Parsley Sidings is a BBC Radio sitcom of the early 1970s created by Jim Eldridge. It stars Arthur Lowe and Ian Lavender (who were starring in the sitcom Dad's Army at the time) and Kenneth Connor from the Carry On films.[1]

The show is set in a sleepy out of the way railway station on the main line between London and Birmingham, in the Midlands. The main characters are the station master, Mr Horace Hepplewhite (played by Arthur Lowe); his son, Bertrand (Ian Lavender); station porter Percy Valentine (Kenneth Connor); Mr Bradshaw, the signalman (also played by Kenneth Connor, as was Clara the station hen); and station tannoy announcer Gloria Simpkins (Liz Fraser, who was also in the Carry On films, and appeared in the Dad's Army feature film). The guest cast in some episodes included Bill Pertwee (also from Dad's Army, appearing in episode 11), Roger Delgado (The Master in Doctor Who in the Jon Pertwee era) with the announcer for the programme being Keith Skues.

The scripts are by Jim Eldridge (who would later go on to write for many more series, the most successful being the BBC's King Street Junior). The series was produced by Edward Taylor, and was broadcast on BBC Radio 2. Due to the BBC's then practice of wiping tapes after the broadcast of a show, only a minority of the 21 episodes produced were still in the BBC archive; Goodbye, Parsley Sidings and The Entente Cordial are aired on BBC Radio 4 Extra occasionally and have always been in the BBC archives, while A Night Out, A Bird in the Hand and The Secret Agent were recovered between 2001 and 2003 as off-air recordings from members of the public. These episodes were aired in early 2007. All the other episodes are known to exist in private hands.

In 2008, more episodes were 'discovered', including the pilot and "The New Level Crossing".[2]

The BBC broadcast some programmes from the series in February 2011. Starting 1 November 2012, 4 Extra began a run of the whole series using audio compiled from both the BBC's own archive and private collections, with intros and outros re-recorded by original on-stage announcer Keith Skues.[3]

The signature tune is "Banjo Boy" by Roger Roger, from the LP Mood Music Vol. 18 in the Chappell music library. (This music was also used for the signature tune of the 1969–71 British TV series The Mind of Mr. J.G. Reeder.)

Episodes

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Series 1
Title Recorded First broadcast
Pilot Unknown 28-02-1971
The Market Special 01-12-1971 05-12-1971
The Postal Express 02-12-1971 12-12-1971
The Beauty Queen Contest 02-12-1971 19-12-1971
The Inspector Calls 03-12-1971 31-12-1971
The 1890 Rocket 03-12-1971 02-01-1972
The Excursion 07-12-1971 09-01-1972
Cricket, Lovely Cricket 12-12-1971 16-01-1972
Who'll Be Mother? 14-12-1971 23-01-1972
The Concert Unknown 30-01-1972
Goodbye, Parsley Sidings 09-01-1972 06-02-1972
Series 2
Title Recorded First broadcast
Pass The Parcel 25-10-1972 29-09-1973
The Flower Show Unknown 06-10-1973
The Entente Cordiale 15-11-1972 13-10-1973
A Night Out 23-10-1972 20-10-1973
The Goods Train Unknown 27-10-1973
A Bird in the Hand 08-11-1972 03-11-1973
The Purity League 13-11-1972 10-11-1973
The New Level Crossing 27-10-1972 17-11-1973
The Film Makers 06-11-1972 24-11-1973
The Secret Agent 01-11-1972 01-12-1973

References

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  1. ^ "Parsley Sidings". British Comedy. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  2. ^ Wolf, Ian. "Parsley Sidings". British Comedy Guide. Retrieved 8 March 2009.
  3. ^ Wilkojc, Mik. "Radio 4 Extra: Parsley Sidings". BBC. Retrieved 3 November 2012.
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