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・ Wilfrid Joseph Sim
・ Wilfrid Kalaugher
・ Wilfrid Kaptoum
・ Wilfred Noy
・ Wilfred Osuji
・ Wilfred Owen
・ Wilfred Owen Green
・ Wilfred P. Deac
・ Wilfred Paling
・ Wilfred Pallott
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・ Wilfred Payton (priest)
・ Wilfred Peters
Wilfred Pickles
・ Wilfred Potter
・ Wilfred Proctor
・ Wilfred Rhodes
・ Wilfred Rickman
・ Wilfred Risdon
・ Wilfred Roussel
・ Wilfred Rowland Childe
・ Wilfred Sanders
・ Wilfred Sanderson
・ Wilfred Schuele
・ Wilfred Senanayake
・ Wilfred Shardlow
・ Wilfred Shepherd-Barron
・ Wilfred Shine


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Wilfred Pickles : ウィキペディア英語版
Wilfred Pickles

Wilfred Pickles OBE (13 October 1904 in Halifax – 27 March 1978 in Brighton) was an English actor and radio presenter.
Born in Halifax in the West Riding of Yorkshire, he moved to Southport, Lancashire, with his family in 1929 and worked with his father as a builder. He joined an amateur dramatic society and in a local production there, met Mabel Celilia Myerscough, all of whose family had been connected with the stage. Pickles remained a proud Yorkshireman, and having been selected by the BBC as an announcer for its North Regional radio service, he went on to be an occasional newsreader on the BBC Home Service during World War II. He was the first newsreader to speak in a regional accent rather than Received Pronunciation, "a deliberate attempt to make it more difficult for Nazis to impersonate BBC broadcasters", and caused some comment with his farewell catchphrase "... and to all in the North, good neet". His first professional appearance was as an extra in Henry Baynton's production of ''Julius Caesar'' at the Theatre Royal in Halifax in the 1920s.〔(Pickles on 'The Calderdale Companion' website )〕
Pickles soon became a radio celebrity, and pursued an acting career in London's West End theatre, on television and on film.
==''Have A Go'' and ''Ask Pickles''==
His most significant work was as host of the BBC Radio show ''Have A Go'', which ran from 1946 to 1967 and launched such catchphrases as "How do, how are yer?", "Are yer courting?", "What's on the table, Mabel?" and "Give him the money, Barney", delivered in Pickles's inimitable style. He appeared in the show with his wife Mabel (''née'' Myerscough, 1906–1989), whom he had married on 20 September 1930, at Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church, Ainsdale, Southport.
The series attracted a weekly audience of over 20 million and a mailbag of around 5,000 letters. Contestants could earn £1/19s/11d by sharing "their intimate secrets." In May 1954 he brought the show to television with the programme ''Ask Pickles'' which ran until 1956. The show was publicised enthusiastically by the BBC:
In 1948 a children's board game entitled "Ask Pickles" was published by noted jigsaw manufacturer Tower Press.

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