BBC to mark 30th anniversary of Spitting ImageBookmark and Share

Tuesday, 7 January 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
The 30th anniversary of ITV's satirical puppet show Spitting Image is to be marked with a special documentary on BBC Four.

In Whatever Happened To Spitting Image? the arts strand Arena will reunite the founding creative team and tell the vexed and frequently hilarious story of the genesis of the satirical puppet show, with exclusive contributions from caricaturists Peter Fluck, Roger Law, and TV producer John Lloyd.

Spanning 131 episodes over 18 series from February 1984 to February 1996, the show was made for Central Independent Television and broadcast across the ITV network.

The puppets became almost as famous as the politicians they lampooned, and in 2000 were auctioned off at Sotheby's. In the course of the documentary, the team sets out to discover where they now reside and who is taking care of them in their old age.

Revealing the extraordinary technical achievement of the series, Arena meets the caricaturists, puppet-mould-makers, designers, puppeteers, impressionists, writers, and directors who worked tirelessly to ensure the show landed its weekly jibes and punches at the politicians, royals, and celebrities of the day. And, tracing its journey to our TV screens, through 12 years of huge audience figures and weekly controversy to its eventual demise, Arena will ask what Spitting Image got right, where it went wrong, and whether its absence for the past 17 years has left a hole in the schedules that has yet to be filled by modern broadcasting.

The documentary has been directed by Arena series editor Anthony Wall, who said:
I made a film about Fluck and Law in 1980, some years before Spitting Image was made, so it's great to be able to revisit their distinctive contribution to Britain's television history.
Cassian Harrison, the channel editor for BBC Four, commented:
It's a testament to Arena's success and eclectic tastes that they've secured access to the Spitting Image team. This is a timely opportunity for Arena to look back at one of television's most extraordinary satirical successes.
A date for broadcasting the one-hour programme is yet to be confirmed, with the BBC currently saying that it will air in the spring, but it will have a preview screening at the BFI Southbank on Thursday 27th February at 6.10pm.
Thirty years ago, Roger Law and Peter Fluck were happily ensconced in a converted Temperance Hall in Cambridge making cruelly funny Plasticine caricatures. These models were photographed and presented to the world in print under the anonymous byline "Luck & Flaw". Unlike a drawing, the caricatures looked like they might move and, Geppetto-style, they did. Law and Fluck, with co-conspirator TV comedy supremo John Lloyd, unleashed one of the most shocking and hilarious TV series ever. Arena tells the story of Spitting Image.
After the screening, there will be a question-and-answer session with Fluck, Law, Lloyd, and Wall.

The big-screen showing and Q&A will be followed at 8.45pm with a special two-hour celebration and Q&A featuring clips and guests including impressionist Steve Nallon plus "victims" Lord Roy Hattersley and Lord David Steel.
We're delighted to host a panel of well-known writers and performers who gave the show its satirical edge and who became household names in the process, alongside some of their victims - politicians and celebrities - who will discuss the effect their puppet personas had on their careers. Using illustrative clips, we examine the show's controversial impact at the time and its lasting legacy, and reveal behind-the-scenes secrets of the performers, puppeteers, writers, and directors. So, in the words of one famous crew member: "Puppets up, loves - wave those dollies in the air!"
Tickets to both events go on public sale at 11.30am on Tuesday 11th February - click here for the preview screening/Q&A and here for the celebration/Q&A - with a joint event ticket also being made available.




FILTER: - Arena - Spitting Image - BFI - Documentary - Comedy - BBC Four

Timeshift: How to be Sherlock HolmesBookmark and Share

Monday, 6 January 2014 - Reported by Chuck Foster
As the current series of Sherlock draws to a close, BBC4 is to broadcast an edition of Timeshift, focusing on the fictional detective and the people who have portrayed him on screen.

How to be Sherlock Holmes: The Many Faces of a Master Detective
Sunday 12th January, 10:00pm

For over 100 years, more than 80 actors have put a varying face to the world's greatest consulting detective - Sherlock Holmes. And many of them incorporated details - such as the curved pipe and the immortal line 'Elementary, my dear Watson' - that never featured in Conan Doyle's original stories. In charting the evolution of Sherlock on screen, from early silent movies to the latest film and television versions, Timeshift shows how our notion of Holmes today is as much a creation of these various screen portrayals as of the stories themselves.

Narrated by Peter Wyngarde, with contributions from Sherlocks past and present including Benedict Cumberbatch, Christopher Lee, Tim Pigott-Smith and Mark Gatiss.

Timeshift: How to be Sherlock Holmes: Benedict Cumberbatch (Credit: BBC/Matthew Thomas) Timeshift: How to be Sherlock Holmes: Christopher Lee (Credit: BBC/Matthew Thomas) Timeshift: How to be Sherlock Holmes: Mark Gatiss (Credit: BBC/Matthew Thomas)




FILTER: - Documentary - Timeshift - BBC Four - Sherlock

The Tomorrow People trailer releasedBookmark and Share

Sunday, 5 January 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
A trailer for the upcoming start of The Tomorrow People on E4 has been released. The American reboot of the classic '70s ITV children's series about the next evolutionary leap of mankind - a generation of humans born with paranormal abilities - begins on the British digital channel on Wednesday 8th January at 9pm.

The show - which comprises 22 one-hour episodes - stars Robbie Amell as Stephen Jameson, Luke Mitchell as John Young, Peyton List as Cara Coburn, Aaron Yoo as Russell Kwon, Madeleine Mantock as Astrid Finch, and Mark Pellegrino as Dr Jedikiah Price.






FILTER: - E4 - The Tomorrow People

Death In Paradise series 3 start date and detailsBookmark and Share

Saturday, 4 January 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
The third series of the BBC One crime drama/comedy Death In Paradise will start on Tuesday 14th January at 9pm, with the run of eight one-hour episodes seeing the departure of Ben Miller as Det Insp Richard Poole, to be replaced by Kris Marshall as Det Insp Humphrey Goodman.

Returning are Sara Martins as Det Sgt Camille Bordey, Danny John-Jules as Officer Dawyne Myers, Gary Carr as the newly-qualified Sgt Fidel Best, Don Warrington as Commissioner Selwyn Patterson, and Élizabeth Bourgine as Camille's mother Catherine.

As previously reported, guest stars will include Peter Davison, Michelle Ryan, Clarke Peters, Adrian Scarborough, and Sophie Thompson. The new series will also see Philip Jackson and Rhys Thomas appearing.

Interviews with cast members plus synopses for the first three episodes are given below. Please note that they contain what some may consider spoilers, so readers assume responsibility for clicking to reveal the contents.


What were your first thoughts when you saw the script and saw your end?
I was shocked when I first read the script, but then found the scenario very comical. I loved the fact he was dispatched with an ice pick, I thought that was really poetic and quite funny. It was very bold, imaginative and a really great end to Richard Poole.

How did it feel to film your the last scene?
It was emotional. No matter how much you imagine what it is going to be like - filming your own death - to be lying there in your character's costume in a pool of fake blood feels quite final, and you can’'t help but feel a little vulnerable! Richard entered with a bang and left with a bang.

How was it shot?
I had a fake knife in my chest - the handle was sticking out and it was on a plate under my clothes. Then, I had a tube that ran up inside the costume to the point where the ice pick would go in which fed the fake blood up through a pipe. We had a man there with a bag of blood and what looked like a bicycle pump forcing the liquid through the tube so you could get a real shot of the blood spreading. It looked great! We don't ever go too over the top on the gore though - it's not that sort of show.

What did you think of the fact that Richard met his end with an ice pick?
I thought it was great because obviously you want to kill Richard with something to do with heat, given his aversion to it, so I kind of guessed it was something to do with that. However, I never guessed an ice pick – that was a brilliant idea!

What is your lasting memory from your time on the show?

I have so many very vivid memories of Death In Paradise. Everything seems more alive in Guadeloupe, mostly because the jungle is just two steps over your shoulder. It's also because the people are so much larger than life. It's the local people I will miss most, many of them worked on the crew and were huge characters. One of my memories is being taught to dance the zouk by our props master, Jean Michelle. Whenever we were at the bar he would drag me on to the dance floor to do the zouk, which is an incredibly intimate dance, usually done with a man and a woman!

Are you happy with the way your exit was written?
I think it was the right choice. If Richard was in too much of the series, it would be odd. You really want to establish a new character as soon as possible and what I particularly liked was that Richard came to the island to investigate a murder of a detective inspector and that the new detective does exactly the same. I love the way history repeats itself.

What do you think of Kris in action?
The thing that struck me the second I saw him was that he had the air of someone who knew exactly what they were doing. He had really thought about the character and I was so impressed by his professionalism. It is a huge responsibility to bear - remembering all those lines in the heat and carrying a lot of story - but he adjusted well and was incredibly impressive.

Are you going to be watching the first show go out?
I'm going to be running my whodunit Twitter competition as ever, inviting people to guess the murderer. You have to put the correct name of the murderer, you also need to have means, motive and opportunity, followed by #whodunit. This time I have a dog in that fight so let's see if we can catch the guilty party!


What we can expect from the new series of Death In Paradise?
It's still a fish-out-of-water story, but there is a new fish in town. As it is such a popular existing show it was very important that I fitted in with the show rather than the show fitting around me. Fans can expect lots more of the same, with lots more fun and puzzling murders.

Tell us about Det Insp Humphrey Goodman.

Humphrey is in his early 40s, married and was a detective inspector with the Metropolitan Police in London before being transferred to Saint-Marie. He's kind of stuck in a rut and wants a change in his life but doesn't quite know what it is he wants. However, when he gets a call to go to Saint-Marie he seems to drop everything and gets on a plane with just a suit and two shirts! He shows up in Saint-Marie with the intention of his wife following on afterwards because she is a botanist and he thinks she'd love the rainforest on the island, but I don't think things are going to work out that way.

How does Humphrey get on with his new team?
To begin with, not very well at all - they think he is quite odd, a bit of an idiot and in the way. Of course, they are grieving over the loss of their previous boss and don't react well to some guy from London coming in and literally treading all over their investigation. However, gradually, as the series goes on, he begins to fit in as their little odd boss. They still think his methods are slightly off the wall, but as the series progresses they become a good team.

Does Humphrey feel a very different character from ones you have played in the past?
Obviously he's not as young as some of the characters I have played in the past, but then I'm not as young either! I read that Jack Nicholson once said that two-thirds of every character you play is yourself - you can never get too far away from yourself. So, Humphrey's character is partly me, just a heightened, exaggerated version! There are probably also links to other characters I have played in the past.

How was it moving out to Guadeloupe for six months?
It was amazing, but quite hard to begin with. I went out by myself first, then my wife and son followed a month later. It was hard to begin with because the pressure was on - not just starting a new job but as the lead on a big, existing, and popular series. It was tough again when my wife came out and she obviously had to find her feet with our son. When you have an eight-month-old son you are still working out how to look after him, let alone when it's 35 degree heat! However, it soon all slotted into place. We were well looked after and lived locally, with our son going to the local crèche. My wife was teaching yoga to the cast and crew, which was great. I did miss England, which is natural when you are away from home. This is, until I got home and I thought, what am I doing back here? I want my flip-flops back!

What was it like joining such an established cast?
It was daunting to begin with because I have never joined an existing show and cast before, and as it's such a popular show you don't want to mess it up. I was really honoured and humbled by the BBC entrusting me with one of their most popular shows. That really meant a lot to me. I just wanted to assimilate myself but still keep the series familiar to viewers. Of course, it's set in the same place, the other cast members are still the same, so not much has changed, but I want people to like it as much as they did before. I don't think it would have been as easy as it has been if the established cast hadn't made me feel so welcome. They were amazing.

What guest stars did you enjoy working with?
Sophie Thompson who is in the first episode - she and I have done the last four jobs together! She is clearly following me around and I can't seem to stop it! It's always lovely to work with Sophie though. I have worked with quite a few before, including Adrian Scarborough and Phil Jackson. It's lovely actually, it's like they all come out to see you. One of my favourite people to work with though was Rhys Thomas who is in episode two. We are about the same age, both have kids and one night did an awesome karaoke-off! We sang Under Pressure - he sang the Freddie Mercury bit and I sang the David Bowie bit, and it was awesome!


What can we expect from the new series of Death In Paradise?

The new series obviously has a new dynamic because we have a new lead character, Humphrey Goodman. It follows the same format that fans love and know about the show, but it has new experiences and encounters. The big thing for the group is adjusting and adapting to a new character - someone who, again, is foreign, but completely different to Richard Poole.

What effect does Richard's death and departure have on the team?
The team loved Richard, even though he was quite odd! They adored and loved him, so his death is devastating for them, but at the same time they owe it to him to solve his murder case and find out who the killer was. I think every episode they think about Richard and want to do the best they can in honour of him.

How does Humphrey fit into the team?
What's great is that Humphrey isn't trying to be Richard Poole, he's a completely different character. He brings a lot of energy - and chaos! - but it's great for the team because he's the complete opposite of Richard, who was very by-the-book and all about rules and logic. He was like a scientist in that way. Humphrey's not like that at all, he's the oddball and brings a lot of madness, but he gets the result.

How has being promoted to sergeant changed Fidel?

In this series, Fidel's trying to figure out what a sergeant does and how he slots into that role, you see him really try to figure out how it all works. It's a big learning curve for him. Dwayne is guiding him, but obviously in Dwayne's way and Dwayne's rules. Dwayne knows his stuff and is a great officer, but Fidel's a sergeant now. Dwayne may think he knows best but Fidel is his boss now!

There are some great guest stars in the new series. With whom did you enjoy working?
I loved working with all of them but Clarke Peters was particularly cool. I was so excited by him in The Wire. I also remember seeing him in a play in the West End when I was about seven and thinking "This is amazing, this is what I want to do!" The guest stars keep getting more and more exciting every series.

You've had huge success in the past 12 months. What's next for you?

I'm doing a play at the Royal Court called The Pass which is a brilliant story and really interesting subject matter. I'm also making a music album in Paris with some amazing musicians, which is very exciting. I can't wait to finally get that off the ground.


What can you tell us about the new series of Death In Paradise?
I think each series goes from strength to strength. The characters have been developed further, we've got loads more guest stars this year, some who have come from as far away as Hollywood, so I hope the audience will feel like they're getting more of what they've been craving over the last year.

What's in store for your character Dwayne this coming series?
Dwayne is becoming more accepting of the new status quo at Honoré Police Department and having these strange English detectives join the team. They're a bit too meticulous for his liking, but Dwayne has developed into a very good policeman. He now uses his "streetwise" much more to help solve the crimes.

How has the dynamic changed on set following the departure of Ben Miller and the arrival of new cast member Kris Marshall?
The dynamics on set have stayed pretty much the same. We've had two very funny guys as the lead - one whose sense of humour is slightly drier than the other, but two people who are always up for having a good time. They're both very hard-working - it is a lot of work for the lead guy in the series. Obviously once the work is done, though, they both enjoy themselves, go out to dinner, and have fun with the cast and crew. The leading man always has to be in the thick of it, and both guys were quite happy to take up that mantle and be the life and soul of the party. As far as their on-screen characters are concerned, Richard Poole and Humphrey Goodman are different, particularly in their approach to solving the crimes. What keeps them both interesting is the supporting characters around them such as Dwayne, and the way they react to the new arrivals. As long as they are not local they're going to have a certain way of working that is going to be different to the locals, and that's what brings the comedy.

What has it been like filming on the beautiful island of Guadeloupe?

Filming in Guadeloupe is a dream come true, particularly because the island that my parents live on is literally a two-hour ferry ride away! I was fairly familiar with the local surroundings for this reason, but to be out there filming a TV show is amazing! How many people in their career get to go and film in the Caribbean? I'm one of the small community of actors that have acquired that privilege. At the same time, though, if you have to do a scene running through a jungle in 100 degrees, then you might not be so happy to be on the island!

Is it difficult for you to blend comedy with drama in the show?
Not really, because I don't like going in for the gag. I have always believed that comedy comes out of real-life situations. I've been known to laugh harder at dead- straight cowboy films than comedies before. Just look at Blazing Saddles - it was inspired by real cowboy movies. Experiencing that kind of comedy was a big learning curve for me. I think that playing for the laugh has not really worked for me. I tend to play for real and if the scenario is funny then we will laugh anyway!

What is it about this show that sets it apart from other series?
What sets Death In Paradise apart is that, unlike other genres where the characters have been brought up in the same scenario, Death In Paradise takes a detective and puts them in a completely alien surrounding where people do things completely different. The cases get solved but you see the characters learning from each other, culturally and professionally.

Written by Robert Thorogood.

The team is left stunned and heart-broken when Detective Inspector Richard Poole (Ben Miller) is found murdered with an ice pick following a university reunion he was attending.

Battling their grief and determined to catch the killer of their friend, Camille (Sara Martins), Fidel (Gary Carr) and Dwayne (Danny John-Jules) are joined by new detective inspector Humphrey Goodman (Kris Marshall) to help them get to the bottom of the tragic and mysterious case. Unfortunately, Humphrey's naturally bumbling and accident-prone ways mean he doesn't make a great first impression.

With the crime scene a remote villa only accessible by car, all the attendees of the reunion are prime suspects. However, after 25 years of not seeing one another, who could possibly hold a grudge against Richard? Did trip organiser Angie (Sophie Thompson) have an ulterior motive for the reunion? Has Richard's old flame Sasha (Helen Baxendale) got something to hide? Or has Sasha's husband James (Mark Bazeley) finally let his jealous streak take over?

To make matters more complicated, the murder appears to have been committed in plain sight of all those at the party. How did someone stab Richard with no-one seeing? Humphrey is increasingly baffled and, still not feeling part of the team yet, takes solace in knowing that at least his wife will soon be joining him on the island. If only he can just solve this case first and show his new team what a brilliant detective he is . . .

Written by Daisy Coulam.

When a stand-in working on a zombie film being shot on the island suddenly dies on set, Humphrey and the team are called to investigate the murder. The victim appears to have been poisoned, but why would someone want to murder a lowly stand-in who had only been on the island a week?

Having gained all the evidence, it all seems to point towards the idea that the film's lead actress Lexi Cunningham (Michelle Ryan) was actually the intended victim in a plan gone wrong. From here, the team quickly focus their investigation on three key suspects: film director Carl Collins (Rhys Thomas), script writer Arnold Finch (Peter Davison), and on-set runner Susie Jenkins (Hannah Tointon). But why would any of them want their lead actress dead?

With the three suspects in mind, Humphrey and the team start to discover that the world of film-making is just as duplicitous and scheming as one might expect. The film set is teeming with ruthless ambition, creative jealousy, and behind-the-scenes affairs. All three suspects have a motive, but which one did it?

Written by Paul Logue.

Det Insp Goodman and the team are called to investigate the death of an old school friend of Fidel's, Carlton Parish (Steve Cole), who has been shot at his home.

Last seen at an art viewing held at a gallery owned by connoisseur Leo Pascal (Adrian Scarborough), Carlton was in attendance with wealthy, older woman, Dorothy Foster (Sharon Small). Witnesses also claim to have seen Carlton having an altercation with Marc Campese (Tristan Gemmill), the owner of private members' club The Reef Club. With only a call from Carlton claiming that a woman was going to kill him to go on, Humphrey and the team start analysing their suspects.

They soon discover that Carlton made his living as a male escort and, as a result, has sparked motives in a number of disgruntled female exes, including the "Dragon Lady" (Josette Simon) herself, Judge Ann Stone, and Marc Campese's wife Lauren (Vinette Robinson). Did any of the loved-up women have reason to kill Carlton?

With emotions running high, Fidel is finding it tough to investigate his old friend's murder, forcing him to confront some long-buried issues. Will he be able to put these aside in order to bring his friend's killer to justice?

The guest cast lists plus character names for all eight episodes are as follows:

Episode 1

Sasha Moore: Helen Baxendale
Angie Birkett: Sophie Thompson
James Moore: Mark Bazeley
Roger Sadler: Tim Dutton

Episode 2

Lexi Cunningham: Michelle Ryan
Arnold Finch: Peter Davison
Carl Collins: Rhys Thomas
Susie Jenkins: Hannah Tointon
Thea: Phoebe Thomas
Big Dave: Peter Bankole

Episode 3

Leo Pascal: Adrian Scarborough
Dorothy Foster: Sharon Small
Marc Campese: Tristan Gemmill
Lauren Campese: Vinette Robinson
Judge Stone: Josette Simon
Carlton Paris: Steve Cole

Episode 4

Adam: Raza Jaffrey
Simone Magon: Kathryn Drysdale
Helen Williams: Sophie Colquhoun
Paul Bevans: Daniel Lapaine
Max Leigh: Chris Geere
Natasha: Felicite Du Jeu

Episode 5

Marlon: Clarke Peters
Jacob: Simon Shepherd
Drew: James Musgrave
Charlotte: Haydn Gwynne
Theo: Eriq Ebouaney
Lena Bell: Nina Toussaint-White

Episode 6

Captain Jack: Paul Barber
Alec Burton: Mark Heap
Matt Webster: William Beck
Gloria: Lisa Kay
Dan Parish: Ciaran McMenamin
Marc: Richard Huw
Yasmin: Hannah John-Kamen

Episode 7

Alexander: Joseph Marcell
Terrance: Jimmy Akingbola
Joseph: Chris Obi
Anna: Nikki Amuka-Bird

Episode 8

Colin: Rupert Vansittart
Jim: Phil Davis
Emma: Kate Fahy
David: Philip Jackson
Sylvane: Sara Niles
Judith: Joanna David
Pam: Michele Dotrice
Sally: Morven Christie

The programme, which is filmed on the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, doubling for the fictional island of Saint-Marie, has gone from strength to strength over the past two series, bringing in an average consolidated figure of almost eight million viewers each episode for the second series.

Death In Paradise is a Red Planet Pictures production in association with BBC Worldwide, produced with the support of the region of Guadeloupe. It was created by Robert Thorogood. Tony Jordan and Belinda Campbell are the executive producers for Red Planet Pictures and Polly Hill is the executive producer for BBC One.




FILTER: - Death In Paradise

Children's TV to be marked with special stamps issueBookmark and Share

Friday, 3 January 2014 - Reported by John Bowman
Characters from much-loved children's TV shows are being celebrated with a special issue of stamps from Royal Mail.

The Classic Children's TV set - to be released on Tuesday 7th January - comprises 12 first-class stamps depicting some of the most popular shows from more than 60 years of television, with the stamps designed so that the characters "break out" of the border.

The full line-up features Andy Pandy, Ivor the Engine, Dougal - from The Magic Roundabout, Windy Miller - from Camberwick Green, Mr Benn, Great Uncle Bulgaria - from The Wombles, Bagpuss, Paddington Bear, Postman Pat, Bob the Builder, Peppa Pig, and Shaun the Sheep.

First-day covers can be franked either with the Royal Mail's Tallents House handstamp or a Wimbledon postmark, the latter chosen because the suburban London district's Common is the home of the Wombles.

2014 will mark the 40th anniversary of Bagpuss first appearing on TV, with the saggy cloth cat continually cited as one of the favourite British children's TV characters of all time. This year will also mark the 50th anniversary of the debut of the French-British show The Magic Roundabout on French TV, subsequently dubbed with new scripts - written and performed by Eric Thompson - and originally broadcast on BBC TV between 1965 and 1977. The prolific British animator Ivor Wood created Dougal, one of the show's memorable characters, who also ranks highly in people's affections. Wood also went on to animate Paddington Bear and Postman Pat for TV.

Each decade since the 1950s is represented in this issue. Even the older programmes have been frequently repeated and new series created of them. Such is the popularity of these characters that 2014 will see the films Postman Pat: The Movie - You Know You're The One - including the voice of David Tennant - and Paddington (with the voice of Hugh Bonneville as Mr Brown) hit the big screen at cinemas nationwide, while 2015 will see a return to television for the Wombles and a new CGI series giving them a hi-tech makeover.

Many of the shows have acquired cult status, and while intended for a young audience they also attract devoted adult fans. Such was the appeal of The Magic Roundabout that when, in 1967, it was moved to an earlier timeslot, the BBC received complaints from the programme's adult fans who could not get home in time from work to watch the show.

Andrew Hammond, of Royal Mail Stamps, said:
For over 60 years, Britain's children's TV characters have brought cheer to generations of viewers. More importantly, it has presented us with a cast of characters that, like the memories of the programmes themselves, remain with us throughout our lives.

It feels appropriate to celebrate all of these unforgettable characters on a set of very special stamps.
The stamps and various items of merchandise relating to the issue are available to pre-order worldwide from the Royal Mail shop. They will be available by phone on 08457 641 641 and in 10,000 Post Offices throughout the UK from 7th January.

Last year, Royal Mail brought out a set of stamps celebrating the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who, which were hugely popular, with pre-orders being three times the usual number.

The Wimbledon postmark for the first day cover of the Classic Children's TV stamps set. Picture: Royal MailThe Andy Pandy stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Bagpuss stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Bob the Builder stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Windy Miller stamp. Picture: Royal MailA Wimbledon-postmarked first day cover for the Classic Children's TV stamps set. Picture: Royal MailFiller card for the Classic Children's TV stamps set. Picture: Royal MailThe presentation pack for the Classic Children's TV stamps set. Picture: Royal MailThe inner card for the Classic Children's TV stamps set. Picture: Royal MailThe Ivor the Engine stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Dougal stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Mr Benn stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Paddington Bear stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Peppa Pig stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Postman Pat stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Shaun the Sheep stamp. Picture: Royal MailThe Tallents House handstamp for the Classic Children's TV issue first day cover. Picture: Royal MailThe Great Uncle Bulgaria stamp. Picture: Royal Mail




FILTER: - UK - Merchandise

Sherlock Series 3: Publicity ImagesBookmark and Share

Friday, 27 December 2013 - Reported by Chuck Foster
A selection of publicity images are available to promote the forthcoming return of Sherlock to our screens on New Years Day.

Martin Freeman as John Watson. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyLouise Brealey as Molly. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyAmanda Abbington as Mary Morstan. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyUna Stubbs as Mrs Hudson. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock with Martin Freeman as John Watson. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyMartin Freeman as John Watson. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyRupert Graves as Lestrade. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyAmanda Abbington as Mary Morstan. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyMartin Freeman as John Watson. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyLouise Brealey as Molly with Ed Birch as Tom. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock with Martin Freeman as John Watson. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyRupert Graves as Lestrade. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyUna Stubbs as Mrs Hudson. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyLouise Brealey as Molly. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyMartin Freeman as John Watson. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyMark Gatiss as Mycroft. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock with Martin Freeman as John Watson. Image: BBC/Robert ViglaskyBenedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock with Martin Freeman as John Watson. Image: BBC/Robert Viglasky




FILTER: - BBC - Sherlock