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Discussion in 'Sunderland' started by Steven Royston O'Neill, Sep 16, 2011.

  1. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    Just had Brucies on talking about this weekend. He played golf this week with clubs owners and was promised funds to replace Gyan in January so despite rumours of board meetings and the rest all is going forward at SAFC.

    Carry on.................
     
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  2. CyprusMackem

    CyprusMackem Active Member

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    I hope he let Ellis win.
     
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  3. Nads

    Nads Well-Known Member

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    Well, Bruce is clearly here for a wee while yet, and as such will recieve my full backing.

    The next 3 games can change the whole complexion of the season, so i'm making no comment on the manager until they pass.

    Unless we lose Sunday like.
     
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  4. simonbh7

    simonbh7 Active Member

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    When Short told him to find a new club, he thought that he meant a 7 iron.
     
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  5. Billy Death

    Billy Death Guest

    Mmmmmmmm, wasn't he promised funds to replace Bent ****?

    So now we have two strikers to replace.

    My God, I'm a negative bastard.
     
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  6. CyprusMackem

    CyprusMackem Active Member

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    <laugh> <doh> :emoticon-0113-sleep
     
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  7. InBruceWeTrusted

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    I am behind Bruce, he hasnt had the best of luck with greedy bastards and if he is given money to buy a striker in January then I trust he will come up with the goods.

    Its so desruptive all these greedy bastards leaving us high n dry, we need some team stability theres just too many comings and goings.
     
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  8. Bigjohnsafc

    Bigjohnsafc New Member

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    That will keep you happy for a while sid, the only thing is, your the only one it will keep happy
     
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  9. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    I intend to stay in the BRUCE IS IN team until Bruce leaves and I will then join the BRUCE IS OUT or that could be the BRUCE IS GONE and i will joint the XXXX IS IN until we lose a few games and I can then join the XXXX IS CRAP and that could become the XXXXOUT and eventually the XXX IS GONE.

    Or maybe I will just try and enjoy Sundays game because the truth is whatever I think we change nothing.
     
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  10. Billy Death

    Billy Death Guest

    up the Kyber
    camping
    doctor
     
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  11. RedNWhite4Life

    RedNWhite4Life Well-Known Member

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    So this means that gyan can never return unless by funds he means a couple of million for a loan deal till the summer and work out what the **** to do with gyan.
     
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  12. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    [video=youtube;i8atKXFZefA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i8atKXFZefA[/video]
     
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  13. Billy Death

    Billy Death Guest

    Bernard Breslaw, what a big daft ****.

    If he was still alive he'd be playing for Stoke on Sunday.
     
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  14. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    Bernard Bresslaw, actor: born London 25 February 1934; married (three sons); died London 11 June 1993.

    I CLEARLY remember the day I met Bernard Bresslaw. So, I'll bet, can anyone who met him.

    It was 1951. He was leaning his 6ft 7in frame against the wall of the Rada canteen as I walked in. One of us greeted the other and we started talking. Realising I was an American, he began pumping me, gently but thoroughly, about transatlantic pronunciation, with particular reference to the Deep South. This was typical; I don't think Bernie wasted a minute at Rada, and it paid off when he won the academy's Emile Littler Award as Most Promising Actor.

    He was born in Stepney, his father an impecunious tailor's cutter. Bernie became an actor thanks to the efforts of his English teacher. (In typically stage-struck fashion, he often likened her to 'Miss Moffatt', the dedicated schoolmistress in the Emlyn Williams play The Corn is Green.) Impressed by the young giant's erudition and acting potential, she encouraged him to try for a Rada scholarship. That's how he came to be there.

    After graduation, Bresslaw gained practical experience by touring hospitals, army camps and prisons as Lachie, the arrogant, doomed Scot in John Patrick's The Hasty Heart. In 1953 he made his West End stage debut at the Duchess Theatre, playing Roary MacRoary, an Irish wrestler, in The MacRoary Whirl by Gerald McLarnon. It was advertised as a farcical comedy, but audiences and critics detected precious few laughs and its whirl was short.

    Far more successful was Maxwell Anderson's Broadway play The Bad Seed (1955) at the Aldwych Theatre. In this chilling study of an eight-year- old murderess, Bresslaw played 'Leroy', a prying janitor who wound up as another of the moppet's victims. He gave an effectively oily performance and his American accent was, unsurprisingly, faultless.

    He had begun making films in 1954, starting with the role of a gullible castle guard in Men of Sherwood Forest, a Hammer second feature. In 1957 Norman Wisdom starred in Up in the World, the tale of a lovable window cleaner who is framed for a crime and sentenced to 25 years. Bresslaw played his lugubrious cellmate, and when the writer and ace talent-spotter Sid Colin saw the film he immediately decided to write the young actor a key role in Granada Television's new sitcom The Army Game. The series was an enormous success and Bresslaw's 'Private 'Popeye' Popplewell' character made him an instant star. The feature film version that quickly followed took its title from his catchphrase I Only Arsked], his records 'The Army Game Theme' and 'Mad Passionate Love' remained high in the charts for many weeks, and he duly followed in the footsteps of Max Bygraves, Beryl Reid, Harry Secombe, Benny Hill and Tony Hancock by joining the cast of Educating Archie on radio.

    In 1958 Bresslaw starred, along with Bruce Forsyth and Charlie Drake, in Sleeping Beauty at the London Palladium. Because of his Army Game popularity, he played 'Popeye', a private in the Tyrolean Army. He always said Sleeping Beauty was his all- time favourite booking; also in the show was a strikingly statuesque dancer who, in 1959, became Mrs Bresslaw. The kind of couple guaranteed to give divorce lawyers ulcers, Bernie and Liz produced three splendid sons, Jonathan, Mark and James.

    But soon the media incorrectly decided the Popplewell character represented the limit of Bernie's ability and the offers ceased. 'OK,' he reasoned, 'if film and television jobs are playing hard to get, there's always my first love, the Theatre.' So he started going where the work was, tackling Sheridan, Marlowe, Ionesco, Ustinov, Galsworthy, Pinero, Chekhov, Shaw, Moliere, Cooney - you name it. There was Shakespeare too: he did Twelfth Night for the British Council, playing a creditable Sir Toby Belch. ('It must be the first time,' he said to me, 'that Sir Toby's ever been played by Sir Andrew Aguecheek]') He played Falstaff in two national tours with the Oxford Playhouse company, and began a long association with the Open Air Theatre. (This summer he was to have appeared in Regent's Park as Grumio in The Taming of the Shrew and as Merlin in Rodgers and Hart's A Connecticut Yankee. He collapsed in his dressing room before a performance of The Shrew.)

    In 1965 Bresslaw made Carry on Cowboy. The first of his 14 Carry Ons, it cast him as the Indian brave 'Little Heap', towering over his father, 'Chief Big Heap' (Charles Hawtrey). The juiciest Bresslaw characters from these films are 'Sockett', the sinister butler in Carry On Screaming (1966) and the gutteral tribal leader 'Bungdit Din' in Carry On Up the Khyber or The British Position in India (1968).

    In 1969 - between Carry On Camping and Carry On Up the Jungle - he took over from Laurence Olivier as AB Rayam, the wily lawyer in the National Theatre production of Somerset Maugham's Home and Beauty. He also worked for the English Stage Company, the Royal Shakespeare Company, the Young Vic and the Chichester Festival Theatre, for whom he played the homicidal Jonathan Brewster in Arsenic and Old Lace.

    Bresslaw was a versatile pantomime performer, playing Dame in Jack and the Beanstalk, Ugly Sister in Cinderella and Bernard the Bad in Babes in the Wood. In 1982 he appeared as Abanazar in Aladdin at Richmond. (Ironically, his Widow Twankey was Les Dawson, who died the day before him, also aged 59.)

    In 1983 the director Peter Yates (another of Bresslaw's fellow students at Rada) gave him his most impressive film role. In the dollars 27m Krull he played 'Rell', the terrifying Cyclops. In The Science Fiction Film Source Book, David Wingrove praises the movie's dazzling visuals, particularly 'the Beast itself, Bernard Bresslaw brilliantly disguised'.

    Last summer he appeared at a revue in Blackpool, for which Barry Cryer and I wrote material. Although he had been unwell for some time, our star did us proud, deftly playing an actor laddie, a lecherous landlady, a bibulous heckler, a frowsy poet and a George-Formbyesque Frankenstein Monster. After the show one night, a man came up to us in a restaurant and said, 'Mr Bresslaw, I must tell you, I loved you in The Ladykillers.' Bernie smiled and accepted the compliment with thanks. Of course, he didn't play 'One Round', the over-the-hill prize fighter in that 1955 film. Danny Green played the part; Bernie was only 21 at the time. But he certainly wasn't going to embarrass the man by correcting him. That would have been out of character.
     
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  15. Commachio

    Commachio Rambo 2021

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    please log in to view this image
     
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  16. monty987

    monty987 Well-Known Member

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    Talking of Bernard Bresslaw, do you remember the scene in 'carry on at your convience' in the cafe/resturaunt where Kenneth cope says to the chef we are not happy with the service or something like that and the chef stands up and he is about 6" taller than Bernard!, how tall was he?.He was also in a film with Terry-Thomas which i have, called too many crooks in which he plays 'snow drop' a dim criminal where George cole and company kidnap Terry's wife by mistake!. And he was in a film called Hawk the slayer i remember he carried a big axe!. I wonder when Les dawson appeared as widow Twankey at the Sunderland empire did Bernard appear in that production?.I think Bernards best film was Carry on up the Khyber (filmed in wales!).
     
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  17. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    Mind when you look back at the cast in the carry on films, sex symbols they failed on
     
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  18. murray out

    murray out Well-Known Member

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    i wonder what Bruce's tactics were on the golf course
     
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  19. Steven Royston O'Neill

    Steven Royston O'Neill Well-Known Member

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    please log in to view this image
     
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  20. Commachio

    Commachio Rambo 2021

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    Instead of shouting "four" he shouted "six".

    When quizzed by Short, why he shouted six, Bruce replied "i was just thinking how many midfielders i may field this weekend".
     
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