Raising Laughter

Regular price €25.99
70s
70s tele
70s tv
A01=Robert Sellers
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Author_Robert Sellers
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boomer market
boomers
Brian Murphy
british comedy
british culture
british entertainment history
british social history
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Category=HBTB
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comedy history
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dad's army|Eric Sykes
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fawlty towers
Galton and Simpson
How the Sitcom Kept us Laughing in '70s Britain
john cleese
Language_English
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Peter Sallis
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Richard Briers
rising damp
seventies
sitcom history
sitcoms
softlaunch
strikes
Wendy Craig
winter of discontent

Product details

  • ISBN 9780750996587
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2021
  • Publisher: The History Press Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days

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The 1970s were the era of the three-day week, the Troubles in Northern Ireland, the winter of discontent, trade union Bolshevism and wildcat strikes. Through sitcoms, Raising Laughter provides a fresh look at one of our most divisive and controversial decades. Aside from providing entertainment to millions of people, the sitcom is a window into the culture of the day.

Many of these sitcoms tapped into the decade’s sense of cynicism, failure and alienation, providing much-needed laughter for the masses. Shows like Rising Damp and Fawlty Towers were classic encapsulations of worn-out, run-down Britain, while the likes of Dad’s Army looked back sentimentally at a romanticised English past.

For the first time, the stories behind the making of every sitcom from the 1970s are told by the actors, writers, directors and producers who made them all happen. This is nostalgia with a capital N, an oral history, the last word, and an affectionate salute to the kind of comedy programme that just isn’t made anymore.

ROBERT SELLERS was born in Leeds in 1965. Following graduation from drama school, he dreamt of a career on stage and screen. Alas, despite a few walk-on roles, the world has been spared his acting, which is perhaps all for the best. Instead, he turned to film journalism - why not write about the medium he loves if he couldn't appear in it. Since the early 90s, he has written numerous biographies, books on film and TV and popular culture including the bestselling Hellraisers (Preface, 2009). His book The Battle for Bond was the subject of controversial litigation and for a time was banned in Britain.