The Home Page The Site Map Page The Links Page Read or Leave a Message in The Guestbook Go the Search Page Cellphone and mobile users click here for a menu

Complete & Unadulterated
The Hill's Angels Years - Set 6

Navigation:  1  2  3  Next Page

Volume 2
(Episodes 4-6)

The Benny Hill Show

Jump to an Episode: 4 5 6

This collection represents the twilight years of The Benny Hill Show. More conservative, it appears that Benny made changes so his show would be more acceptable to prime time. You won't see as many sexy girls in revealing costumes as you used to as Benny wanted skirts longer and longer. Hill's Angels were a pale shadow of what they had once been. Benny also introduced Hill's Little Angels at this time. Benny also didn't seem to have the same spark that he did years before. That being said, there are a few surprise moments in this collection that marks the closing chapter of Benny's career as one of the world's most beloved comedians.

Photo Gallery (Requires Javascript)

Pop-Up Gallery | Non Pop-Up Gallery

In order to accomodate those who do not have Pop-Up Support in their browsers, there are two links for each gallery. The Photos in the gallery are 500 pixels wide by 357 pixels high, so they are much larger than before.

Episode 4 (54)

(January 13, 1988)

Color [50:43]

  1. Benny Quickies: Married Life
  2. Brooklyn Benny
  3. The Halitosis Kid
  4. Celebrity Menu
  5. Hill's Angels: A Night on the Tiles
  6. Hill's Little Angels: Outdoor Games
  7. Benny Quickies: State the Obvious!
  8. National Smile Week
  9. Closing Chase (not in the menu)

Cast: Benny Hill with Henry McGee, Bob Todd, Anna Dawson, Jon Jon Keefe, Jerold Wells, Derek Deadman, Johnny Hutch, Sue Upton, Lorraine Doyle, Mike Mulloy, Zoe Bryant, Sharon Kiel, Gary O'Bee, Martin Slater with Hill's Angels and Hill's Little Angels: Adam Johnstone, Joanna Kirkland, Jade Westbrook, Louise Whatling and Richard Whatling

Hill's Angels Choreographed by: Libby Roberts

Vocal Backing: The Ladybirds

Musical Director: Ronnie Aldrich

Producer and Directed by: Dennis Kirkland

Highlights: Benny Quickies: Married Life, The Halitosis Kid.

(This episode, Benny's first in two years (he did no new shows in 1987), was previously marketed on VHS only by HBO Video as Golden Titters. - William Brown).

This show starts with a few shorts in Benny Quickies: Married Life, starting with Benny getting a kiss from Anna Dawson as he's going out the door, then Benny and his new bride Lorraine Doyle enter their new home, with Lorraine mistaking the stove for a record player and finally a girl at the dinner table wondering why she has the toothpaste tube instead of the mustard. (Do they actually have their toothpaste in a tube in England?)

The show opener is Brooklyn Benny which, like the previous show opener, has a vaudeville style to it. Benny is a gangster who arrives at his coming out party after a long run in prison. There is a large cast in this sketch, including Anna Dawson, Johnny Hutch, (his first TBHS appearance; Hutch, who died a month prior to the release of this latest set, was the one officially designated as Jackie Wright's replacement. - William Brown), Jerold Wells, Mike Mulloy (this was Mulloy's first credited appearance on the show - William Brown), Lorraine Doyle, Sue Upton, Jerold Wells and probably everyone listed in the credits. The men wear the suits of the 30's and the girls are dressed as flappers. Songs include "A Hard Life" and "Spring has Sprung". Benny's son shows up for the party, played by Gary O'Bee, (and the arresting officer was played by Martin Slater - William Brown).

The Halitosis Kid is another silent segment which features Benny as the classic western hero, but this one has bad breath. Lorraine Doyle plays his girl, "Lucky Lullubelle" whose lost her sense of smell. Bob Todd is the villian, "Thunderclap". Jon Jon Keefe plays his effeminite sidekick, "The Gay Caballero". Naturally, the villians kidnap Lorraine and Benny is off to the rescue. This is probably one of the better ones in this episode and Jon Jon Keefe is great as the gay cowboy.

Celebrity Menu features Henry McGee, Anna Dawson, Jon Jon Keefe, an unknown girl and Benny as their waiter. The menu items are all named after famous celebrities and the descriptions Benny gives are the punchlines. This kind of exchange is cute, but not very funny. This leads into Hill's Angels: A Night on the Tiles with the Angels spending a night on the town. The main song is "I'm Still Standing", starting with the girls dancing in a gym in leotards, and then leaving the gym in evening dresses. Benny appears as Toulouse Lautrec with each of the girls pushing him to the ground and him bouncing back up. They go to the Playgirl Club where men are the ones who serve the drinks. Benny appears in a bunny suit while "It's Raining Men" plays. In this sketch, the men get pushed around by the women, including Sue pushing a chair into Benny's groin and another girl kneeing Jerold Wells in the private parts! The next song is "How Will I Know" and three girls, including Lorraine Doyle, dance with suits hung on full-size hangers. (The other two girls were Zoe Bryant and Sharon Kiel. - William Brown). The girls leave the club and use the men as their form of transportation, much the same way that the guys got on top of the girls at the end of the Chez Ben Grand Gala routine. It would seem this sketch was made to appease female viewers who were offended by the Benny Hill Show. (Indeed, one could argue that the Angels of 1988 and beyond, with one reviewer calling them "more assertive than in the early 1980s," could be characterized as "New Age Angels." - William Brown).

Hill's Little Angels: Outdoor Games is the first Little Angels segment on this disc and in the series. It all begins with the kids watching TV in the dark. Benny shows up and takes them out as their Scout Leader for a picnic and some outdoor recreation. They play cricket, do some arm wrestling and play golf, which is interrupted by rain. Benny is chased by a bull and gets a broken leg, with all of them winding up back in front of the TV.

Benny Quickies: State the Obvious! features several short bits, including: Benny asking Anna Dawson how long they've had their seed cake; Benny as the boss to Derek Deadman, telling him to fix his office door; Dr. Bob Todd telling Benny and Anna Dawson that Benny's bad health is due to alcohol; Anna Dawson reminding Benny to mail a very large package; Anna Dawson asking Benny when the TV set last broke down; Henry McGee asking Benny and Zoe Bryant to watch his cat; Benny telling Henry McGee that he hasn't been able to keep secrets from his wife; Benny telling his girl that he wished their romantic night would never end; Anna Dawson and Bob Todd on a date with Anna asking if his company is still making money; newlyweds Lorraine and Benny in the kitchen and Benny trying to break the egg she boiled for half an hour; Benny as a gentleman caller learning from Anna Dawson that the girl he's waiting for is a horrible cook; Derek Deadman getting fired by his boss Benny; Anna Dawson on the phone asking the doctor to bring around more sleeping pills for Benny; Bob Todd coming home from looking for a job and Lorraine as his wife asking how he made out; and finally an investment commercial with Bob Todd farting in the elevator. (The last-named bit was a parody of an ad campaign run at the time by the Financial Times newspaper. - William Brown).

National Smile Week is an unusual sketch where everyone smiles, no matter what difficulty they find themselves in, (with the musical accompaniment being the old standard "When You're Smiling." - William Brown). There are several short bits that make up this sketch. Sue Upton gets assistance from policeman Henry McGee who helps her get her bus pass out of the drain and getting covered in filth, only to find out it was in her purse all the time. Benny helps Zoe Bryant with her overheated car and Benny plays a little school kid who gets beat up by the Little Angels. Johnny Hutch gets help from Lorraine Doyle to get his baggage off of a tall wardrobe and the whole wardrobe collapses on top of him. Benny is Sue Upton's tough biker boyfriend and her little girl decides Benny's bike helmet is a potty. Then we learn from Bob Todd the newsman that National Smile Week is over, but Benny continues to smile at a bus stop with Jon Jon Keefe thinking he is smiling at his girl, (who is probably Vicki Harris. By then "Tiger Rag" is the backing music. - William Brown). He pushes Benny and knocks Sue Upton over. He also knocks over officer Henry McGee's bike, which gets run over by a truck. This all leads to the Closing Chase (not in the menu) with Benny ending up at an amusement park and hopping on a white water rapids ride with the rest of the cast chasing him downstream, ending this program.

Episode 5 (55)

(April 27, 1988)

Color [50:37]

  1. Benny Quickies: Don't Speak!
    a. The Garbage Man
    b. Can You Lend me $50
    c. The Superior Sex
    d. Bank Raid
    e. Boy's Night Out
  2. Bronco Benny
  3. Benny Quickies: Misheard and Mistaken
    a. Stolen Potatoes
    b. Boy Scouts
    c. Fisherman's Catch
    d. Paddy's Dead
    e. Doctor's Prescription
    f. Wishbone
    g. Pain In The Back
    h. Another Wishbone
    i. Tax Time
  4. Joggers
  5. Pigeon English
  6. Have a Butchers
  7. Club Chicago-Go
  8. Benny Quickies: Misheard and Mistaken II
    Unzipped
    Welcome To The Family
    Unzipped Again
    The Burglar
  9. Down With President Fartas
  10. Closing Chase (not in the menu)

Cast: Benny Hill with Henry McGee, Bob Todd, Anna Dawson, Jon Jon Keefe, Derek Deadman, Johnny Hutch, Sue Upton, Lorraine Doyle, Christine Pilgrim, Gary O'Bee, Duncan Pettigrew, Hill's Angels and The Royal Artillery Motorcycle Display Team

Hill's Angels Choreographed by: Libby Roberts

Vocal Backing: The Ladybirds

Musical Director: Ronnie Aldrich

Producer and Directed by: Dennis Kirkland

Highlights: Pigeon English, Have a Butchers

(This was previously marketed on VHS and DVD by HBO Home Video as Golden Yucks. - William Brown).

This program begins with Benny Quickies: Don't Speak!, featuring several short bits, starting with Anna Dawson asking her husband how he made out asking the dustman to keep the noise down in "The Garnage man". Then, Bob Todd asks Benny for $50 with Anna Dawson as an operator listening in, in "Can You Lend me $50". Johnny Hutch asks Anna Dawson for a book in "The Superior Sex"; Benny and Derek Deadman hold up a Fish Shop in "Bank Raid" and Benny asks Anna Dawson for a night out with the fellas in "Boys' Night Out". (All title are from the "Golden Yucks" program).

The it's Henry McGee's usual introduction and the show opener, Bronco Benny. The girls in this one wear shiny country-style costumes which are completely unlike anything worn for these openers before. The dancing is pretty silly with all of the hand-clapping and knee-slapping. Benny steps out in a large cowboy hat and sings a song about why he never was married and how he has been in love with screen stars all his life. It's pretty low key and lacks spark. The rest of the cast appear to be in the background for no reason. (Benny later recorded this song for his CD Benny Hill . . . The Best Of [later reissued as part of The Benny Hill Collection]; according to this CD, the title of this number was "Star Names." - William Brown).

Benny Quickies: Misheard and Mistaken is another series of short bits, starting with "Stolen Potatoes" with Benny as the market man and Henry McGee getting a report on some stolen spuds. "Boy Scouts" has two little Angels knocking on Benny's door looking for a job. "Fisherman's Catch" features Derek Deadman buying a fish from Bob Todd. Then Little Angel Richard Whatling complains to Sue Upton and Benny that his guinea pig is dead in "Paddy's Dead". "Doctor's Prescription" has Dr. Bob Todd making a house call for Benny and Anna Dawson. "Wishbone" takes place in a restaurant with Benny and Christine Pilgrim breaking a wishbone and Lorraine Doyle magically appearing in her underwear. "Pain In The Back" has Benny making a call on Dr. Henry McGee. "Another Wishbone" returns to the restaurant with a broken wishbone and this time, Benny's wife wishes for Lorraine in her underwear. Finally, "Tax Time" features Henry McGee auditing Benny's yearly accounts with everything just fine, until Anna Dawson walks in with a hidden ledger.

Joggers is a silent segment which begins with Benny and Lorraine Doyle Just Married and they are changing for bed, but Benny changes into a Jogging outfit and goes jogging. The theme here is that everyone jogs. Benny goes for a jog in the park with Jon Jon Keefe. They are pursued by Sue Upton as the Old Lady with her nurse pushing her in a wheelchair. Carla De Wansey and Zoe Bryant play meter maids that put a ticket on a fatigued jogger's head. Bob Todd attempts to drown himself with a boulder he is going to throw into a lake. Jerold Wells delivers milk to Carla De Wansey. In the park, Henry McGee gets a light from an olympic torch bearer for his cigarette. Sue Upton goes over a cliff in her wheelchair and gets picked up on a stretcher by two medics. When she gets back to the park, she is carried on the stretcher, and all the while she pinches and hits the men in the park with her cane. Benny is escorted home to Lorraine Doyle by two police officers.

Pigeon English has Benny and Anna Dawson in bird costumes, with Benny as a sparrow and Anna as a budgie. Benny shows some sympathy to Anna who is caged up. Benny talks about his experiences outside the cage and all of the dangers he faces. This is a cute segment. You won't fall down laughing, but it is an improvement over most of the material in this show. (The Golden Yucks issue titled this one "Birds of a Feather." - William Brown

Have a Butchers features Benny as a butcher serving some customers. Benny serves Johnny Hutch who is on a "salary controlled diet" and Sue Upton as the Old Lady who is "on a pension". Anna Dawson steps up next, asking for a Norfolk Turkey. Benny presents three different turkeys in front of her, all of which she claims aren't what she is looking for. She states that he must be new to the area and asks where he is from. Benny drops his pants and says, "You tell me, you're the expert!". This is the best moment in this episode. (This bit was known as "The Butcher" in Golden Yucks. - William Brown).

Club Chicago-Go is another extended segment usually featuring songs, jokes and a Hill's Angels moment. As with many of these segments, it begins outside the club. Johnny Hutch makes a pass at Sue Upton in front of his wife, Bob Todd. Benny and Jon Jon Keefe need a suit and tie and get it from Derek Deadman and Henry McGee, whom they get into a fight. In the club, Benny chugs down four beers that were on waiter Johnny Hutch's tray. Chef Bob Todd is taken out of the kitchen by the white coats. Waiter Benny serves wine to four guests, including Sue Upton, from a bucket. Johnny Hutch's stomach makes some strange sounds in front of two beautiful girls. The club entertainment begins with Benny stepping out in a red wig and telling some jokes. The first act is "One Lung Ho" and his assistant Elsie who perform some balancing tricks and then it's the great "Baldini" who does a trick with a candle. Liz Jobling does a trick with a sheet and reveals her underwear briefly. Then, it's "Tanya and her performing Men", featuring Lorraine Doyle as the trainer to several guys in the cast. Lorraine wears a Leropad Skin dress and wields a whip. The guys wear long underwear and bowler hats. This portion is pretty strange with a lot of nonsensical gags. The idea is that the men are submissive to Tanya. There is one unusual gag where Benny must grab a steak using only his mouth off of Lorraine's chest. I didn't find anything about this sketch offensive, I just felt it went on too long and wasn't funny. (It seemed part of the motive for this bit was to showcase the acrobatic act of Gary O'Bee and Duncan Pettigrew who were among the "Performing Men." - William Brown). Benny introduces Hill's Angels singing and dancing in Top Hats and Tails. They do show some nice legs, but this will disappoint fans of the classic Hill's Angels routines. They dance to "New York, New York", the song made famous by Frank Sinatra. (Which was performed in a medley with "There's No Place Like London," which had been a hit in Britain for Shirley Bassey in 1986. - William Brown). Finally, the guys dance with the Angels. It all ends with everyone having a great time and the camera moving in on Benny.

Benny Quickies: Misheard and Mistaken II is another series of short bits, starting with "Unzipped", with what appears to be a girl who looks very much like Louise English pointing out that his zip is undone on his briefcase in front of everyone on an elevator. "Welcome To The Family" puts Jon Jon Keefe in a tough spot when Benny asks him if he can support a family of fifteen. "Unzipped Again" takes us back to the elevator, with Anna Dawon telling Benny his zip is undone so she can win a bet with Sue Upton. Bob Todd is "The Burglar" who gets stuck up by Benny when he breaks in. Little Angel Richard Whatling blows Benny's cover that his gun is a water pistol.

Down With President Fartas is a silent segment taking place in a Spanish dictatorship. (The prior Golden Yucks indexed this sketch as "Welcome President Fartas!" - William Brown). Bob Todd is an official who gets Benny and Johnny Hutch to paint over graffiti on a large wall. They must beautify the area before President Fartas arrives. Someone paints a slur, "Death to El President" on a wall and Benny gets blamed which starts a chase. This naturally leads into the Closing Chase (not in the menu) with Benny stealing a motorcycle. Benny is caught at the end by Lorraine Doyle and Bob Todd, concluding this program. Stunts are performed by The Royal Artillery Motorcycle Display Team.

Episode 6 (56)

(February 8, 1989)

Color [50:39]

  1. Benny Quickies: Indiscretions
    a. The Ceiling
    b. Compulsive Liar
    c. You Carry The Baby
    d. "92"
  2. Benny's Ballad: Cockney Girls and Rustic Lasses
  3. Hill's Little Angels: The Birthday Party
  4. Fred Scuttle: The Daily Scuttle
  5. Benny Quickie: Bad Memory!
    Benny introduces Hill's Angels in Sport
    (not in the menu)
  6. Hills Angels: Sport
  7. The After Dinner Speech Dinner
  8. Benny Quickie: Sick As a Dog
    a. Rover Bit Your Mother
    b. Expecting
  9. The Crook Report
  10. Closing Chase (not in the menu)

Cast: Benny Hill with Henry McGee, Bob Todd, Anna Dawson, Jon Jon Keefe, Johnny Hutch, Duggie Small, Sue Upton, Lorraine Doyle, Carla De Wansey, Albert Moses, Jenny Westbrook, Mike Mulloy and Hill's Angels with Hill's Little Angels: Joanna Kirkland, Jade Westbrook, Richard Whatling, John Adamstone and Louise Whatling

Hill's Angels Choreographed by: Libby Roberts

Vocal Backing: The Ladybirds

Musical Director: Ronnie Aldrich

Produced and Directed by: Dennis Kirkland

Highlights: Fred Scuttle: The Daily Scuttle, The Crook Report.

(This was previously marketed on VHS and DVD by HBO Home Video as Golden Chuckles, - William Brown).

This is first show from 1989 and begins with some short bits in Benny Quickies: Indiscretions, starting with Benny and his wife in bed. She notices that Benny's ceiling is the same color that the milkman is going to paint his in "The Ceiling". Benny is an old man who visits Dr. Henry McGee to tell him he is a "Compulsive Liar". Then, Anna Dawson takes the eggs and makes Benny carry their baby in "You Carry The Baby". Finally, Benny visits Dr. Henry again in "92", telling him that God turns the lights off and on for him when he goes to the bathroom at night.

The show opens with Benny's Ballad: Cockney Girls and Rustic Lasses and the setting is on the farm, (which was called "Country Song and Dance" in Golden Chuckles, - William Brown). The girls who dance wear checkered dresses, while some wear pants and checkered vests. Benny steps out after his intro by Henry McGee. There is a large cast of extras here to ask Benny questions about his trip to London when he returns to the countryside. He entertains them with songs and stories. Henry McGee steps out with Anna Dawson and she sings "Miss Buttercup", the famous tune by Gilbert & Sullivan. Benny joins in. Finally, Benny calls a square dance with Sue Upton on violin and Johnny Hutch playing a banjo.

Hill's Little Angels: The Birthday Party begins with Joanna Kirkland and Richard Whatling being drive to Jade Westbrook's birthday party. Benny plays the butler who must cater to the kids. The kids go in the house and it appears that Bob Todd plays the grandfather. I don't know who the woman is in the blue dress. (It was Jenny Westbrook, Jade's real-life mum. - William Brown). Carla De Wansey is the maid. Jon Jon Keefe plays a small part. Benny then takes them out and serves Ice Cream. There is also an outdoor picnic. Little Richard Whatling stomps on Benny's feet, but Benny gets revenge by pushing him over in a chair and pushing his face into some whipped cream. Later, Benny passes out balloons, the kids do some rope jumping, they play darts, cricket and do some piggy backing. Richard Whatling does everything to make Benny miserable, by swatting him with a leaf and shaking his soda pop. When the party is over and they are leaving, Richard Whatling ties Benny's shoes together.

In Fred Scuttle: The Daily Scuttle we see the return of one of Benny's most enduring characters. This time, Scuttle is the editor-in-chief of a tabloid newspaper. Henry asks Scuttle about his staff and if his paper is going to display page three girls. Scuttle also talks about the seedy stories that can be found in his paper. Henry tells Scuttle his paper is trash and Scuttle threatens to print nasty stories about him. After showing Henry some of the front page headlines he is going to print, Henry walks off disguested. A highlight in this program.

Benny Quickie: Bad Memory! features Benny as an old man approached by Polic Officer Henry McGee on the street, asking him why he is upset. (Formerly "The Perfect Marriage" in Golden Chuckles. - William Brown). Benny tells him about his perfect life that anyone would envy and that he can't remember where he lives! Then, Benny steps out in front of the audience and tells a quick joke and introduces Hill's Angels in Benny introduces Hill's Angels in Sport (not in the menu). (The prior Golden Chuckles indexed Benny's intro individually as "The Most Asked Question." - William Brown). Hills Angels: Sport begins with the girls running out in red spandex outfits, lying down and forming the word "sport" for the camera. In the gym, the Angels hit punching bags and dance. We move to a boxing ring with Benny getting out of the ring with Johnny Hutch catching him in the groin with the ropes. Then it's a boxing match between two Angels. Next, the Angels dance in cricket uniforms, (to the tune of the old Booker T. & The M.G.'s hit "Soul-Limbo." - William Brown). Benny then portrays his role as Ginger Tompkins, playing billiards against Jon Jon Keefe. This then leads to the Angels as billiard balls dancing around the top of a billiard table set. This is not a good Hill's Angels routine and won't set anyone's pulse going faster. (The Dec. 5, 1973 "Spot Black" sketch could be considered an improvement over this. The shot which ended this number was a repeat of that from the Dec. 25, 1969 "Holiday Sport Spectacular" sketch. A tidbit of Ginger's "real name" as announced by color commentator Benny, may have come from that of a famous rock-and-roll drummer, Ginger Baker of Cream and Blind Faith fame, - William Brown).

The After Dinner Speech Dinner features Benny walking in on the middle of a very important dinner function. He sets himself down between Anna Dawson and Bob Todd, with Sue Upton serving him his meal. Benny accidentaly flings his butter pat across the room and onto the chest of Lorraine Doyle. While we hear the voice of Henry McGee making a speech, Benny must find a way to eat his food without annoying anyone around him. At the end, Benny makes his speech with his mouth full of food. (The earlier DVD issue indexed this as "Dining Etiquette." - William Brown). Benny Quickie: Sick As a Dog is actually a few quickies, beginning with "Rover Bit Your Mother" and Benny rushing the dog off to the vet after it has bitten Bob Todd. Then it's Bob Todd as the priest talking to several young women, all of them expecting a Baby in "Expecting".

This program ends with The Crook Report. Benny plays a tabloid news journalist trying to get an interview from a crooked businessman who owns sweatshops and abuses his employees. Benny, along with Henry, Bob Todd and Jon Jon Keefe break down the gate to the business owner's home and demand an interview. (The other crew member was Duggie Small, and Johnny Hutch played a vagabond. - William Brown). Albert Moses plays "Apu Dhurani", the man perused by Benny and his camera crew. Anna Dawson is his wife in appropriate makeup. In the end, Benny, himself, is chased by other tabloid news journalists and asked to comment on his own code of ethics. Look for Carla De Wansey as the blond interviewer who chases Benny. Not a really funny sketch, but an interesting point about peoples right to privacy and what rights journalists should have. (The name was a pun on Roger Cook, a British investigative reporter whose "ambush journalism" style (and show title of The Cook Report) were parodied here. An irony in this sketch was the name of the ersatz production company in the sketch, "Bentral Television" - a play on both Hill's first name and ITV's Midlands franchise Central Television, for which Benny was slated to do a series of specials at the time of his death in 1992. - William Brown). A whole group of reporters chase Benny down in Closing Chase (not in the menu), ending this program.

Navigation:  1  2  3  Next Page

Top Of Page
Contact William
© April 06, 2002.

Benny's Place - Navigation
  • Home
  • Site Map
  • Links
  • Fan Reviews
  • Podcasts
  • Angels after Benny Hill
  • Benny Hill References
  • About Me
  • Original Series
    • 1969 - 1971
    • 1972 - 1974
    • 1975 - 1977
    • 1978 - 1981
    • 1982 - 1985
    • 1986 - 1989
  • Syndicated Series
    • Shows #1 - #20
    • Shows #21 - #40
    • Shows #41 - #60
    • Shows #61 - #80
    • Shows #81 - #100
    • Shows #101 - #111
  • New: The Music
    • Episodes 1 - 11
    • Episodes 12 - 21
    • Episodes 22 - 31
    • Episodes 32 - 41
    • Episodes 42 - 50
    • Episodes 51 - 58
    • Essay on Stock Music
    • The Musicians
    • Album Reviews
  • Hill's Angels 1979-1981
    • Hot Gossamer
    • Pan's People
    • Chez Ben Grand Gala
    • Madame Louise...
    • New York, New York
    • TV Workout
    • Ease On Down The Road
    • Keep Young and Beautiful
    • An Occasional Man
    • Street Dance
  • Hill's Angels 1982-1985
    • Hotel Splendide
    • Street Party
    • Strip Tease
    • The Cruise
    • Lady Godiva
    • Club Bizarre
    • The Workout
    • Sauce At Benito's
    • Oddball's Club Cabaret
  • The Faces Of Benny Hill
    • Page 1
    • Page 2
    • Page 3
    • Page 4
    • Page 5
    • Page 6
    • Page 7
    • Page 8
    • Page 9
    • Page 10
  • The Cast
    • Page 1
  • Who's Who of Hill's Angels
    • Page 1
    • Page 2
    • Page 3
    • Page 4
    • Page 5
  • Angels Compendium
    • Page 1
    • Page 2
  • Benny Hill Tribute
    • Page 1
    • Page 2
    • Page 3
    • Page 4
  • More Tributes
    • Henry McGee Tribute
    • Jackie Wright Tribute
    • Dennis Kirkland Tribute
    • Love Machine Tribute
    • Diana Darvey Tribute
    • Bob Todd Tribute
    • Boots Randolph Tribute
    • Monty Python Connections
  • Who's Who A - L
    • Page 1
    • Page 2
    • Page 3
    • Page 4
    • Page 5
    • Page 6
    • Page 7
    • Page 8
    • Page 9
    • Page 10
    • Page 11
  • Who's Who M - Z
    • Page 12
    • Page 13
    • Page 14
    • Page 15
    • Page 16
    • Page 17
    • Page 18
    • Page 19
    • Page 20
    • Page 21
  • A&E DVD Review, Set 1
    • Episodes 1 - 4
    • Episodes 5 - 8
    • Episodes 9 - 11 & Summary
  • A&E DVD Review, Set 2
    • Episodes 1 - 4
    • Episodes 5 - 8
    • Episodes 9 - 10 & Summary
  • A&E DVD Review, Set 3
    • Episodes 1 - 4
    • Episodes 5 - 8
    • Episodes 9 - 10 & Summary
  • A&E DVD Review, Set 4
    • Episodes 1 - 4
    • Episodes 5 - 7
    • Episodes 8 - 10 & Summary
  • A&E DVD Review, Set 5
    • Episodes 1 - 3
    • Episodes 4 - 6
    • Episodes 7 - 9 & Summary
  • A&E DVD Review, Set 6
    • Episodes 1 - 3
    • Episodes 4 - 6
    • Episodes 7 - 8 & Summary
  • World Tour DVD Review
  • Hill's Angels Connection
  • Benny Hill Collection
  • The Lost Years DVD
    • Bennies From Heaven
    • Benny & The Jests
    • The Good, The Bawd & The Benny
    • Bonus Benny!
    • The Lost Years DVD Guide
  • Golden Classics Review
    • One Night Video Stand
    • Video Spotlight
    • Home Video Drive In
    • Video Follies
    • Bonus Features
  • Golden Greats Review
    • Golden Smiles
    • Golden Yucks
    • Golden Guffaws
    • Golden Laughs
    • Golden Sniggers
    • Golden Chuckles
    • Bonus Features
  • Benny Hill Annuals: R2
  • Region 2 Reviews
  • The Ultimate DVD
  • Benny Hill on VHS
  • Love Machine Q&A
    • Jane Eve (Colthorpe)
    • Lorraine Doyle (Greening)
    • Teresa Lucas
    • Claire Lutter
  • Angels In The Spotlight
    • Penny Kendall
    • Sue Upton
    • Vicky Facey
    • Alison Thomas
  • Celebrity Chats
    • Penny Kendall
  • Benny Hill Stars Q&A
    • Suzy Mandel
    • Christine Pilgrim
    • Louise Walker
    • Dee Dee Wilde
    • Jayne-Marie
    • Bettine Le Beau
    • Jon Jon Keefe
  • News Archives
    • Archive 11
    • Archive 10
    • Archive 9
    • Archive 8
    • Archive 7
    • Archive 6
    • Archive 5
    • Archive 4
    • Archive 3
    • Archive 2
    • Archive 1
  • Website Awards
  • Competitions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Guestbook
  • Guestbook Archive
    • Page 1
    • Page 2
    • Page 3
  • Hotel Splendide ezboard
  • Wayne & Shuster Tribute
  • SCTV on DVD Campaign
  • Benny Hill Links
    • Official Benny Hill Site
    • The Benny Hill Songbook
    • One and Only Benny Hill
    • www.laughterlog.com
    • Nicholas Parsons Site
  • Benny Hill On DVD!

Webmaster: threerandot
Contributing Editor:
William Brown
Associate Editor:
David Hawkins

Printing pages:
All pages are now printable throughout the site, except for Photo Galleries. I cannot guarantee perfect results. Use 'Print Preview' to see how your browser renders a given page before printing.

Benny Hill, The Hill's Angels Years - Set 6 (1986-1989)
Complete And Unadulterated:
The Hill's Angels Years,
Set 6 (1986-1989)
Details:
Studio: A&E Home Video
Release Date: 01/30/2007
No. of Discs: 3 (Box Set)
Running Time: 6 Hours, 40 Mins. + extras
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Color
Audio: Dolby Digital Mono
DVD Features:
Hill's Angels In Conversation Featurette
The Benny Hill Cheeky Challenge Trivia Quiz #6 Interactive Menus
Scene Selection
Distributed by Newvideo