Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Scottish comedian Ronnie Corbett, best known as one-half of British comedy television staple “The Two Ronnies,” died on Thursday ...
Possibly the most robust long-running sketch show ever made and certainly one of the most successful, The Two Ronnies, in its 17 years of regular programming, regularly dominated the schedules.
After the sad news of the TV comic’s death, we look back at some of his top moments, including the Mastermind sketch from the Two Ronnies Ronnie Corbett, ‘true great’ of British TV comedy, dies aged ...
LONDON (AP) — A diminutive, verbally dexterous entertainer with exquisite comic timing, Ronnie Corbett has been hailed as a giant of comedy by fans and fellow stars mourning his death at the age of 85 ...
For years the Two Ronnies were regarded as unfunny and unfashionable – now we're once more celebrating their brand of humour One of my highlights of last Christmas was seeing Ronnie Corbett deliver ...
The Two Ronnies at 50: why comedy’s happiest, funniest marriage was too good to last The rare double act who actually liked each other, Ronnies Barker and Corbett turned wordplay and innuendo into ...
The handwritten script of The Two Ronnies' famous Fork Handles sketch could fetch up to £80,000 at auction. The script, penned by the late Ronnie Barker in the 1970s, went on to be voted the greatest ...
The Two Ronnies are returning to the nation's screens after a 17-year absence, the BBC has confirmed. Ronnie Barker, now 74, and Ronnie Corbett, 73, enjoyed huge success in the 1970s and 80s, ...
Possibly the most robust long-running sketch show ever made and certainly one of the most successful, The Two Ronnies, in its 17 years of regular programming, regularly dominated the schedules.
Ronnie Corbett, the diminutive comedian who teamed with Ronnie Barker to delight audiences for almost two decades on the hit BBC comedy show “The Two Ronnies,” died Thursday. He was 85. His death was ...
The rare double act who actually liked each other, Ronnies Barker and Corbett turned wordplay and innuendo into high art. Why did they stop? Martin Chilton is a former Culture Editor for The Telegraph ...
As Mitchell and Webb return to TV with a brand-new sketch show, we look back at the people who made us laugh the most, from John Cleese to Smack The Pony. What gets your vote? Ben Dowell, Tim ...