Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn Australian comedy show hosted by Crocodile Dundee Star, Paul Hogan.An Australian comedy show hosted by Crocodile Dundee Star, Paul Hogan.An Australian comedy show hosted by Crocodile Dundee Star, Paul Hogan.
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- 5 vitórias no total
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Delvene Delaney
• 1984
Roger Stephen
• 1984
Marion Mathrick
• 1984
Andrew Harwood
• 1984
Sue McIntosh
• 1984
Karen Pini
• 1984
John Blackman
• 1984
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G'day
This is my favourite show of all time, it's an absolute classic full of such great skits. Someone should start a petiton to have the series released on dvd, I bet you'd get millions of votes there's so many fans of the show. The best of video still goes for about 50 or sixty bucks on ebay.
This is my favourite show of all time, it's an absolute classic full of such great skits. Someone should start a petiton to have the series released on dvd, I bet you'd get millions of votes there's so many fans of the show. The best of video still goes for about 50 or sixty bucks on ebay.
I was a big fan of this show in the '80's. I remember this show so fondly. My favorite recurring skit was the one where Paul Hogan and John Cornell played room-mates in this seedy little apartment. To this day I still fall down laughing when I think about them preparing their breakfast. They'd nail their bread to the wall and toast it with a blow-torch. This is one of the few shows whose collection I would buy if it was made available to the public.
Judging from comments made, a lot of people have been waiting for a DVD of the Paul Hogan Show. Well, it's finally out, in Region 4 at least. It's a 2-disc DVD featuring the best of Hoges and all his small-screen characters, and supporting cast including John Cornell (as Strop), Delvine Delaney, Andrew Harwood and John Blackman. 'The Best of the Paul Hogan Show' is rated PG, covers the years 1977-79 mainly, and runs for 370 minutes.
I have to admit that much of the material seems quite dated now, and politically incorrect, but then that was the 70s. The formula is simple: backyard ocker fun that appeals to the workers and pokes fun at politicians and others in the public eye. Notable politicians who get a (dis)honourable mention include former Australian Prime Ministers Bob Hawke and Malcolm Fraser.
I have to admit that much of the material seems quite dated now, and politically incorrect, but then that was the 70s. The formula is simple: backyard ocker fun that appeals to the workers and pokes fun at politicians and others in the public eye. Notable politicians who get a (dis)honourable mention include former Australian Prime Ministers Bob Hawke and Malcolm Fraser.
Before the "Come and Say G'Day" commercials in 1983 and the Crocodile Dundee movie in 1986 there was the Paul Hogan Show. It was Australia's Benny Hill with sophomoric but clean, biting humor yet without the infamous ribaldry. The show usually opened with a welcoming monologue featuring wisecracks in front of a live audience. Then would come a series of shorts. One of the recurring skits featured Hogan and John Cornell as two losers in a ramshackle bachelor pad planning out their supposed evening with the ladies. In a style that truly mimicked Benny Hill there were frequently accelerated-film skits. One that I remember featured Hogan trying to set up camp to the accompaniment of Canned Heat's "Up The Country".
Although sometimes bland, the Paul Hogan show definitely had its moments. One of the most unforgettable performances was Hogan as the trenchcoat-clad man in the city park, singing to the accompaniment of lush Phil Spector-esque instrumentals: "There's someone, waiting around you, just stop and see. There is someone, waiting to know you, over there, behind the tree! There is someone, who has something, that he wants the world to see! Oh somebody, anybody! oh for God sake! look at me!" [holding trenchcoat wide open] "LOOK AT ME!"
Do any tapes exist anymore? If so, drop me a line.
Although sometimes bland, the Paul Hogan show definitely had its moments. One of the most unforgettable performances was Hogan as the trenchcoat-clad man in the city park, singing to the accompaniment of lush Phil Spector-esque instrumentals: "There's someone, waiting around you, just stop and see. There is someone, waiting to know you, over there, behind the tree! There is someone, who has something, that he wants the world to see! Oh somebody, anybody! oh for God sake! look at me!" [holding trenchcoat wide open] "LOOK AT ME!"
Do any tapes exist anymore? If so, drop me a line.
Loved watching this series on TV back in the day, always loved seeing him making toast by nailing bread to the wall and using a blow torch on it, ingenious, lol all the way
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- ConexõesFeatured in What a Year: 1980 (2007)
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