This is delightful. Possibly the most pleasant and thoughtful man of his time. Thank you for preserving it and making it available.
@dmitrijszinovjevs83894 күн бұрын
❤
@franciscomacias209711 күн бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@azillliasmith273412 күн бұрын
All our boys and girls 😢 ❤❤❤and Gracie 🇬🇧👍🏻👍🏻
@tummablues401322 күн бұрын
The Janis Joplin of her day...
@georgedabrowski690026 күн бұрын
Boy, from I've s😂een of women when I was young, I gotta say, she didn't care!!! Wow,,!!!!! 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@equine2020Ай бұрын
Outstanding singers.
@borderlordАй бұрын
A lot of the Council flats there would be sold off to private now . A lot of the flats given to people that have been in the country 5 minutes. I'd be surprised if theyre 50% English occupied. Always puzzles me how foreigners have access to British social housing!
@paololuckyluke2854Ай бұрын
It would be very interesting (and probably disheartening) to see this video alongside one of the same places, with the same angles, of Pimlico.
@bellairfrancois5386Ай бұрын
Gracie Fields fut sans doute la gloire absolue du Music-Hall Anglais de son époque . Il est possible , et même probable qu'elle soit doublée dans la danse, mais quelle force comique ! Elle possédait une voix magnifique .Une des plus grandes artistes de son temps !
@debiethredge3020Ай бұрын
Mom danced Adagio as a young child when two male adagio dancers came to New Orleans from New York during the depression. I think she was about 5, born in 1927, so maybe 1932. I wish I could find them. All I know is Mom said they threw her around! Mom was a good dancer. After this she studied tap until jitterbug came along! After she and dad married in 1946, she said they preferred waltz to jitterbug. "You can jitterbug with your date, but you want to waltz with your husband!" <3
@MaryLee-h6vАй бұрын
Beatrice was a funny lady and different. She had a style of her own.😊
@PeterTiefelАй бұрын
Au weia!
@philipleather34962 ай бұрын
Excellent.....Her songs always make me giggle.....all I knew who saw her...said she was entrancing.....dame Hilda receaces her superbly ......but actually to see Gertie Millars eyes...you have to go to the Theatre Royal...Drury Lane....upstairs....left hand side....there she is....in "The Quaker girl"...and more glamourously dressed....I think for "Moonstruck "
@Faith-di1gm2 ай бұрын
My dad knew her in her later years. He was her postman. Every time he delivered to her, he had a tea and chat. I asked why and he said "Because she was really, really lonely. She drank all the time and had no friends because she didn't know if people wanted to really get to know HER or just because she was famous."
@roberttaylor20582 ай бұрын
The Lyons Tea Rooms were so busy then that its accountants (known at the time as computers) required mathematical automation not yet available. This led the CEO at the time to investigate Electronic Brain (eventually became known as computers) stories coming from America. Eventually they became first British company to build and use a computer (in 1953). It was called Lyons Electronic Office or LEO
@tomcretin11312 ай бұрын
The camera is pointing from Rochester Row across Vauxhall Bridge Road.
@JimPigMuseumOfSound2 ай бұрын
I love how the background singers get more and more rowdy as the song goes on
@fabriciocalvero4732 ай бұрын
Very cool, hello there.
@g.carroll83572 ай бұрын
If you don't shed a tear here you don't have tears.
@DwayneBrue2 ай бұрын
Ellen Terry, Magnificent British Actress Great Aunt of Sir John Gielgud.
@thomashenden712 ай бұрын
Cute! 😘♫♬ 😄
@daigreatcoat442 ай бұрын
In "In Parenthesis", David Jones describes the newly-conscripted soldiers, on their way to the Somme, singing this. "Never such innocence..."
@thewordkeeper2 ай бұрын
I don't remember if it was in a movie or a video clip but I saw something similar with a black chorus line in the 1940s. I mean what they were doing was making me tired. And at the end of the dance routine and just as the clip was fading out one of the girls just about fell out and almost tumbled over. I laughed but caught myself and thought man, I hope she didn't hurt herself.
@naomiuchiha09062 ай бұрын
I love it😂❤
@naomiuchiha09062 ай бұрын
Me, looking for more Cazador VA content-
@irenesama6700Ай бұрын
same😂
@nyangab2 ай бұрын
Amazingly amazing
@sleddy123453 ай бұрын
Classic Nairn - wonderful
@77roadhog3 ай бұрын
Opening credits and themes used to be so much better
@lesterjohnston88883 ай бұрын
Fantastic sung and song
@lesterjohnston88883 ай бұрын
To all there sacrifice thank you
@pietrusza3 ай бұрын
Truly one of the worst acts I have ever seen.
@thomasbrown33252 ай бұрын
Was this considered amusing in its day, or would they have cringed also?
@lesterjohnston88883 ай бұрын
Just a great voice and song
@lesterwyoung3 ай бұрын
Great production!
@bobarchitect71393 ай бұрын
Lol i didnt know he voiced a pigeon as well
@markrees81663 ай бұрын
What a wonderful piece of history. When people worked at their trade and all about live performance. No TV, no Internet. An aside, she gave very helpful advice to Frankie Vaughan so
@Jonathan-h1w9j3 ай бұрын
An appearance by the late great Jake Thackery
@douglasvick97033 ай бұрын
Watch The Film."""Passport To Pimlico""""...Wonderful....
@BrendaAndrews-ck2fq4 ай бұрын
I lived on The Lillington Gardens Estate in the late 60/70s. We moved from Millbank to a larger flat. We moved into a brand new flat and our living room was the window above what he called the arch. I loved living there and have very fond memories of Pimlico. It was a great place to be brought up. One of my sisters still live in Pimlico.
@mtv5654 ай бұрын
Crappy singing, like a mother hen! Give me Sarah Brightman's version anytime!!
@uslines4 ай бұрын
Game girl. Kept on kickin'
@WadeRaney-vv5oi4 ай бұрын
Billy was the Best 😉
@omnivorousbiped24474 ай бұрын
"Who brought her in the first place?"
@gavhinds81904 ай бұрын
Brilliant cant believe this is stans mum from the 1st series of on the buses.
@ORDEROFTHEKNIGHTSTEMPLAR134 ай бұрын
i used to live there in St Georges Sq..
@markmoretzfishing5 ай бұрын
Wow!!!!!so beautiful 🙏
@tiggywinkle205 ай бұрын
I love this. I saw Harry Welchman as an elderly actor on film and discovered this old song which I am very fond of.