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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Whack-O!Whack-O! - Wikipedia

    Whack-O! is a British sitcom TV series starring Jimmy Edwards.It was written by Frank Muir and Denis Norden.. The series (in black and white) ran on the BBC from 1956 to 1960 and (in colour) from 1971 to 1972. Edwards took the part of Professor James Edwards, M.A., the drunken, gambling, devious, cane-swishing headmaster who tyrannised staff and children at Chiselbury public school (described ...

  2. Born James Keith O'Neill Edwards in Barnes, London, on 23 March 1920, he acquired a taste for comedy and the stage while performing in the Footlights Revues at Cambridge University. His aptitude for the footlights was confirmed with the staging of concert parties during wartime RAF service. His immediate post-war career followed the usual route ...

  3. Whack-O!: With Jimmy Edwards, Arthur Howard, Edwin Apps, John Stirling.

  4. From Wikipedia James Keith O'Neill "Jimmy" Edwards, DFC (23 March 1920 – 7 July 1988) was an English comedy writer and actor on radio and television, best known as Pa Glum in Take It From Here and as headmaster "Professor" James Edwards in Whack-O! Edwards was born in Barnes, London, (then Surrey), the son of a professor of mathematics. He was educated at St Paul's Cathedral School, at King ...

  5. 29 de may. de 2019 · Love Bug Crawl (Bullington-Foshee) by Jimmy EdwardsJimmy had previously released a different version of this song on the Wednesday record label under his rea...

  6. 28 de jun. de 2021 · @Ted-Says - The headmaster (Jimmy Edwards) of Chiselbury School For The Sons Of Gentlefolk is a man only interested in himself, the boys at the boarding scho...

  7. 2 de jul. de 2011 · Jimmy Edwards other incarnation ‘Wacko’ to something. They made one or two modifications to the characters, and The Glums became a regular part of Take It From Here. The premise of The Glums was the long engagement between Ron Glum and his long-term fiancée Eth. As a result of post-war austerity, long engagements were common in 1950s Britain.