The Grumbleweeds Radio Show

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The Grumbleweeds' Radio Show


Cassette cover for "The Grumbleweeds" featuring one of the main characters: Wilf "Gasmask" Grimshaw

Genre Comedy
Running time 30 mins
Country United Kingdom
Language(s) English
Home station BBC Radio 2
Starring Robin Colvill,
Graham Walker,
Maurice Lee,
Albert Sutcliffe,
Carl Sutcliffe
Producer(s) Mike Craig
Air dates 19791991
No. of series 15

The Grumbleweeds' Radio Show was a long-running comedy sketch show that aired for fifteen series' between 1979 to 1988 and was broadcast on BBC Radio 2 (and later repeated on BBC Radio 4). The show later became just The Grumbleweeds.

The Grumbleweeds' comedy team themselves were founders Robin Colvill and Graham Walker along with Maurice Lee and brothers Albert Sutcliffe and Carl Sutcliffe, all from Leeds in the North of England.


[edit] On radio (1979-1991)

The radio programme was a mixture of fast-moving skits, impressions and sketches, linked by snatches of the band's signature tune "We Are The Grumbleweeds". Recurring sketches included 'Trouble At T'Mill', 'Oh Amanda' and a parody of Radio 4's 'A Book At Bedtime', where a softly-spoken narrator would attempt to read a story despite constantly-failing transmitter power, and end up yelling at the top of his voice in order to be heard. A regular Family Grumbleweed sketch introduced the residents of Grumbleweed Towers and a revolving cast of assorted friends, neighbours and lunatics. Key characters included:

  • Uncle Rubbish, a nostalgia buff
  • Wilf "Gasmask" Grimshaw, who constantly wore a gas mask, apparently to stop him from picking his nose
  • Perennially-stressed housekeeper Freda Nattercan, her husband Adolph and daughter Melanie (catchphrase: "Has anybody seen me teeth?")
  • The stereotypically camp duo Ernest and Geoffrey (who were reinvented as agony aunts Viv and Trix when the series transferred to television)
  • Fred Fibber, a pathological liar
  • Uncle Nasty, an unpleasant character who would interrupt proceedings with threatening and sarcastic comments
  • Jimmy Savile, not the real one but Colvill's impersonation of the personality Jimmy Saville, who also came from Leeds.

Following a half-hour Christmas special, Wilf In Santaland, broadcast on BBC Radio 2 on Christmas Day 1984, the programme switched from the established quickfire sketch-based format to a half-hour sitcom format, largely an extension of the Family Grumbleweed sketch from the earlier incarnation of the radio show. It ran for four series from 1985 to 1988, with scripts mostly written by Mike Craig and often featuring cameos from other contemporary light entertainment favourites including Jimmy Cricket and Paul Shane. A number of new characters were introduced, amongst them the vagrant Ratface, the spluttering, lisping Sid Squeak and his partner-in-crime Stanley Bubble.

In late 1987, the Sutcliffe brothers decided to leave in order to pursue other careers, and their places were taken by backing musicians for the final few television shows, which had by now been retitled simply The Grumbleweeds Show. The remaining trio secured a new radio slot, Someone and the Grumbleweeds, with sketches mostly written by ex-Morecambe And Wise scriptwriter Eddie Braben and featuring a different celebrity guest each week. This ran on BBC Radio 2 from 1989 to 1991, since when the group have had no regular radio or television series.

[edit] On television (1983-1988)

The Grumbleweeds Radio Show won Best Radio Show Award in the Television and Radio Industries Awards of 1983, and transferred to a Granada Television series in the same year, paradoxically retaining the same name and set in a mocked-up radio studio. While the radio show was more targeted to the adult audiences they had played to in working mens' clubs, the TV appearances were geared toward a more family audience.

These half-hour shows, produced by Johnny Hamp of The Comedians fame, retained the fast-moving sketch format and upped it a little, with thirty or more sketches per half-hour episode, interspersed with impressions and a selection of regular characters from the radio series.

New characters introduced in the television show included:

  • The Milky Bar Kid (played by a blinking, gurning Albert Sutcliffe with his false teeth removed)
  • Hymie and Rachel, a stereotype Jewish couple
  • Shamus O'Hooligan, a stereotype Irishman whose voice bore close resemblance to Frank Carson
  • Viv & Trix, agony aunts
  • Clair Voyant, a fortune teller
  • Wally & Mandy, an old man (played by Carl Sutcliffe) and his sexy young wife, played by actress Mandy Montgomery
  • The Mystics, a husband-and-wife cabaret magic act whose male half Gilbert was perennially drunk
  • Taxi Jim, closely based on Jim Ignatowski from the TV series Taxi
  • Pam Hair, a poet closely based on Pam Ayres but with a lot of facial hair
  • Sid Noxious, a punk rocker

Additional regular performers included the "Grumble Girls" (brunette Mandy Montgomery with blondes Sally and Tracy) who usually played overtly sexy female roles, while the roles of older women would usually be played by the men (in drag).

Popular cabaret artists such as Madeline Bell made occasional guest appearances, attempting to keep a straight face while being distracted by such oddball characters as a park-keeper dribbling Pot Noodle down his chin, the aforementioned Milky Bar Kid and an outsized flying impersonation of Demis Roussos.

The group also played it straight for three or four minutes each week by performing songs generally written by Maurice or Carl, the band's two guitarists.

The series also begat a book, The Grumbleweeds Scrap Book (ISBN 0708831540), and a long-playing album of songs, 'Let The Good Times Roll', released on K-Tel Records.

Official web site