Tiswas © 1974 ATV Network Limited,
© 2004 Granada Media .
This is a non-profit site intended for education about the British televison
series Tiswas.
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Pied Pipers
Just a few tests here at the moment, based on our episode guide database... No biographies or pics here yet.
John Asher There are 302 editions of Tiswas in total. John Asher's first edition was 5/1/1974 (Series 1) John Asher's final edition was 6/9/1975 (Series 2) John Asher appeared in 61 editions of Tiswas. That's 20.20% appearance rate, based on there being 302 editions of Tiswas. Series 1 5/1/1974 12/1/1974 19/1/1974 26/1/1974 2/2/1974 9/2/1974 16/2/1974 23/2/1974 2/3/1974 Series 2 14/9/1974 21/9/1974 28/9/1974 5/10/1974 12/10/1974 19/10/1974 26/10/1974 2/11/1974 9/11/1974 16/11/1974 23/11/1974 30/11/1974 7/12/1974 14/12/1974 21/12/1974 24/12/1974 28/12/1974 4/1/1975 11/1/1975 18/1/1975 25/1/1975 1/2/1975 8/2/1975 15/2/1975 22/2/1975 1/3/1975 8/3/1975 15/3/1975 22/3/1975 29/3/1975 5/4/1975 12/4/1975 19/4/1975 26/4/1975 3/5/1975 10/5/1975 17/5/1975 31/5/1975 7/6/1975 14/6/1975 21/6/1975 28/6/1975 5/7/1975 12/7/1975 19/7/1975 26/7/1975 2/8/1975 9/8/1975 16/8/1975 23/8/1975 30/8/1975 6/9/1975 Series 3 Did not appear at all in this series. Series 4 Did not appear at all in this series. Series 5 Did not appear at all in this series. Series 6 Did not appear at all in this series. Series 7 Did not appear at all in this series. Series 8 Did not appear at all in this series.
Chris Tarrant The main man, the most familiar face with the series - host and producer for the majority of Tiswas editions. Sally James The main female presenter of the show, and the second longest serving of any Tiswas regular. Trevor East Tiswas's footballed-obsessed presenter, a familiar face throughout the 1970s. Peter Tomlinson Posh-voiced and smooth-talking, this ATV announcer was regularly seen during Tiswas' early years. John Gorman Hailing from Merseyside, this ex-Scaffold singer/writer, served as resident comic performer during Tiswas' peak. John Asher The first ever main presenter of Tiswas, chirpy, affable and up for a laugh. Bob Carolgees Resident puppeteer during Tiswas's peak, with a few comic characters too. Lenny Henry Dudley-born funnyman and New Faces refugee, who could and would impersonate Trevor MacDonald and David Bellamy at the drop of the hat. Paul "The Kid" Hardin Tiswas's only child regular, who specialized in impersonating Frank Spencer and a few others. Frank Carson Northern Ireland comedian, famed for his immortal line "it's a cracker" and "it's the way I tell 'em". Sylveste McCoy Comic performer on many shows, with a great gift for facial expression. Terry Thomas Tiswas's main animal expert when it came to the IBA-pleasing wildlife/environmental slots. Den Hegarty Ex-Darts singer/founder who was the manic and off-the-wall presenter in Tiswas' final series. Oliver Spencer Warm-up man for the show, and on-screen comedy performer, specialising in being 'Barbara Woodshed'. Gordon Astley From a background of many local radio stations, he was the main male host for the final series with an affable approach to being at the helm of Tiswas. Peter Matthews Although kept off screen in the very early days as main duty was to look after pre-recorded items, this guy made a few appearances in the mid 1970s. Fogwell Flax Winner of LWT's 'Search For A Star' competition, performed many impersonations as resident comic performer of the final series.
Jim Davidson Stand-up comedian of the old school variety, appearing sporadically, and claims to be the first ever Phantom Flan Flinger. Clive Webb Oddball magician whose tricks would either work perfectly, or get someone completely messy. Ian "Sludge" Lees Old school comic with huge bubble-perm hairdo and striking suit. Terry Coates Seen many times in the final series, this guy, giving more than just a nod to Monty Python, was an old time announcer in a 1930s BBC Home Service mould, to bring a serious tone to juxtapose against the general ensuing chaos that is Tiswas. Trevor James Possibly intended to be the final series' answer to Bob Carolgees, as he had Sid the Parrot, although when he didn't do that, he shouted a lot in his guise as a CB-radio-owning nerd. David Rappaport Midget actor/performer who was seen in many final series editions, usually in the role of some comic character. Norman Collier Comedian famed for his "broken microphone" routine. Joan Palmer A female presenter/announcer who occasionally helped out on Tiswas in pre-Sally-James days. Helen Piddock Apparently the first person to play the Phantom Flan Flinger, although her main roles on Tiswas were research and competition-setting, which would be normally done off-screen as the show hit its peak. Emil Wolk Comic performer and mime artist, used early on in the final series alongside Fogwell Flax. Richard Barnes Announcer and occasional helping hand in the early days of ATV-only Tiswas, usually ended up as the target of water buckets.
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Tiswas Reunited is now available on DVD - an extended version of the show seen on ITV1 in 2007, with plenty of extras. TiswasOnline has been covering this revival project and has contributed to it. See the official blog and other show details at our Tiswas Reunited minisite!


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Random Tiswas quote: "This is the song, We lovers of water sing" - The Four Bucketeers, Bucket Of Water Song. Random Tiswas fact: In the beginning of 1982, viewers in the south east of England didn't see Tiswas. New ITV franchise TVS replaced the first six 1982 editions with their own production - 'Number 73', which was eventually networked nationally a year later. Petitions to TVS HQ in Southampton saw Tiswas back on the airwaves there.
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