Bootsie and Snudge - Bootsie and Snudge Bootsie and Snudge was a series written by Barry Took and Marty Feldman, also known for the BBC radio series Round the Horne. It feaured Clive Dunn, more famous for being in Dad's Army as well as Alfie Bass and Bill Fraser and was a follow on from the Army Game. It centred around the Imperial Club. Bootsie Bilsey and Claude Snudge were always opposed to each other. This is a stub..
Barry Took - was a comedian and writer Writing partner of Marty Feldman. Bootsie And Snudge Beyond Our Ken Round the Horne The News Quiz -- a proper appreciation of Barry Took needs to be written.
Marty Feldman - He formed a flourishing writing partnership with Barry Took in 1954. For British TV they wrote sit-coms The Army Game, Bootsie and Snudge, and most notably the ground-breaking BBC radio show Round the Horne, which starred Kenneth Horne and Kenneth Williams. and also benefitted from future Pythonites Michael Palin and Terry Jones co-writing with Barry Took. Feldman had a memorable series of his own shows on British commercial television (ITV) called Marty. His performances on American TV included the Dean Martin Show and Marty Feldman's Comedy Machine. He is remembered for his role as the hunchback Igor in Young Frankenstein in which, as usual, many of his lines were improvised. In a memorable sketch for "At Last the 1948 Show" (1/3/1967), (a series which featured Feldman's first screen performances) Feldman harassed.
List of famous pairs - & Butthead (fictional; companions) Bed and breakfast (proverbial/idiomatic) Ben & Jerry (commercial partners) Benjamin Britten & Peter Pears (colleagues; couples) Bert & Ernie (fictional; companions; puppets; television) Creations of Jim Henson, possibly named after characters in It's a Wonderful Life Big-endian & Little-endian (fictional; opposing factions) Creations of Jonathan Swift. Satirized homoousia & homoiousia, q.v. Also: (technical; conceptual; opposing) computer science terms Bill and Ben, The Flowerpot Men (fictional; companions) Bill & Ted (fictional; companions) Black & Decker (commercial partners) Black & white (proverbial/idiomatic; conceptual; opposing) Block & tackle (equipment; complementary) Boardwalk & Park Place (complementary; juxtapositions) Bolsheviks & Mensheviks (opposing factions) Bonnie & Clyde (colleagues; couples; criminals) Bootsie and Snudge Bosnia & Herzegovina (geographical; juxtapositions) Brace & bit (equipment; complementary) Brahms & Wagner (idols of opposing musical factions in Vienna.
Caligula - Claudius) and Agrippina the Elder, granddaughter of Augustus. As a boy, he accompanied his parents on military expeditions and would wear soldier's boots around the camp, hence the nickname Caligula (Latin: "little boots" or "bootsie"). Through his mother he was the great-grandson of the emperor Augustus, through his father the great-grandson of Augustus's wife Livia. See the Julio-Claudian Family Tree. Robert Graves's contention in I, Claudius that the seven year old Caligula was responsible for the murder of his father in Syria is unsupported by the historical record. Most of the information about Caligula comes from sources biased against him, mainly from the historian Suetonius. After the death of Tiberius the Roman Senate annulled his will and proclaimed Caligula imperator on March 18, 37. He probably had an incestuous sexual relationship.
Trust & Betrayal: The Legacy of Siboot - published by Mindscape in 1987. Trust & Betrayal was a predecessor of the concept of interactive storytelling, a concept Crawford is currently pursuing. The name Siboot preserves the memory of Bootsie ("Siboot" is "Bootsie" with the syllables reversed), a cat which Crawford had, which had to be euthanized due to an irreparable injury to his jaw. Crawford suffered much grief while contemplating that he was unable to talk to Bootsie in order to try to comfort him, before he had to be put down. One day while pondering this, Crawford had a flash of insight: his next game would be Talk to the Animals, which evolved into Trust & Betrayal. The original concept was very different from the final design, but the design still sprang from the designer's heart. The final.