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Steptoe and Son

 Steptoe and Son
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TVTItem
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Steptoe and Son
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SteptoeAndSon
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A classic Brit Com of The '60s and The '70s, written by famed British comedy writers Ray Galton and Alan Simpson and centered around the perennial conflicts between a pair of Shepherd's Bush rag-and-bone men, Harold Steptoe (Harry H. Corbett) and his elderly father Albert (Wilfrid Brambell). Airy, pretentious snob Harold has finer aspirations than riding a horse-and-cart for the rest of his life and is determined to improve himself, whilst wily, sneaky Albert is equally determined to sabotage his every effort and keep him in the family home for a good while yet.The show was noted for being a lot more gritty and down-to-earth than most other sitcoms of the age, focusing on two obviously poor and downtrodden working-class men, with most of the humour coming from the interactions between the characters rather than from farce and slapstick, and their situation providing an undercurrent of pathos. Picked up from a pilot episode in the Anthology Series Comedy Playhouse, it had two runs on The BBC (1962–65 and 1970–74note  The later run was made in colour, but many episodes from 1970–72 only survive in black and white copies), and was adapted to radio as well as two feature films. More recently, there was a stage play called Steptoe and Son in Murder at Oil Drum Lane, in which Harold returns to the junkyard in 2005, where he is confronted by the ghost of Albert.Right after it ended, the show received an equally-beloved Foreign Remake by Norman Lear as Sanford and Son, riding off of the success of Lear's previous remake of Till Death Us Do Part, All in the Family.Came fifteenth in Britains Best Sitcom.
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2024-03-04T06:16:27Z
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DBTropes
 Steptoe and Son / int_10dcbe05
type
Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other
 Steptoe and Son / int_10dcbe05
comment
Aw, Look! They Really Do Love Each Other: The father/son equivalent; for all the bitterness and bickering, it was sometimes hinted that Harold and Albert really did care about each other. It's worth noting that Harry H. Corbett and Wilfrid Brambell did not get along at all in real life, particularly later in their lives; much like their characters, the actors found themselves stuck with each other and having to make the best of things.note  Just how much they disliked each other depends on who is telling the story. The 2002 documentary When Steptoe Met Son and the 2008 docu-drama The Curse of Steptoe between them implied that Corbett and Brambell absolutely loathed each other and the series. However, Ray Galton and Alan Simpson (who claimed their interviews for the documentary were Quote Mined) denied this, and Corbett's daughter Susannah published a biography of her father at least partly to counter the notion that he hated Brambell and/or Steptoe and Son. Brambell said after Corbett's death that while they were never close friends as they led very different lives, they generally liked each other enough to work together, and while Corbett admitted that he regretted being typecast as a comic actor later in his career, he claimed not to resent Steptoe and Son for this. Averted rather thoroughly in the stage play. The clue is in the title.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_11cac491
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Tragedy
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Tragedy: Both the TV and radio series fall into the tragicomedy category - comedic moments in what would otherwise be much more sombre situations.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_1320d787
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Playing Sick
 Steptoe and Son / int_1320d787
comment
Playing Sick: In "Upstairs, Downstairs, Upstairs, Downstairs", Albert is laid up with a bad back, and Harold is forced to wait on him hand and foot. When Harold switches on the racing on television but forgets to turn on the sound (and orders Albert not to make any further requests for at least 15 minutes), Albert's attempts to get out of bed lead to him inadvertently fixing his back. Naturally, he conceals this fact from Harold so that he can keep being waited on... but Harold notices cans of lager and pink Liquorice All-Sorts mysteriously disappearing while he is out...
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 Steptoe and Son / int_186a97ab
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Do-It-Yourself Plumbing Project
 Steptoe and Son / int_186a97ab
comment
Do-It-Yourself Plumbing Project: "Those Magnificent Men and Their Heating Machines" sees Harold bring a consignment of radiators, pipes, and a furnace and heat pump back to the house so that he and his father will have central heating. However, Harold insists on installing the system himself, rebuffing Albert's insistence that he should at least get someone to inspect his work before switching it on. The bizarre network of pipes snaking around and through the walls (and Albert's brass bedstead) heralds the inevitable disaster when Harold finally switches on the pump; the entire house is nearly torn apart as the radiators and pipes shake violently and spray hot water everywhere.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_1bf94a24
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The Movie
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The Movie: Steptoe and Son (1972), Steptoe and Son Ride Again (1973).
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 Steptoe and Son / int_1e159001
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Diagonal Billing
 Steptoe and Son / int_1e159001
comment
Diagonal Billing: When Wilfrid Brambell and Harry H. Corbett argued over which of them should receive top billing ahead of the first series, the BBC compromised by alternating which of them was billed first every episode. Furthermore, whichever was billed second in the opening credits of an episode would be billed first in the closing credits.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_1f50c188
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Home-Early Surprise
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comment
Home-Early Surprise: Used as the punchline to a rather values-dissonant episode. Harold strikes up a friendship with a man he doesn't realise is gay, which was criminalised in the UK at the time. When Harold is visiting, the friend tries to seduce him. Harold makes his excuses and, as he leaves, finds a policeman at the door. He gives a hasty excuse and runs away. The episode ends with the friend telling the policeman: "Hello Edgar. You're home early."
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 Steptoe and Son / int_260926c3
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Failure Is the Only Option
 Steptoe and Son / int_260926c3
comment
Failure Is the Only Option: Harold's attempts at upward mobility are invariably doomed from the start, either because he isn't as clever or as savvy as he believes himself to be or because Albert sabotages his plans (usually deliberately).
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 Steptoe and Son / int_26e7f210
type
This Is My Side
 Steptoe and Son / int_26e7f210
comment
This Is My Side: "Divided We Stand" revolves around this trope. Disgusted by his father's slovenliness and refusal to re-decorate their house, Harold builds a partition wall that completely divides the house in half, with an old turnstile at the foot of the stairs so that they can reach their halves of the lounge, the kitchen, and the bedrooms. The partition is even built to divide the cooker (they get two burners each, requiring co-ordinating turning on and lighting the gas), the kitchen sink (each has a piece of string to pull the spout to his side), the dining table, the television, and the outside toilet!
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 Steptoe and Son / int_2761a793
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Hobo Gloves
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Hobo Gloves: Albert is frequently seen wearing a ratty pair of woolen fingerless gloves to emphasise the poverty and squalour in which he has lived all his life.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_2c11d835
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Kitchen Sink Drama
 Steptoe and Son / int_2c11d835
comment
Kitchen Sink Drama: Well, kitchen sink comedy, anyway, but the general point stands. The characters are members of the urban working class, and both the situations and the comedy in "situation comedy" come from their struggles to make ends meet and their interactions with each other, with Harold aspiring to better things and Albert determined to sabotage his efforts so that he doesn't have to face life alone.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_2dc0d2bf
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Hidden Depths
 Steptoe and Son / int_2dc0d2bf
comment
Hidden Depths: A constant source of frustration for Harold is Albert's tendency to reveal himself as being skilled at something Harold himself aspires to do. In "The Diploma", Harold is studying to be a TV engineer but struggles to make sense of the engineering schematics he is using to practice assembling a set; Albert looks over Harold's work and calmly explains that he has several pieces in the wrong place, and gets the set working within seconds. In "A Star is Born", Harold hopes that his landing the lead role in a local amateur dramatics production will be his ticket to stardom, but after Albert is drafted to replace an unavailable cast member, he shocks Harold by affecting a flawless RP accentnote  Wilfrid Brambell achieved this by dropping the accent he used to play Albert and speaking in his normal voice. and revealing that he made stage appearances during his service in World War I. Judging from the audience and cast reactions on the night, Albert's performance was dazzling while Harold's was disastrous. In "Loathe Story", Harold has spent considerable money on badminton equipment and joined a local tennis and badminton club as a means of socialising with the upwardly mobile. He plays a game against Albert in front of their house... and discovers the difficult way that Albert was champion of his regiment when he was in the Army, and can still play a mean game. To compound Harold's embarrassment at getting thrashed, Albert goes down to the tennis and badminton club and becomes a member - and even schedules a game against an attractive female member whom Harold was hoping to woo.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_2fd7200b
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Dead Guy Junior
 Steptoe and Son / int_2fd7200b
comment
Dead Guy Junior: "A Death in the Family" features an animal example. After the Steptoes' horse, Hercules, dies of a heart attack at the ripe old age of 39, Harold purchases a replacement whom he names Samson... unaware that the horse is a mare, and a pregnant mare at that. Albert delivers the newly renamed Delilah's foal, and, at Harold's invitation, names him Hercules II.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_35b241c0
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Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping
 Steptoe and Son / int_35b241c0
comment
Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: Harold affects a very dodgy Received Pronunciation accent when he is putting on airs, whether to Albert or to someone whom he is trying to impress. When Albert inevitably gets on Harold's nerves during such scenes, Harold's anger causes him to revert to his normal accent.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_37001209
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Annoying Patient
 Steptoe and Son / int_37001209
comment
Annoying Patient: In "Upstairs, Downstairs, Upstairs, Downstairs", Albert is laid up with a bad back and Harold has to do everything for him (including, to his horror, carrying him to the outside toilet). He complains endlessly about the food Harold cooks for him, insists on the television and telephone being put in his bedroom, and throws aside the books Harold brings back from the library as he has already read them (except for one which he claims not to like the look of).
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 Steptoe and Son / int_380faa43
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Your Tomcat Is Pregnant
 Steptoe and Son / int_380faa43
comment
Your Tomcat Is Pregnant: After the Steptoes' horse, Hercules, dies of a heart attack at the age of 39 in "A Death in the Family", Harold buys a new horse whom he names Samson. Samson has to be re-named Delilah after her foal is delivered by Albert (who berates Harold for not noticing that the horse was female and heavily pregnant).
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 Steptoe and Son / int_38d02d44
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Batman Gambit
 Steptoe and Son / int_38d02d44
comment
Batman Gambit: In "A Perfect Christmas", Harold persuades Albert to accompany him abroad for Christmas. When they are about to catch the train to the ferry, Harold realises his own passport has expired. Albert mockingly goes on without him, only for Harold to jump into his girlfriend's car outside the station for an Albert-free Christmas.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_3ac583f4
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SlidingScaleOfIdealismVsCynicism
 Steptoe and Son / int_3ac583f4
comment
Sliding Scale of Idealism vs. Cynicism: Where Sanford and Son was more modern and had a mix of difficult reality and heartfelt optimism, this series was gritty, cynical, and even depressing.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_40d6724
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Sound-to-Screen Adaptation
 Steptoe and Son / int_40d6724
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Sound-to-Screen Adaptation: In reverse; a radio series was adapted from the TV show.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_4179d411
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Spooky Séance
 Steptoe and Son / int_4179d411
comment
Spooky Séance: Or at least one with a spooky ending in, "Seance in a Wet Rag and Bone Yard".
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 Steptoe and Son / int_46d3f869
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Family Business
 Steptoe and Son / int_46d3f869
comment
Family Business: Albert was originally the "Son" in "Steptoe and Son", the business having been founded by his father. Now Harold is the "Son" in the business' name.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_4873cba8
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I Was Young and Needed the Money
 Steptoe and Son / int_4873cba8
comment
I Was Young and Needed the Money: In the episode "Porn Yesterday", Harold is excited about finding an old What the Butler Saw machine, until he recognises Albert as one of the nude actors in the film. Albert explains that he made the film because times were hard.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_62907b90
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Bottle Episode
 Steptoe and Son / int_62907b90
comment
Bottle Episode: Many episodes were set entirely in the Steptoe house and just featured Harold and Albert. Examples include "The Diploma" (in which Harold is studying to become a TV engineer) and "Those Magnificent Men and Their Heating Machines" (in which Harold attempts to install a full system of radiators in the house).
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 Steptoe and Son / int_66dfe36a
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Missing Mom
 Steptoe and Son / int_66dfe36a
comment
Missing Mom: Albert is a widower, and it's established that his wife died when Harold was young.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_6e2163a3
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Crossword Puzzle
 Steptoe and Son / int_6e2163a3
comment
Crossword Puzzle: In "Men of Letters", Albert and Harold are invited to contribute to the local church's centenary edition of the parish magazine. Harold writes an article about the rag and bone trade, while Albert provides a crossword... almost every answer for which is obscene, leading the vicar to be arrested and the magazine to be impounded and burned by the police (the copies that escaped confiscation are changing hands at high prices).
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 Steptoe and Son / int_6ef9d3fe
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Christmas Episode
 Steptoe and Son / int_6ef9d3fe
comment
Christmas Episode: Season seven's "The Party", where Harold books a Christmas holiday in Majorca, but when it's cancelled, he decides to have a Christmas party instead. The guests all refuse to come in because Harold and Albert both have chickenpox. The final episode "A Perfect Christmas" focuses on Harold's last attempt to get away abroad for his Christmas Holiday, but he has a cunning plan in mind. The characters also appeared in short sketches in the 1962 and 1967 editions of the BBC's annual Christmas anthology special, Christmas Night with the Stars.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_75588c15
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Transatlantic Equivalent
 Steptoe and Son / int_75588c15
comment
Transatlantic Equivalent: Sanford and Son is based on this show. It's also a rare crossover show that was both as successful and highly regarded in its new version as the original show it was inspired from. However the character of Fred Sanford, though hardly a saint, is considerably less cruel to his son, Lamont, than Albert is towards Harold. Also, Lamont is both smarter and less pretentious than the character he's based on. Additionally, many more characters appear and the overall tone is much brighter and cheerier than this show's grimness.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_76db0ef5
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Slobs Versus Snobs
 Steptoe and Son / int_76db0ef5
comment
Slobs Versus Snobs: One of the main conflicts of the series pits Harold's snobbish aspirations of upward mobility against Albert's slobbish acceptance of the life of dirt and poverty they already lead. Albert usually emerges victorious when the two philosophies clash. "Without Prejudice" sees Harold and Albert looking to buy a suburban semi-detached house. However, the local residents are horrified at the effect rag and bone men setting up shop in their neighbourhood might have on their property prices, and try bribing them not to buy the house.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_82e9aaba
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Down in the Dumps
 Steptoe and Son / int_82e9aaba
comment
Down in the Dumps: A lot of the castoffs Albert and Harold collect on their rounds end up "decorating" their house and forecourt on a permanent basis, creating a suitably down-and-out atmosphere for the series.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_86bbf6b5
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Newscaster Cameo
 Steptoe and Son / int_86bbf6b5
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Newscaster Cameo: "The Desperate Hours" features a newscast delivered by (then retired) BBC newsreader Corbett Woodall.note  Woodall was something of a go-to newsreader for 1970s British comedy; he also made cameo appearances on The Goodies, Whatever Happened to the Likely Lads? and Spike Milligan's Q9.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_8a48681
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Casino Episode
 Steptoe and Son / int_8a48681
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Casino Episode: "Men Of Property"
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Sir Swears-a-Lot
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Sir Swears-a-Lot: At the rate of 10p per swear, the contents of the swear—box, amounting to the sum of ₤80·30p, the vast majority of which were contributed by Albert. More than eight times what they have in they have in their bank & building society accounts combined!
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 Steptoe and Son / int_8ff8d545
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Kissing Cousins
 Steptoe and Son / int_8ff8d545
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Kissing Cousins: In "Oh What A Beautiful Mourning", Harold is propositioned by his cousin Caroline at the funeral of their uncle George.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_9820c37a
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Screw Politeness, I'm a Senior!
 Steptoe and Son / int_9820c37a
comment
Screw Politeness, I'm a Senior!: Albert fully believes that his advanced age gives him the right to be rude and abrasive to almost everyone he meets. Harold gets the worst of it, but Albert is unafraid to speak his mind, however coarse it may be, in front of anyone.
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Screen-to-Stage Adaptation
 Steptoe and Son / int_99244825
comment
Screen-to-Stage Adaptation: In March 2011 the Engine Shed Theatre Company performed three episodes live on stage at the Capitol Theatre, Horsham. Jack Lane played Albert Steptoe and Michael Simmonds played Harold. The three episodes performed by the company were: "Men Of Letters", "Robbery With Violence" and "Seance in a Wet Rag and Bone Yard". Engine Shed went on to adapt and perform the two Christmas Specials later that year. Steptoe and Son by Kneehigh. Performed in 2012 and 2013 by Kneehigh Theatre, it was adapted from four of the show's original scripts. The production was designed to highlight the Beckettian nature of Albert and Harold's situation, focusing on themes of over-reliance and being trapped within social class
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 Steptoe and Son / int_9b030fac
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Repeated Rehearsal Failure
 Steptoe and Son / int_9b030fac
comment
Repeated Rehearsal Failure: One episode has Harold practicing for a play and there is a line about his character owning "a string of polo ponies", however in the script the typist has rendered this as 'poloponies', and in rehearsals his father keeps pronouncing the phrase "pol-lop-pawnies" and he and Harold get into a fight about the correct way to say it. Come the night of the play, Harold manages to make that mistake on stage.
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*Crack!* "Oh, My Back!"
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*Crack!* "Oh, My Back!": Inverted in "Upstairs, Downstairs, Upstairs, Downstairs" when Albert, who has been bedridden with a bad back for the first twenty minutes of the episode, tries to get out of bed to turn the sound up on the television after Harold leaves it turned down and tells him not to ask for anything for fifteen minutes... and ends up accidentally twisting his back in a way that fixes it and returns him to full mobility. He resorts to Playing Sick so that he can force Harold to keep waiting on him.
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Ambulance Cut
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Ambulance Cut: At the climax of "Divided We Stand", as Albert and Harold are going to bed on their individual sides of the partition wall Harold has built, Harold empties the pot in which he is boiling his evening cocoa into a mug - forgetting the control for the burner he is using is on his father's side of the partition. Soon, the tea towel hanging over the burner catches fire, and the scene cuts to fire engines zooming down the road, sirens wailing.
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Oh, Crap!
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Oh, Crap!: Albert gets this look in "Porn Yesterday" when Harold notes that the scene in the What the Butler Saw machine he picked up on his rounds has changed to a woman in a bath, with the milkman at the door with a crate of milk and no clothes... as he knows it's only a matter of time before Harold realises that the milkman in the film is Albert himself.
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Catchphrase
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Catchphrase: "You dirty old man!" Parodied with Brambell's appearance as Paul McCartney's grandfather in A Hard Day's Night, where people keep saying he's a clean old man.
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Classically-Trained Extra
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Classically-Trained Extra: Or in this case leading characters. The loss of Harry H. Corbett (referred to as "the English Marlon Brando" at the time he was cast as Harold) to this typecasting has been described as one of the greatest losses to British theatre. The episode in which Harold tries his hand at stage acting (unsuccessfully, of course) could be seen as lampshading this.
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Dumpster Dive
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Dumpster Dive: The rag and bone trade involved going around residential areas with a horse and cart collecting old clothes and furniture for which the owners no longer had any use, the idea being that the rag and bone men could either clean, restore, and resell them or sell them to a scrap dealer. The "mechanics" of the trade seldom feature heavily in the episodes' plots, but Harold in particular is occasionally seen riding the family horse and cart through residential areas to collect junk.
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Tragic Dream
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Tragic Dream: Harold's repeated, failed attempts to better himself, combined with the acting ability of both Harry H. Corbett and Wilfrid Brambell, provide some of the most tear-jerking moments in comedy.
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Pilot
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Pilot: "The Offer", which originally aired as an episode of the anthology show Comedy Playhouse.
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Series Continuity Error
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Series Continuity Error: In the episode Sixty-Five Today Harold takes Albert out for the evening to celebrate his birthday which ends in a visit to a Chinese restaurant. However Albert hates Chinese food and his behaviour causes Harold to walk out of the restaurant in embarrassment. This is contradicted by the episode The Siege of Steptoe Street at the end of which Harold and Albert receive a windfall and decide to celebrate by going for a Chinese meal. Albert goes on a spiel about all the different types of Chinese food he's going to enjoy.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_d8c10bd9
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Ensemble Dark Horse
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Ensemble Dark Horse: An in-universe example occurs in "A Star is Born" when Albert is recruited at the last minute to act in a play which Harold has already been cast as the leading man. The initial rehearsal is a disaster, with Albert repeatedly misreading words in the script (not helped by "polo ponies" being mistyped as "poloponies"note  A joke previously seen in an episode of The Honeymooners, with Ralph Kramden and Ed Norton playing comparable roles to Harold and Albert, respectively; an email from Galton and Simpson to a fan confirmed that this joke was consciously derived from The Honeymooners.) and Harold getting Distracted by the Sexy. But the episode then cuts to the bows after opening night; the applause gets louder as Albert takes his bow, but dies out almost completely as Harold takes his (the leading lady, Nemone, is also visibly angry at Harold as she takes her bow). As if to rub salt in Harold's wound, the other cast members surprise Albert by inviting him to take a second bow.
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O.O.C. Is Serious Business
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O.O.C. Is Serious Business: Albert takes Hercules the horse's death in "A Death in the Family" especially hard, losing all interest in even getting out of bed each morning. Harold tries to rouse him by suggesting they go to the cinema to see I Am Curious (Yellow), but when even the promise of seeing uncensored Swedish sexual intercourse does not snap Albert out of his funk, Harold realises just how serious his depression is. (Fortunately, when Albert delivers the new horse's foal and names him Hercules II, he is soon back to normal - and very keen to see I Am Curious (Yellow).)
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Economy Cast
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Economy Cast: Many of the episodes, both radio and television, solely have Harold and Albert, without any supporting characters.
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 Steptoe and Son / int_ffb1df90
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Perpetual Poverty
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Perpetual Poverty: One of the first British sitcoms to show characters living in this state. Quite famously, British Prime Minster Harold Wilson got a re-run scheduled for the day of the 1966 General Election moved until after the polls had closed, either to ensure that Labour voters voted rather than stayed in to watch the show, or because it might put people off voting Labour. Either way, it worked — Labour won a landslide victory.
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The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

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