Minder: Guess Who's Coming to Pinner?


9:00 pm - 10:05 pm, Saturday, March 14 on That's TV 3 (71)

Average User Rating: 7.33 (3 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favourites

About this Broadcast

-
Guess Who's Coming to Pinner?
Season 8, Episode 5

Arthur spies a business opportunity as he and Ray prepare to pay their respects to the late Charlie Johnson, but the deceased's widow has other ideas. Comedy drama, starring George Cole and Gary Webster


General Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

-

George Cole (Actor) .. Arthur Daley
Gary Webster (Actor) .. Ray Daley
Glynn Edwards (Actor) .. Dave
Nicholas Day (Actor) .. DS Morley
Stephen Tompkinson (Actor) .. DC Park
Susan Tracy (Actor) .. The Widow Johnson
John Rowe (Actor) .. Supt Copeland
Dorian Healy (Actor) .. DS Cody
Gina McKee (Actor) .. Joanna

More Information

-

No Logo

Did You Know..

-

George Cole (Actor) .. Arthur Daley
Born: April 22, 1925 in London
Best Known For: Playing Arthur Daley in Minder.
Early-life: George Edward Cole was born in London on April 22, 1925. His mother, whom he never met, abandoned him at 10 days old, and he was adopted by the Cole family. George left school to be a butcher's boy, but won a part in a touring musical and opted for acting instead. At 15 he and his adoptive mother moved in with Alastair Sim's family after he appeared in a film with the thespian. They helped him lose his cockney accent, and he stayed with them until his first marriage at 27.
Career: Cole made his big-screen debut in 1941's Cottage to Let, but didn't achieve fame until he landed the part of Flash Harry in the classic St Trinian's films. He went on to have a successful career on stage, TV and in movies, often appearing opposite mentor Sim in such productions as Scrooge and The Green Man. TV credits include My Good Friend, Dad, An Independent Man, Blott on the Landscape and Minder, which ran for 15 years. In his later years, he appeared in Station Jim, Bodily Harm, Mary Reilly, A Class Apart, and Diamond Geezer. He died on August 6, 2015, after a long illness. He was 90.
Quote: 'I made my first film in 1940. I can't think much has changed apart from the equipment and cost.'
Trivia: In 2013, Cole published his autobiography, The World Was My Lobster.
Gary Webster (Actor) .. Ray Daley
Glynn Edwards (Actor) .. Dave
Nicholas Day (Actor) .. DS Morley
Stephen Tompkinson (Actor) .. DC Park
Born: October 15, 1965 in Stockton-On-Tees, Cleveland
Best Known For: Roles in a number of hit shows.
Early-life: Born in Stockton-On-Tees, Cleveland, on October 15, 1965. He was raised a Catholic and considered becoming a priest. He later moved to St Anne's-on-Sea in Lancashire when his bank clerk father was promoted to manager. His mother was a primary school teacher. His grandfather encouraged him to become an actor and, after making his first stage appearance in The Crucible while in the sixth-form, he attended the Central School of Speech and Drama in London.
Career: Tompkinson has rarely been out of work since thanks to radio, stage, TV and film roles. Early parts came in The Manageress, Casualty and Treacle, before he got his first big role playing ruthless reporter Damien Day in acclaimed sitcom Drop The Dead Donkey in 1990. All Quiet on the Preston Front, Chancer and Minder followed, before Brassed Off and Ballykissangel made him a star in 1996. Hollywood agents came knocking, but Tompkinson preferred to stay in the UK to star in Grafters, Mr Charity, Ted and Alice, In Deep, Staying Up and Lucky Jim. He's also had roles in New Tricks, Marian, Again, Prime Suspect: The Final Act, Wild at Heart and Truckers. The drama DCI Banks has become a regular fixture in the schedules.
Quote: 'I keep getting these posh people to play when really I'm a nice northern bloke adored by my Grandma.'
Trivia: A huge cricket fan, he has stated that if he weren't an actor, he'd be a commentator.
Susan Tracy (Actor) .. The Widow Johnson
John Rowe (Actor) .. Supt Copeland
Dorian Healy (Actor) .. DS Cody
Gina McKee (Actor) .. Joanna
Born: April 14, 1964 in Sunderland
Best Known For: Our Friends in the North.
Early-life: Born in Sunderland in 1964, she was raised in Easington, County Durham, by non-theatrical parents. Notoriously reticent at talking about her family, but she does admit to being a highly creative and imaginative child who loved to draw, write stories and act out plays. She became hooked on acting and, while not encouraged by her parents, they didn't stand in her way when she won a role on TV show Quest of Eagles before joining the National Youth Theatre.
Career: At 17, McKee auditioned but was turned down by drama school. At first, she thought she wouldn't make it in showbusiness, but continued auditioning anyway. She appeared on TV in such programmes as An Actor's Life for Me, Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, Inspector Morse, and The Lenny Henry Show. McKee also made a handful of movies, most notably Mike Leigh's Naked, before hitting the big time with miniseries Our Friends in the North in 1996, for which she won a Bafta. Since then, she's appeared in such acclaimed projects as Notting Hill, Croupier, The Forsyte Saga, The Lost Prince and The Borgias.
Quote: 'Some people can talk about their private lives to the media, and good luck to them. But I just don't feel comfortable. And I wouldn't be any good at it - showing people around my kitchen or whatever. I'd be pathetic in fact.'
Trivia: In 2002, McKee received an Honorary Doctorate of Arts from the University of Sunderland.
Diarmuid Lawrence (Director)

Before / After

-