Season 01
Season 02
Season 03
Season 04
Highlights include Benny playing several students at the St. Solomon's School; a trespassing fisherman recites a poem about the fishing life; a hospital patient's 92nd birthday is celebrated with a special musical number, Down Memory Lane; another series of bloopers including a Balmolive ad and a licentious TV cameraman; Fred Scuttle as head of a proposed fourth TV channel, previewing a poetry and jazz recital; Chow Mein and his wife (Zienia Merton) are interviewed; and Benny performing new renditions of old mainstays Wild Women, The Harvest of Love, and Those Days (with Ladybird Marian Davies). Written by W.B.
All Episodes - S03
EPS01
Benny starts off with The Beach at San Tropez, then shows more examples of things that go wrong on television; a 17th century Pilgrim (Bob Todd) in the stocks for thinking wicked thoughts is relentlessly tormented by a fellow townsman (Hill); hijinks on board a cruise ship; a parody of cooking-show hosts Fanny and Johnny Cradock; and Mervyn Cruddy's film career is examined in an interview given to Andree Melly on The Movie Shakers, which includes the famous Home Is The Hero about a returning Confederate veteran. Also: The Ladybirds perform River Deep, Mountain High. Written by W.B.
EPS02
Highlights include: Benny leading off with a spirited rendition of Gypsy Rock; dialogue director/drama coach Fred Scuttle introducing a new male model, 'Chunky'; a poem devoted to the exploits of the Dimpton Drinking Club; The Ladybirds performing I Say a Little Prayer; a parody of News at Ten with Hill impersonating co-anchors Reginald Bosanquet and Andrew Gardner; a commoner is kidnapped to impersonate a king to thwart an assassination plot; and more examples from around the world of things that can go wrong on TV. Written by W.B.
EPS03
Benny leads this edition off with Oh, Zandoona; Fred Scuttle runs a Keep Fit health club, with a film showing some of the exercise routines; Hill reads a poem, Fam and Fufan by Folomon Faint Ftephen; French film director Pierre de Tierre discusses his technique, then leads into a sketch about a young man who strikes out with a girl of many moods; musical guest Sylvia McNeill performs I Don't Know How to Love Him; Percy Thrower interviews gardener Amos Thripp; more bloopers including a Wild West show where the demonstrations go all wrong and examples of actresses who can't say their lines right; Chow Mein gets into a tangle with customs and immigration agents at an airport; and Benny closes with a series of impersonations of various British entertainers of the day, including Shirley Bassey, Gilbert O'Sullivan and Nana Mouskouri. Written by W.B.
EPS04
Highlights include Benny playing several students at the St. Solomon's School; a trespassing fisherman recites a poem about the fishing life; a hospital patient's 92nd birthday is celebrated with a special musical number, Down Memory Lane; another series of bloopers including a Balmolive ad and a licentious TV cameraman; Fred Scuttle as head of a proposed fourth TV channel, previewing a poetry and jazz recital; Chow Mein and his wife (Zienia Merton) are interviewed; and Benny performing new renditions of old mainstays Wild Women, The Harvest of Love, and Those Days (with Ladybird Marian Davies). Written by W.B.
EPS05
A sketch-comedy series in which Hill would often play multiple characters and satirize popular British and American performers and stars. Common themes in the show were the husband-beating wife, buxom women, and silent, high-speed chase scenes between Hill and the other characters. Written by Gregg Long diggerblue@hotmail.com
EPS06
A sketch-comedy series in which Hill would often play multiple characters and satirize popular British and American performers and stars. Common themes in the show were the husband-beating wife, buxom women, and silent, high-speed chase scenes between Hill and the other characters. Written by Gregg Long diggerblue@hotmail.com
EPS07
A sketch-comedy series in which Hill would often play multiple characters and satirize popular British and American performers and stars. Common themes in the show were the husband-beating wife, buxom women, and silent, high-speed chase scenes between Hill and the other characters. Written by Gregg Long diggerblue@hotmail.com
EPS08
A sketch-comedy series in which Hill would often play multiple characters and satirize popular British and American performers and stars. Common themes in the show were the husband-beating wife, buxom women, and silent, high-speed chase scenes between Hill and the other characters. Written by Gregg Long diggerblue@hotmail.com
EPS09
A sketch-comedy series in which Hill would often play multiple characters and satirize popular British and American performers and stars. Common themes in the show were the husband-beating wife, buxom women, and silent, high-speed chase scenes between Hill and the other characters. Written by Gregg Long diggerblue@hotmail.com
EPS10
A sketch-comedy series in which Hill would often play multiple characters and satirize popular British and American performers and stars. Common themes in the show were the husband-beating wife, buxom women, and silent, high-speed chase scenes between Hill and the other characters. Written by Gregg Long diggerblue@hotmail.com