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Oh In Colour

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Oh In Colour
Oh In Colour title screen.
GenreComedy
Created bySpike Milligan
John Antrobus [1]
Directed byJohn Howard Davies
Joseph McGrath
Duncan Wood
StarringSpike Milligan
John Bluthal
Charlie Young Atom
Alan Clare
Edward Underdown
Country of originUnited Kingdom
No. of episodes6
Production
Running time30 minutes
Original release
NetworkBBC
Release27 September (1970-09-27) –
1 November 1970 (1970-11-01)

Oh In Colour was a comedy television sketch programme broadcast on BBC 2 in 1970. It ran for one six-episode series from September to November 1970.[2] It was written by and featured Spike Milligan, who was accompanied by different stars every week.[3] It was shown after the thoroughly more popular Q5, also written by Milligan and Neil Shand. It is likely the programme was written to bridge the long production gap between Q5 and the next series, Q6, which did not appear on TV screens until 1975. (Milligan later complained of the BBC's cold attitude towards the series and stated that he would have made more programmes had he been given the opportunity.)

Relation to Q..

The format is essentially identical to Milligan's Q series; a series of madcap sketches, typically lacking in plot or cohesion, with the cast and crew often donning bizarre or inappropriate outfits during pieces. The show ran for 30 minutes without commercial breaks, as is typical for programmes broadcast on the BBC. Oh In Colour was broadcast in colour, however the only surviving colour sequence is from episode six, the final broadcast. The entire series ironically exists as black-and-white telerecordings made for foreign sale.

One can find the racial gags that mired the Q... series in controversy. The cast are similar, too, with mainstays John Bluthal and Fanny Carby taking part in both programmes.[4]

Episodes

Series No. Episode No. Title Original air date
1 1 Unknown 27 September 1970 [5]
1 2 Unknown 4 October 1970 [6]
1 3 Unknown 11 October 1970 [7]
1 4 Unknown 18 October 1970 [8]
1 5 Unknown 25 October 1970 [9]
1 6 Unknown 1 November 1970 [10]

References