British Comedy Guide

Television

TV schedule Saturday 26th December 1992

BBC One. Copyright: BBC 8:15am
20 min
ChuckleVision. Image shows from L to R: Paul Chuckle (Paul Elliott), Barry Chuckle (Barry Elliott)

ChuckleVision

Series 5, Episode 14 - Spooks And Gardens

The Chuckle Brothers take shelter in a spooky house, for for Paul one of the rooms holds a secret and he has to make a choice.

ITV1 logo. Credit: ITV 6pm
30 min
Beadle's About. Jeremy Beadle. Copyright: London Weekend Television

Beadle's About

Series 7, Episode 10

Surely it can't be the Queen on the telephone to an off-licence ordering a bottled gin and a packet of prawn crisps?

ITV1 logo. Credit: ITV 7:30pm
60 min
The Darling Buds Of May. Pop Larkin (David Jason)

The Darling Buds Of May

Series 2, Christmas Special - Le Grand Weekend

Charley and Mariette are left holding the fort when Ma and Pop win a surprise trip to Paris. Things don't go as planned and it turns into quite a weekend.

BBC One. Copyright: BBC 7:45pm
30 min
Last Of The Summer Wine. Image shows from L to R: Walter C. 'Foggy' Dewhurst (Brian Wilde), William 'Compo' Simmonite (Bill Owen), Norman Clegg (Peter Sallis). Copyright: BBC

Last Of The Summer Wine

Series 14, Episode 10 - Stop That Castle!

With the annual gala parade in the skilful hands of Foggy, Compo and Clegg, how could anything go wrong?

BBC One. Copyright: BBC 8:15pm
95 min
Lovejoy. Lovejoy (Ian McShane). Copyright: FremantleMedia

Lovejoy

Christmas Special - The Prague Sun

A feature-length Christmas episode written by Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais and starring Ian McShane. It looks like Lovejoy will be spending Christmas alone. Then a savage attack on a veteran Second World War flier from Czechoslovakia leads Lovejoy and Eric to Prague on a hunt for missing diamonds.

ITV1 logo. Credit: ITV 10:40pm
30 min
The New Statesman. Alan B'Stard MP (Rik Mayall). Copyright: Alomo Productions / Yorkshire Television

The New Statesman

Series 4, Episode 6 - The Irresistible Rise Of Alan B'Stard

The time has come: despite no longer holding a Westminster seat, Alan has Downing Street in his sights - and it all rests on a series of splits over Europe.

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