The Burkiss Way

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Burkiss_Way an entity of type: Thing

The Burkiss Way is a BBC Radio 4 sketch comedy series, originally broadcast between August 1976 and November 1980. It was written by Andrew Marshall and David Renwick, with additional material in seasons 1 and 2 by John Mason, Colin Bostock-Smith, Douglas Adams, John Lloyd, Tom Magee Englefield and Liz Pollock. The show's humour was based on surrealism and literary and media parodies, sprinkled with puns. rdf:langString
rdf:langString The Burkiss Way
rdf:langString The Burkiss Way
xsd:integer 762801
xsd:integer 1094844650
rdf:langString The Burkiss Way
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Mono
rdf:langString Stereo
rdf:langString Unknown
rdf:langString United Kingdom
rdf:langString An excerpt from Douglas Adams's Burkiss Way sketch, "Eric Von Contrick" excerpt
rdf:langString Eric Von Contrick.ogg
xsd:date 1976-08-27
rdf:langString English
xsd:date 1980-11-15
xsd:integer 47
xsd:integer 6
rdf:langString
rdf:langString John Lloyd
rdf:langString David Hatch
rdf:langString Simon Brett
<second> 1800.0
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Fred Harris
rdf:langString Nigel Rees
rdf:langString Chris Emmett
rdf:langString Denise Coffey
rdf:langString Jo Kendall
rdf:langString Burkiss Way, "Eric Von Contrick" sketch excerpt
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Andrew Marshall
rdf:langString David Renwick
rdf:langString The Burkiss Way is a BBC Radio 4 sketch comedy series, originally broadcast between August 1976 and November 1980. It was written by Andrew Marshall and David Renwick, with additional material in seasons 1 and 2 by John Mason, Colin Bostock-Smith, Douglas Adams, John Lloyd, Tom Magee Englefield and Liz Pollock. The first season of the show starred Denise Coffey, Chris Emmett, Nigel Rees and Fred Harris. From season 2 onwards, the show starred Jo Kendall, Chris Emmett, Nigel Rees and Fred Harris. The series had three producers, announced as "Simon Brett of Stepney", "John Lloyd of Europe", and "David 'Hatch of the BBC' Hatch". The show's humour was based on surrealism and literary and media parodies, sprinkled with puns.
rdf:langString BBC Paris Studio, Lower Regent Street, London
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 15565

data from the linked data cloud