The Vicar of Dibley: The Christmas Lunch Incident


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About this Broadcast

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The Christmas Lunch Incident
Season 1, Episode 7

The villagers celebrate Christmas, and vicar Geraldine learns there is a heavy price to be paid for her kindness when she agrees to attend three slap-up lunches and takes part in a Brussels sprout-eating competition. Festive special from 1996, guest starring Peter Capaldi and Mel Giedroyc


subtitles audio-description
Movie/Drama Sitcom

Cast & Crew

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Dawn French (Actor) .. Geraldine Granger
Gary Waldhorn (Actor) .. David Horton
James Fleet (Actor) .. Hugo Horton
Emma Chambers (Actor) .. Alice Tinker
John Bluthal (Actor) .. Frank Pickle
Trevor Peacock (Actor) .. Jim Trott
Roger Lloyd Pack (Actor) .. Owen Newitt
Peter Capaldi (Actor) .. Tristram Campbell
Orla Brady (Actor) .. Aoife
Carol Macready (Actor) .. Mrs Tinker
Mel Giedroyc (Actor) .. Mary Tinker

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Dawn French (Actor) .. Geraldine Granger
Born: October 11, 1957 in Holyhead
Best Known For: Her partnership with Jennifer Saunders.
Early-life: Born Dawn Roma French on October 11, 1957, in Holyhead, Wales. She enjoyed a happy childhood, despite moving around a lot due to her father's various RAF postings. In her teens she won a scholarship to study in New York following a debating contest. She trained to be a drama teacher at the Central School of Speech and Drama, where she met Jennifer Saunders. They shared a house together in their final year and during that time developed their first comic characters.
Career: French taught briefly at a London school before taking up comedy performance professionally with Saunders, and gaining valuable TV experience in The Comic Strip Presents. She co-wrote and starred in ITV sitcom Girls On Top in 1985 and appeared in early Ben Elton offering Happy Families. She went on to become a household name with the first series of French and Saunders in 1987. While Saunders focused on Absolutely Fabulous, French also went solo, starring in Murder Most Horrid and The Vicar of Dibley. Other projects include Sex and Chocolate, Let Them Eat Cake, Lark Rise to Candleford, Psychoville and Roger & Val Have Just Got In.
Quote: "There are two kinds of women in the world: women who love chocolate and complete bitches."
Trivia: Away from acting, she published an autobiography, Dear Fatty, in 2008, and the novels A Tiny Bit Marvellous, in 2010, and Oh Dear Sylvia, in 2013.
Gary Waldhorn (Actor) .. David Horton
Born: July 03, 1943 in London
Best Known For: Playing David Horton in the sitcom The Vicar of Dibley.
Early-life: Gary was born in London on July 3, 1943. He made his TV debut in the 1969 drama Take Three Girls. During the 1970s, he made guest appearances in a number of TV shows, including Crown Court, The Sweeney, The Professionals, Return of the Saint, and Softly Softly, Task Force.
Career: Roles followed for Waldhorn in the 1980s in the likes of Brideshead Revisited, Minder, Harry's Game, Robin Hood and The Chief. He is best known for the roles he played in two sitcoms, Lionel Bainbridge in Brush Strokes and David Horton in The Vicar of Dibley. His theatre credits include work with the Royal Shakespeare Company.
Quote: "It's quite nice playing kings because people do what you tell them and you get to wear fantastic capes."
Trivia: Waldhorn has reunited with the cast of The Vicar of Dibley for a number of Comic Relief specials.
James Fleet (Actor) .. Hugo Horton
Born: March 11, 1954 in Bilston, Staffordshire
Best Known For: The Vicar of Dibley and Four Weddings and a Funeral.
Early-life: James Edward Fleet was born in Bilston, Staffordshire, on March 11, 1954 to a Scottish mother, Christine, and an English father, Jim. He moved to a town near Aberdeen at the age of 10 with his mother when his dad died. He studied engineering at university before training as an actor at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama. He began his career in the Royal Shakespeare Company, appearing in several plays in the early 1980s.
Career: Fleet is best known for playing the bumbling Tom in the 1984 romantic comedy Four Weddings and a Funeral, and the dim-witted Hugo Horton in the sitcom The Vicar of Dibley. He had a stint in Coronation Street in 2010 and his other TV credits include roles in Midsomer Murders, Being Human, Death Comes to Pemberley and Bad Education. On the big screen, he has appeared in Sense and Sensibility (1995), The Phantom of the Opera (2004) and Charlotte Gray (2001).
Quote: "Casting directors tend to see me as a posh idiot."
Trivia: Fleet is a keen biker.
Emma Chambers (Actor) .. Alice Tinker
Born: March 11, 1964 in Doncaster
Best Known For: Playing Alice in The Vicar of Dibley.
Early-life: Emma was born in Doncaster on March 11, 1964. She has a sister, Sarah. Emma trained at the Webber Douglas Academy of Dramatic Art in the 1980s. After a number of stage roles and a few small TV parts, Emma played Charity Pecksniff in the miniseries Martin Chuzzlewit in 1994. In the same year, she made her debut as dim-witted Alice in the hugely popular BBC sitcom The Vicar of Dibley.
Career: Chambers appeared in all 24 editions of The Vicar of Dibley and her last appearance was a Comic Relief Special in 2007. Her other TV credits include How Do You Want Me? and Take a Girl Like You. In 1999, she starred in the film Notting Hill.
Quote: On her Vicar of Dibley character: "People come up to me and say, `Are you that stupid?' I look at them and say: `Oh, yes. I am dim, dim sum, dim sum dim. Dim, dim, dim, dim,' and they look at me rather strangely."
Trivia: In 1998, Chambers won a British Comedy Award for her role in The Vicar of Dibley.
John Bluthal (Actor) .. Frank Pickle
Trevor Peacock (Actor) .. Jim Trott
Born: May 19, 1931 in London
Best Known For: Playing Jim Trott in The Vicar of Dibley.
Early-life: Trevor was born in London on May 19, 1931. He had a trial for Tottenham Hotspur FC when he was 18 years old. In the 1960s, he was a noted songwriter, writing hits for Herman's Hermits, Adam Faith, Billy Fury, Joe Brown and Bernard Cribbins. He wrote scripts for the 1950s music shows Oh Boy! and the Six-Five Special.
Career: Peacock has had roles in a number of stage productions, including Waiting for Godot, Endgame, Sherlock Holmes, Henry V, The Merry Wives of Windsor, What the Butler Saw, Hobson's Choice, and The Crucible. He is best known for playing Jim Trott on TV in the hugely popular BBC sitcom The Vicar of Dibley, a role he has played since 1994. His other TV credits include The Old Curiosity Shop, Born and Bred, Wish Me Luck, Last of the Summer Wine, Merlin of the Crystal Cave, and Magic Grandad. On the big screen, he has appeared in Hamlet (1990, Sunshine (1999), Fred Claus (2007) and Quartet (2012).
Quote: Jim Trott's catchphrase: "No, no, no, no, no.. yes."
Trivia: Peacock supports Yeovil Town.
Roger Lloyd Pack (Actor) .. Owen Newitt
Born: February 08, 1944 in London
Best Known For: Only Fools and Horses.
Early-life: Roger Lloyd Pack was born on February 8, 1944, in London. Acting was in his blood - his father, Charles, was a prolific thespian who had supporting roles in such classic TV series and films as The Prisoner, The Avengers and If... After passing A-levels in English, French and Latin, Roger enrolled at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (Rada). On graduating, he was snapped up by the Royal Shakespeare Company.
Career: Roger's first film was 1968's The Magus, opposite Michael Caine and Anthony Quinn. He then featured in movies including Hamlet, The Go-Between and Fiddler on the Roof. Appearances in cult shows The Protectors and Jason King followed. He went on to feature in acclaimed programmes The Naked Civil Servant and Play for Today before accepting the role which made him a household name - Trigger in Only Fools and Horses. He went on to star in a wide variety of projects, including The Vicar of Dibley, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Vanity Fair, Doctor Who, Poirot, The Borgias and The Old Guys. He died of pancreatic cancer on January 15, 2014. He was 69.
Quote: "It's extraordinary to me as an actor to find oneself in a sitcom that's been successful and goes on being successful."
Trivia: He supported Tottenham Hotspur.
Peter Capaldi (Actor) .. Tristram Campbell
Born: April 14, 1958 in Glasgow
Best Known For: The Thick of It and Doctor Who.
Early-life: Peter Dougan Capaldi was born in Glasgow on April 14, 1958. He is Irish on his mother's side and his father's family was from Italy. While attending Glasgow School of Art, he was the lead singer in a punk rock band called the Dreamboys. The drummer in the band was Craig Ferguson, who went on to become comedian and American chat show host. It was also while studying that Peter landed his breakthrough acting role in Local Hero in 1983.
Career: Playing mainly minor roles, Capaldi went on to feature in episodes of Minder, C.A.T.S. Eyes, The Lair of the White Worm, Rab C Nesbitt, Ruth Rendell Mysteries, Agatha Christie's Poirot and the miniseries Selling Hitler. He returned to the big screen when he wrote and starred in 1993's low-budget Soft Top Hard Shoulder. Guest starring roles followed in Prime Suspect 3, The Vicar of Dibley, Judge John Deed, My Family and Midsomer Murders. His profile raised significantly in 2005 when he began playing foul-mouthed spin doctor Malcolm Tucker in BBC comedy The Thick of It, a role that won him a Bafta. He also played Tucker in movie spin-off In the Loop. Always in-demand, his other TV credits include Skins, Torchwood: Children of Earth, The Nativity, Getting On and The Hour. He is currently playing the twelfth incarnation of the Time Lord in Doctor Who, a role he had long coveted.
Quote: "There is no such thing as too much swearing. Swearing is just a piece of linguistic mechanics. The words in-between are the clever ones."
Trivia: A lifelong Doctor Who fan, Capaldi was invited to audition for the role of the Eighth Doctor, which was eventually taken by Paul McGann, but turned it down, saying, "I loved the show so much, and I didn't think I'd get it, and I didn't want to just be part of a big cull of actors."
Orla Brady (Actor) .. Aoife
Born: March 28, 1961 in Dublin
Best Known For: A string of TV roles.
Early-life: Orla was born in Dublin on March 28, 1961 to Patrick and Catherine. At the age of 25, she relocated to Paris to study at the L'Ecole Philippe Gaulier, securing a place at the Ecole Internationale de Mimodrame de Paris. She began her acting career with Balloonatics Theatre Company. She then returned to Dublin to perform at the Gate Theatre. Her first work in England was in Blinded by the Sun at the Royal National Theatre.
Career: Brady now regularly works on both sides of the Atlantic. Her TV credits include The Bill, Absolutely Fabulous, Out of the Blue, The Vicar of Dibley, Noah's Ark, Servants, Proof, Revelations and Shark. More recently, she has starred in Mistresses, The Deep, Sinbad, Fringe, Nip/Tuck, Eternal Law, Jo, and Doctor Who.
Quote: "Clothes are interesting and they're there to be played with. I like the idea of costume rather than fashion."
Trivia: Brady enjoys horseback riding and reading.
Carol Macready (Actor) .. Mrs Tinker
Mel Giedroyc (Actor) .. Mary Tinker
Born: June 05, 1958 in Epsom, Surrey
Best Known For: Being the blonde half of TV personalities Mel and Sue.
Early-life: Melanie Clare Sophie Giedroyc was born on June 5, 1968, in Epsom, Surrey, and grew up in Leatherhead. Her father is a Polish-Lithuanian history writer who settled in England in 1947. Mel also has Belgian and Belarusian ancestry. She attended Oxford High School before going on to Trinity College, Cambridge, where she studied Modern Languages. Her sister, Coky, is a TV director whose credits include The Hour, Blackpool and What Remains.
Career: Like bread and butter, Giedroyc and Sue Perkins go well together - in fact, they're almost inseparable in professional terms. They were a hit at the Edinburgh Festival in 1993, and went on to write scripts for French and Saunders before presenting comedy chat show Light/Late Lunch and RI:SE. She was also in the children's sketch show Sorry I've Got No Head. More recently she has scored another hit with The Great British Bake-Off, alongside Sue, and daytime ITV show, Mel and Sue. Her radio work has included The 4 O'Clock Show on Radio 4 Extra.
Quote: On her relationship with Sue Perkins: "She's like Don Corleone with her friends, which I must say can at times be trying: she will always get the truth out of you, you can't hide anything."
Trivia: She has written two books: From Here to Maternity and Going Gaga.
Gareth Carrivick (Director)
Richard Curtis (Writer)
Born: November 08, 1956 in Wellington, New Zealand
Best Known For: Creating Four Weddings and a Funeral
Early-life: Born in New Zealand in 1956. He father was an Unilever executive, and the family moved around a lot - Richard spent parts of his childhood in the Philippines and Sweden, before attending school in England at the age of 11. He won a scholarship to the prestigious private school Harrow, where he became head boy, before going to study English Literature and Language at Oxford. As well as picking up a first-class degree, he also befriended fellow student Rowan Atkinson.
Career: In the early 1980s, Richard became a regular writer on Not the Nine O'Clock News, which starred Atkinson, and they went on to work together on Blackadder and Mr Bean. In 1989, Richard gained plaudits for writing the film The Tall Guy, but his real movie breakthrough came five years later when he penned Four Weddings and a Funeral, which went on to become the most successful British movie of all time. In 1999 he scored another huge hit with Notting Hill, and went on to work on the adaptation of Bridget Jones's Diary before making his directorial debut with Love Actually in 2003. His new film, The Boat That Rocked, hits cinemas this week. Curtis is also behind the sitcom the Vicar of Dibley, acclaimed TV film The Girl in the Cafe, and is one of the founders of Comic Relief.
Quote: "I really do believe that there is a tremendous amount of optimism, goodness and love in the world, and that it is under-represented."
Trivia: He was awarded a CBE in 2000.
Paul Mayhew-Archer (Writer)

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