Friday 1 January 2010

HAPPY NEW YEAR 2010

Last night we had some friends round to see in the New Year, Annette being of German descent brought a copy of “Dinner for One” it’s a televised theatre sketch from 1963, about an eccentric woman who holds a dinner party (every year) for her 4 guests, even though they are all dead.

Every New Years Eve since 1972 this programme has been aired on German television (without subtitles) and with only a small introduction in German.

Part 1



Part 2



Freddie Frinton, born Frederick Bittiner Coo (17 January 1909 – 16 October 1968)was an English comedian who remains a household name in Germany and Scandinavia because of his performance in Dinner for One.

Frinton was born in Grimsby, Lincolnshire, and was brought up by foster parents. He started working in a Grimsby fish processing plant—where he is said to have entertained his colleagues with parodies and jokes—but was ultimately sacked. He moved into music hall, where he enjoyed modest success and renamed himself Freddie Frinton.

During the Second World War he made a moderate breakthrough as a comedian. In 1945, Frinton first performed the sketch Dinner for One in Blackpool. As he had to pay a royalty every time he performed the sketch, he bought the rights to Dinner for One in the 1950s, which turned out to be a very prescient decision.

At the age of 55, Frinton became a belated success as a plumber character in the television sitcom Meet the Wife, which ran for 40 episodes (the wife was played by Thora Hird). The series is mentioned in the Beatles song "Good Morning, Good Morning" with the line "It's time for tea and Meet the Wife". In October 1968, at the age of 59, Freddie Frinton died suddenly from a heart attack in London. He is buried in Westminster Cemetery, Uxbridge Road, Hanwell, London.

This would be the end of the story of a not very well remembered English comedian, were there not a surprising postscript. In 1963, Frinton's Dinner for One was recorded by the Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) German television station, and bizarrely, watching the non-subtitled English language sketch on television subsequently has become a German New Year's Eve tradition, with the short seeing multiple repeats every year from 1972 onwards. The television cult also caught on in Scandinavia and Dinner for One has been a hugely popular permanent, mandatory institution on Danish, Finnish and Swedish television on New Year's Eve for many years, as well in the Netherlands. It became so popular that a Dutch version was made with the Dutch actor Joop Doderer. It is also shown every 23 December on the Norwegian television, (NRK) and has been shown on the Australian SBS television network on New Year's Eve for at least the last fifteen years. Interestingly the programme and its main actor Frinton are far less well known in Britain than in any of these countries.

Ironically for an actor whose roles often comprised playing a drunk Frinton was a teetotaller, having seen in others the damage that alcohol could do.

Biography from Wikipedia

HAPPY NEW YEAR 2010 FROM ALL AT CUSTOM-4U SPANISH PROPERTIES

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