Edition: | UK (hardback) | | Released: | October 2018
| | Publisher: | Constable | | ISBN: | 978-1-4721-3016-7 | | Format: | hardback | | Owned: | | | Buy: | | | New: | £28.90 | Used: | £0.70 | |
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Cover blurb: MY NAME IS BERNARD CRIBBINS, AND I’D LIKE TO TELL YOU A STORY... The long-awaited memoir from one of Britain’s greatest entertainers
Bernard Cribbins’s life has been an eventful one. In 1943, he left school aged fourteen and joined Oldham Repertory Company where he earned fifteen bob for a seventy-hour week. After being called up for National Service in 1946, he became a paratrooper and spent several months in Palestine being shot at. On returning home, and to the theatre, Bernard was approached by George Martin, then an A&R man for Parlophone Records, who suggested he make a record. Just months away from producing The Beatles, Martin asked Bernard to come to Abbey Road Studios and, after teaching him how to sing into a microphone, they eventually recorded two hit singles - ‘The Hole in the Ground’ and ‘Right Said Fred’. These, together with appearances in now classic films such as Two Way Stretch and The Wrong Arm of the Law (not to mention a certain television programme called Jackanory), catapulted Bernard to stardom and, by the time he started filming The Railway Children in 1970, he was already a national treasure. Since then, Bernard’s CV has been an A-Z of the best entertainment that Britain has to offer, and, thanks to programmes such as Jackanory, The Wombles, and, more recently, Old Jack’s Boat, he has become the voice of many millions of childhoods. Seventy-five years in the making and packed with entertaining anecdotes, Bernard Who? tells the wonderful story of one of the longest and most celebrated careers in show business. |