Hinge and Bracket
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Dr Evadne Hinge and Dame Hilda Bracket were the stage names of George Logan and Patrick Fyffe respectively. The characters of Hinge (somewhat brittle and acerbic) and Bracket (more flamboyant) were elderly, intellectual, female musicians; in these personas the male Logan and Fyffe played and sang songs to comic effect. They made numerous appearances on television and radio.
A genteel English inter-war world of cucumber sandwiches, bell ringing, church fetes and old fashioned values were recalled through the act. Both ladies shared a house (The Old Manse) in the fictional village of Stackton Tressel in Suffolk, where they amused themselves with recitals of Gilbert & Sullivan, Noel Coward and Ivor Novello.
Hinge and Bracket made their first appearance in 1974 at the Edinburgh Festival. They toured their double act for years, before appearing on the radio. Their first radio series, The Enchanting World of Hinge and Bracket, ran on BBC Radio 4 for three series from 1977 to 1979. The series was a mix of period songs and situation comedy, frequently a sort of musical evening with jokes.
The Random Jottings of Hinge and Bracket, which ran for 68 episodes on BBC Radio Two from 1982 to 1989, put the stars more firmly in a sitcom setting. Another radio series, At Home with Hinge and Bracket, had more of a chat show style and ran for a single season in 1990. Hinge and Bracket appeared in 3 series of their own BBC TV show Dear Ladies on BBC 2, between 1983 and 1985. Locations were filmed in picturesque Cheshire towns and villages, including Knutsford, Great Budworth and Nantwich.
The two also made stage appearances: Dame Hilda as 'Katisha' in The Mikado; and Doctor Hinge as Miss Marple in Murder at the Vicarage (in 1994). The ladies appeared together in Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest for a West End run, followed by a nation-wide tour; and at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in a New Year’s Eve performance of Die Fledermaus, conducted by Plácido Domingo and starring Kiri Te Kanawa. They latterly toured the UK with the Peter Shaffer play Lettice and Lovage, as well as continuing to appear in their variety act (touring with the variety show 'Palladium Nights' until 2001).
Patrick Fyffe was born on 23 January 1942 and died on 11 May 2002.