#tony caunter
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New Scotland Yard: And When You're Wrong (1.13, LWT, 1972)
"You sent for me."
"I sent for you four days ago."
"I didn't get the message till yesterday."
"Right, you can put your diary down. Where have you been?"
"Busy."
"Doing what?"
"You know what I'm doing."
"I know what you're supposed to be doing, nobody seems to know what you're actually doing."
"You'll have my report when it's all wrapped up."
"I'll have it now. Whatever you were playing at before, you're now a witness in a murder case."
#new scotland yard#and when you're wrong#1972#classic tv#alun falconer#bryan izzard#john woodvine#john carlisle#jeremy wilkin#sheila fearn#robert fyfe#frederick treves#keith marsh#leon sinden#tony caunter#yvonne manners#david king#john tatham#a good attempt at a dramatic season finále but it fluffs a couple of key moments and never quite gels together as it should have#Carlisle's sneering‚ increasingly bullyish DI is involved in a high end art theft case‚ tho the degree to which he's involved (and on which#side of the law) is quite cleverly obscured; up until about the halfway mark anyway (one of those fluffed moments i mentioned; it would#have been far more effective to keep us guessing right through). things are complicated by the murder of his informant‚ and then further#complicated by an array of suspects and third parties‚ all just a little larger than life (Treves makes for a wonderfully dithering and#almost edwardian style co conspirator). that's part of the problem‚ that the colourful characters in the case are just a little at odds#with the more serious tone that a potentially corrupt main character should provoke. Woodvine mostly struts around being very annoyed at#proceedings but he is notably sympathetic towards Fearn's (implied) sex worker and even subtly provides some legal advice at the close#with Carlisle busy being partly the subject of investigation‚ his place is taken for this ep by the lovely Wilkin sporting quite a 'tache#oh and it may not come across in text but the quote above quite takes you aback for the sheer lack of respect bordering on relaxed contempt#that Carlisle shows his immediate supervisor (the way he nails that 'You know what I'm doing' with arch disinterest.. the character may be#a shit but give him his dues‚ Carlisle plays it incredibly)
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Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe - BBC / A&E - December 30, 1985
Drama
Running Time: 92 minutes
Stars:
Ben Kingsley as Silas Marner
Jenny Agutter as Nancy Lammeter
Patrick Ryecart as Godfrey Cass
Rosemary Martin as Dolly Winthrop
Jonathan Coy as Dunstan Cass
Angela Pleasence as Molly
Freddie Jones as Squire Cass
Patsy Kensit as Eppie
Elizabeth Hoyle as Baby Eppie
Melinda Whiting as Little Eppie
Robert Putt as Ben Winthrop
Jim Broadbent as Jem Rodney
Tony Caunter as Mr. Snell
Michael Bilton as Mr. Macey
Nick Brimble as Bob Dowlas
Frederick Treves as Mr. Lammeter
#Silas Marner#TV#BBC#A&E#Drama#1985#1980's#Ben Kingsley#Jenny Agutter#Patrick Ryecart#Rosemary Martin#Jonathan Coy#Angela Pleasence#Freddie Jones#Patsy Kensit
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“You’ve been expecting me?”
Enlightenment - season 20 - 1983
#doctor who#classic doctor who#classic who#fifth doctor#peter davison#enlightenment#vislor turlough#mark strickson#crewman jackson#tony caunter#crewman collier#clive kneller
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cowards
Infotext: The role of Morgan was written with an actress in mind: “Miss Morgan”. To get away from the traditional characterization of a “heavy”, Hulke wrote the character as a vicious woman. In early January, 29-year-old Susan Jameson was cast to play her. (She was the woman in the photograph on Ashe’s desk, remember?) The BBC management quickly got cold feet about the possible “kinky”, dominatrix connotations of such a character, so the serial reverted to the usual stock male villain, with Tony Caunter cast on 29 January.
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The Hill (1965) | Documentary Short
Cast
Sean Connery as Joe Roberts Ian Hendry as Staff Sergeant Williams Harry Andrews as Regimental Sergeant Major Wilson Ian Bannen as Harris Alfred Lynch as George Steovens Ossie Davis as Jacko King Roy Kinnear as Monty Bartlett Jack Watson as Jock McGrath Michael Redgrave as The Medical Officer Norman Bird as Commandant Neil McCarthy as Burton Howard Goorney as Walters Tony Caunter as Martin
from Ian Hendry
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Asian Male Model play - Tony Sallis
ENTER LINK ONLY FOR YOU!
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Queenie’s Castle - ITV - November 5, 1970 - September 5, 1972
Sitcom (18 episodes)
Running Time: 30 minutes
Stars:
Diana Dors as Queenie Shepherd
Freddie Fletcher as Raymond Herbert Shepherd
Brian Marshall as Bernard Anthony "Bunny" Shepherd
Barrie Rutter as Douglas Fairbanks Shepherd
Tony Caunter as Jack Henry Shepherd
Lynne Perrie as Mrs Edith Petty
Bryan Mosley as Jeremy, the landlord
Kathy Staff as Mrs Blakely
#Queenie's Castle#TV#ITV#1970's#Sitcom#Diana Dors#Freddie Flletcher#Brian Marshall#Barrie Rutter#Tony Caunter#Lynne Perrie
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Special Branch: The Children Of Delight (1.8, Thames, 1969)
"It seems that since this hoo-ha started, some of their members have been refused jobs; houses; their children have been refused entry into schools!"
"People still have the freedom of choice, thank God."
"Listen Moxon. I don't like what I've heard about The Children of Delight any more than you have, but I'll fight to the death to defend their right to exist - even if their beliefs happen to be repugnant to me. What kind of freedom do we want?"
#special branch#Special branch rewatch#Wensley pithey#derren nesbitt#jennifer wilson#Morris Perry#Sheila Fearn#Georgine Anderson#Howard goorney#John abineri#Wilfred downing#Anna Turner#Arnold ridley#Tony caunter#Louise hasler#Lynne white#Pamela Coveney#Heather emmanuel#Peter duguid#Adele Rose#Cults seem to have been one of the standard plots for a certain type of 60s tv: Strange Report did an episode on the subject as did Mr Rose#The Avengers and several others. This is one of the stronger scripts on the subject. Writer Adele Rose keeps its fairly nuanced and#Balanced. More important to our leads than the cult is the theme of freedom of expression and the idea of choice (our leads except Nesbitt#That is. He spends the episode typically grouchy and sidelined as he has been for the last few). As in another early episode (I think it#Was Smokescreen?) Moxon asks SB to recommend an action then at the end completely ignores them. I suppose it's true to life but it does#Rather make it feel like the entire episode has been a bit of a waste of time for them. Operation Troika is name checked for the first time#In a while to make sure we still remember what's going on there. Fearn is a nice one shot character but it's Goorney who proves the most#Interesting and it would have been nice to learn some more about him. Abineri rocks up in a confusingly underwritten role: he was one of#The bigger names in the guest cast but he's mostly in the background and only has a couple of lines. The initiation scene for the cult is#Really very good: very reminiscent of Pinter in its barrage of questions torture interrogation style
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Play For Today: Dinner At The Sporting Club (BBC, 1978)
"The People's Champion, that's what they called Ali. You see, the game doesn't belong to the dinner jackets and the frilly shirts - it belongs to the people. 'Cos that's where the fighters come from. That's where most of them go back to an' all, the people."
#play for today#dinner at the sporting club#1978#leon griffiths#classic tv#bbc#john thaw#billy mccoll#patrick durkin#jonathan lynn#ken campbell#tony caunter#maureen lipman#john bardon#herbert norville#terry downes#liam neeson#nula conwell#marilyn galsworthy#eric kent#paul imbusch#a stark and stripped down tv play about a second rate boxer and his second rate manager#filmed entirely on film in grimy run down clubs and gyms with no background music to speak of#all that said. it's funny and its human and the relationship between the three leads (thaw mccoll and durkin)#have a great chemistry and you're left wanting to see more of them. there are some interesting cameos. lipman steals#her one scene and intriguing to see a very young neeson in what must have been one of his first ever roles#but its thaw and mccoll and durkin who draw you in and keep you watching. its melancholy but its very human
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XD
Infotext: On the recording day, Katy Manning suggested to the cast that they lighten the tone and turn up in studio in silly outfits. She wore some colonist postiche on her face, and donated her false eyelashes to Bernard Kay (Caldwell), who painted eyes on his eyelids. Tony Caunter reverted to the original character: “Miss Morgan”, in drag. Jon Pertwee used one of his comedy voices. Producer Barry Letts was not amused and insisted that the cast take their work more seriously. Then Morris Perry turned up, wigged for his role as Captain Dent- and got an undeserved roasting from Letts. Letts mistakenly assumed that the blond wig was more comical campery - not part of his actual costume!
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The Hill is a 1965 film directed by Sidney Lumet, set in a British army prison in North Africa in World War II. It stars Sean Connery, Harry Andrews, Ian Bannen, Ossie Davis, Ian Hendry, Alfred Lynch, Roy Kinnear and Michael Redgrave.
In the finale, the camp's Medical Officer and Staff Sergeant Harris decide to report the abuses at the camp. Sadistic Staff Sergeant Williams goes to administer one final, perhaps fatal, beating to Sergeant Major Roberts, when two prisoners intervene and appear to beat Williams to death while Roberts pleads with them to stop.
Cast
Sean Connery as Joe Roberts Ian Hendry as Staff Sergeant Williams Harry Andrews as Regimental Sergeant Major Wilson Ian Bannen as Harris Alfred Lynch as George Steovens Ossie Davis as Jacko King Roy Kinnear as Monty Bartlett Jack Watson as Jock McGrath Michael Redgrave as The Medical Officer Norman Bird as Commandant Neil McCarthy as Burton Howard Goorney as Walters Tony Caunter as Martin
from Ian Hendry
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