper, and The Tomorrow People. In 1978, Lyndhurst began his transition into more grown-up roles by playing Ronnie Barker's son in Porridge spin-off Going Straight, and classic sitcom Butterflies, but it was Only Fools And Horses that made him a household name when it began in 1981. Since then, he's also starred in The Two of Us, The Piglet Files, David Copperfield, Gulliver's Travels, Goodnight Sweetheart, After You've Gone and Only Fools prequel Rock & Chips. He is now a regular in New Tricks.
Quote: 'The idea of achieving fame and fortune didn't cross my mind and I find it terrifying that being famous is the sole objective of so many young people today.'
Trivia: He enjoys underwater diving.
Donald Morley (Actor) .. Mr Smith
Pete Postlethwaite (Actor) .. Thomas Clifford Crowther
Rikki Howard (Actor) .. Cheryl
Martin Milman (Actor) .. Policeman
Sydney Lotterby (Director)
Dick Clement (Writer)
Ian La Frenais (Writer)
Bill Wright (Editor)

Before / After

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