1022 4th November 1970 360p
Vložit
- čas přidán 5. 08. 2018
- (This belongs to ITV) - - -
best, Auntie Corrie -- auntie.corrie@gmail.com
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
p.s. I am looking for these episodes:
2000 - May 31 (I only have a partial - 3 min over-written 9:40 - 12:40)
2001 - Jan 22 (I only have the first half)
2001 - June 8 (I only have a partial - missing 3 min at end)
2002 - Oct 18 (often it is actually a mislabeled 20th Oct)
2003 - March 28 (I only have a partial - missing 3 min at end)
2004 - May 28 mine is a damaged mix of two episodes
Also looking for these pre-April 1976 episodes..
- from Granada Plus rebroadcasts (Please check your old video tapes!)
0986 - 6th July 1970 -- Transmitted on Saturday, 9th November, 1996.
1232 - 6th November 1972 -- Transmitted on Saturday, 8th February, 1997.
1313 - 15th August 1973 -- Transmitted on Saturday, 12th October, 1996.
1473 - 3rd March 1975 -- Transmitted on Saturday, 7th June, 1997.
---------
Look how nice and settled billy is ❤️I was born in 76; so I never got to know Minnie so I’ve only got to know her on here but I absolutely love her ❤️my new favourite lady ❤️❤️❤️
She's fab, especially when she rebels against Ena. X
She's cute isn't she? I was born in 67 and don't remember Irma, so these are good.
These are most of the characters i grew up with - probably earliest memories of CS are from around 1974/75- do remember Maggie vaguely and Minnie. Always loved Elsie and think the 3 queens and that has not changed - are Ena, Elsie and Annie. All original characters
Good old days I was a little girl and enjoyed this with my nana
I’m luvin these episodes,I’ve seen the first lot from auntie Corrie from 1978,so this is great,watching these ones...
i've called my new kitten BOBBY in ho2mage to Minnie
Its nice to be able to follow story lines through, thanks Aunt Corrie2.
Thank you for uploading this episode of Coronation Street.
Bobby is the best actor out of the lot...
Aww bobby is a chatty boy bless him ❤️❤️❤️❤️
A fat and cheerful cat...somebody loved him.
15.00 That’s Mavis’s phrase, Elsie!
Maggie “D’you mind?”
Elsie “I don’t really know...”
😂😂
Loving these episodes. Thanks heaps.
Thank you so much Auntie Corrie 2 😊😊
Thx I think the 70s were the best
Yes - something gritty and real about the episodes in the 70s
The sexual freedom revolution was upon us and the Street had to modernize with it.
"are you walking her out" Strange Edwardian expression. Rather like Mikes sideburns
Mark Howard played by a young Nicholas Jones (he played Jeremy Aldermarten in Kavanagh QC).
The "washing line"!! HoooooraaaH Auntie😘
Oh dear poor Lucile - one can only imagine - he"s the type that catches you by surprise the filthy beast
He seems to be a little snake.
@@MissTLI1980 Oh my goodness i was thinking he would have a big snake
Ena Scharples
The Godfather of Coronation Street!
Piece of cheese.....and I mean a piece!😁
Irma was rather lovely.
I like Minnie's place.
It got a major revamp around 1976/'77 when Mike Baldwin purchased it.
Since there wasn't conscription until 1916, how did Handel end up in jail in 1914 ?
Either through a noble unrequired 1914 declaration, which I'm still not sure would have put him in prison, or a script cock up.
I think it was a crime at that time. I watched Downton Abbey, and on that war Tom Branson said he’d refuse if called up( for the same reasons as Handel) and Sybil worried they’d put him in prison. The only reason they didn’t was because he had a heart murmur, and therefore was never called up. Handel probably had nothing wrong with him, and still refused.
@@alexanderjones9572 Hi, thanks for your reply - it made me do some research which I found fascinating!
It appears that there were indeed no conscientious objectors until 1916 because those against the war simply didn't volunteer.
After conscription came in, those who 'proved' their conscientious objection ( a horrible state concept I think) weren't guilty of crimes, they were put into 'non combatants' secure accommodation and required to do other work. Some refused to do that, seeing it as war related, they were then deemed criminals and put in prison, all released by 1919 I think.
@@ysgol3 Thanks-I didn’t know all that, only what I knew previously from Downton Abbey.
Mark had it up his Gary Glitter
Why does the furniture and fire place in Elsie's keep changing ?
How many times a week did these episodes originally broadcast?
Sarah twice a week, on Mondays and Wednesdays .
@@acesigma06 at 7:30pm on ITV.😊
Much better quality in them days.
Where has been them two bad boys who steal cars? And where’s Ken at?
Who is this Handel character?😄
Joseph and today TV 😀
Always wondered why 2 sisters both called their sons gordon.
LOL because Gordon is eventually exposed to be Betty's biological son not Maggie's.
@@ysgol3 and that's a cracking episode!
How could a lovely gentle person like Maggie have a snappy aggressive judgemental old bat like Betty for a sister.
You might be surprised how absolutely polar opposite two sisters can be! Trust me, I've got one. We're 14 years apart and besides being practically different generations, we have completely different temperaments, we're living totally different lifestyles, and we also have distinctly true N/true S moral compasses! Lol.
@@evangeline77x Yes indeed, I was just grabbing the chance to launch a vicious attack on Betty, who I watch most days on Classic Corrie on ITV3, and who reveals herself all these years later to have been as I describe - horrible ! (I'm also amazed at how irritating Raquel is in hindsight, and now think Bryan Mosley as Alf was an even more brilliant actor than I thought at the time.)
@@ysgol3 I couldn't stick Racquel. 😖
@@annoldham3018 If you watch her on Classic Corrie, you'll find she's even more appalling than you think she was !
What accent does Erma have?
East Lancs/West Yorkshire
@@jaredini Thanks.
Sounds more like she has a Manchester accent to me. I know the actress Sandra Gough (who portrayed Irma) was born & bred in Manchester anyway.
1933.