Yes Minister: The Challenge


7:20 pm - 8:00 pm, Friday, December 26 on That's TV 2 (65)

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About this Broadcast

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The Challenge
Season 3, Episode 2

A change in administration policy leaves Jim lumbered with the unenviable task of shaking up local government bureaucracy. Political comedy, starring Paul Eddington and Nigel Hawthorne


Comedy Movie/Drama

Cast & Crew

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Paul Eddington (Actor) .. Jim Hacker
Nigel Hawthorne (Actor) .. Sir Humphrey Appleby
Derek Fowlds (Actor) .. Bernard Woolley
John Nettleton (Actor) .. Sir Arnold Robinson
Ian Lavender (Actor) .. Richard Cartwright
Doug Fisher (Actor) .. Ben Stanley
Ludovic Kennedy (Actor) .. Himself
Moray Watson (Actor) .. Director of policy
Antony Jay (Writer)
Peter Whitmore (Director)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Paul Eddington (Actor) .. Jim Hacker
Born: June 18, 1927 in London
Best Known For: Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister and The Good Life.
Early-life: Born in London on June 18, 1927, Paul began his acting career with the Entertainments National Service Association during the Second World War. He went on to work for a repertory theatre company in Sheffield.
Career: Made his TV debut in 1956 in The Adventures of Robin Hood. A variety of stage, film and TV roles followed in the 1960s and 1970s. His big break came in his late forties when he landed the role of Jerry Leadbetter in The Good Life, and in the 1980s he cemented his position as a household name playing politician Jim Hacker in the acclaimed sitcoms Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister. While making Yes, Prime Minister, Eddington was diagnosed with a rare form of skin cancer that eventually claimed his life. He continued to work and went on to appear in The Camomile Lawn in 1992. He died on November 4, 1995 at the age of 68.
Quote: "A journalist once asked me what I would like my epitaph to be and I said I think I would like it to be 'He did very little harm'."
Trivia: He was awarded a CBE in 1987.
Nigel Hawthorne (Actor) .. Sir Humphrey Appleby
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.
Derek Fowlds (Actor) .. Bernard Woolley
Born: September 02, 1937 in London
Best Known For: Yes, Minister, Yes, Prime Minister and Heartbeat.
Early-life: Born in London on September 2, 1937, Derek left school at 15 and worked in a factory as an apprentice painter. It was during his national service that he was encouraged to take up acting. He went on to win a scholarship and grant for Rada.
Career: Fowlds made his stage debut in the West End in The Miracle Worker and continued to win stage work and small roles in films before he became known to millions as Mr Derek in children's series The Basil Brush Show, which ran from 1969 to 1973. His big break came in 1980 when he landed the role of Bernard Woolley in BBC sitcom Yes, Minister and its sequel Yes, Prime Minister. He went on to play Oscar Blaketon in long-running ITV police drama Heartbeat from 1992 until 2010.
Quote: "I'm still waiting to be discovered."
Trivia: He married Blue Peter presenter Lesley Judd in 1974. They divorced four years later.
John Nettleton (Actor) .. Sir Arnold Robinson
Ian Lavender (Actor) .. Richard Cartwright
Born: February 16, 1946 in Birmingham
Best Known For: Playing ‘stupid boy' Private Pike in Dad's Army.
Early-life: Arthur Ian Lavender was born on February, 16, 1946, in Birmingham. The son of a policeman, he considered becoming a detective, but turned instead to acting after developing a passion for it at an early age. After finishing school in 1965 he trained at Bristol's Old Vic theatre school, moving on two years later to tackle his first professional roles at the Marlowe Theatre in Canterbury. He is also keen on various sports, including cricket, golf and snooker and is fluent in French.
Career: At the age of 22, Lavender was signed up to play Private Frank Pike in Dad's Army, the classic sitcom about the Home Guard. He went on to feature in various other TV series including The Glums and That's My Boy, plays for TV and radio, as well as summer tours and pantomimes. He has also made West End appearances, in the farce Run for Your Wife and The Merchant of Venice, starring alongside Dustin Hoffman. He successfully won a battle against cancer of the bladder in the 1990s and survived a heart attack in 2004. His last regular appearance on the small screen was as Pauline Fowler's gay friend Derek in EastEnders, a role he played for four years until 2005. Lavender then toured with The Rocky Horror Show musical, playing the Narrator and continues to work on stage and screen. In 2009, he appeared as Monsignor Howard in the West End theatre production of Sister Act the Musical.
Quote: "My wife loves me, I love her. I've got quite a few nice friends and I'm very lucky to be doing a job which is really my hobby."
Trivia: In 2013, Lavender made his Edinburgh Fringe debut in a stage version of The Shawshank Redemption.
Doug Fisher (Actor) .. Ben Stanley
Ludovic Kennedy (Actor) .. Himself
Moray Watson (Actor) .. Director of policy
Antony Jay (Writer)
Jonathan Lynn (Writer)
Peter Whitmore (Director)

Before / After

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