翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Kingswinford (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Kingswinford Rural District
・ Kingswood
・ Kingswood (band)
・ Kingswood (Tamworth), New South Wales
・ Kingswood (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Kingswood Abbey
・ Kingswood Academy
・ Kingswood Academy, Hull
・ Kingswood Borough
・ Kingswood College
・ Kingswood College (Box Hill)
・ Kingswood College (South Africa)
・ Kingswood College (Sri Lanka)
・ Kingswood College Doncaster
Kingswood Country
・ Kingswood Elementary School
・ Kingswood Elementary School (Nova Scotia)
・ Kingswood High School, Kalaw
・ Kingswood House
・ Kingswood House School
・ Kingswood Junction
・ Kingswood Methodist Episcopal Church
・ Kingswood Music Theatre
・ Kingswood railway station
・ Kingswood railway station, Sydney
・ Kingswood Regional High School
・ Kingswood School
・ Kingswood School (disambiguation)
・ Kingswood Secondary Academy


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Kingswood Country : ウィキペディア英語版
Kingswood Country

''Kingswood Country'' is an Australian sitcom that screened from 1980 to 1984 on the Seven Network. The series started on 30 January 1980 and was a spin-off from a sketch on comedy program ''The Naked Vicar Show'' that had featured Ross Higgins as a blustering bigot. It was produced by RS Productions.
==Premise==
While some condemned its racist and sexist humour, this was simply the plot device, and indeed the premise of the entire show, to show and mock the bigotry of the main character, Edward Melba "Ted" Bullpitt (Ross Higgins), a white Australian, conservative, bigoted, Holden Kingswood-loving putty factory worker and WWII veteran who recalls his difficult childhood in ever more exaggerated ways.
He lives for three things: his beloved chair in front of the TV, his unsuccessful racing greyhounds Repco Lad & Gae Akubra and his worshipped Holden Kingswood car (late in the show's run Ted traded-in the Kingswood, which had gone out of production around the time the series began, for Holden's replacement mid-range family car, the Commodore). His long-suffering wife, the vague and dithering Thelma (Judi Farr), was cast as a traditional housewife trapped by Ted's conservative family views, but she often got her own back on Ted (this often included using old Myer receipts she had hidden in a drawer used to fool Ted into thinking she paid less for a new item, often clothes, than she really had).
Ted's Kingswood is never shown on any episode.
Humour was generated by the conflict of Ted's traditional views and his children's progressive nature. For example, his son Craig (Peter Fisher) is portrayed as a sexually rampant medical student and is referred to as an "Al Grassby Groupie", a reference to a flamboyant Australian Labor Party politician of the Whitlam era. His daughter, Greta (Laurel McGowan), is portrayed as a feminist and is married to Bruno (Lex Marinos), the son of Italian immigrants, to which Ted strongly objects (often referring to him as a "bloody wog"). Other politically incorrect humour includes Ted's references to Neville, the concrete Aboriginal garden statue.
At other times, humour was based on the more traditional comedic methods of poorly thought-out schemes of Ted's (usually get-rich-quick); class differences (between the suburban Bullpitts and Ted's 'Datsun dealer' brother Bob and his upwardly-mobile wife Merle) and simple misunderstandings leading to a chain of humorous events.
Reruns currently air on cable and satellite channel FOX Classics.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Kingswood Country」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.