Arnold Brown Trailers
Scotland In A Day TrailerWhere is the Fish that Never Swam? TrailerArnold Brown: Jokes I Have Known Trailer
Scotland In A Day TrailerWhere is the Fish that Never Swam? TrailerArnold Brown: Jokes I Have Known Trailer
Total trailers found: 11
12 February 1987
The story of the rise of a madame of a suburban brothel catering to older men, inspired by the real experiences of Cynthia Payne.
14 August 1984
Radio host Alan 'Dickie' Bird witnesses how an icecream van is attacked and destroyed by angry competitors.
23 January 2001
A morality tale of xenophobia, religious prejudice, mob violence, poverty, and their effect on two children in Liverpool during the Depression.
04 October 2000
A Jewish girl in 19th century London dreams of becoming a stage actress.
12 December 1964
A TV version of the stage show originally performed at the Edinburgh Fringe (August 1960) and in London (Fortune Theatre, May 1961) and Broadway (October 1962).
28 January 1984
A hoodlum is turned into a celebrity when he steals a cab and subsequent events are blown out of proportion by the media.
18 September 2014
Mockumentary set on the day of the 2014 Scottish Independence referendum and designed to capture a snap shot of a nation on the brink of both triumph and disaster.
09 September 2011
This DVD captures him in an intimate, idiosyncratic performance at Cardiff's Chapter Arts Centre. The show is interspersed with extracts of an interview with Arnold waxing lyrical on his long, unique career and in the process, revealing some of his comedy secrets.
01 January 1994
There's No Business... is a 1994 British partially improvised comedy film directed by Kevin Molony and produced by Claudia Lloyd for Prospect Pictures.
01 January 1981
A tongue-in-cheek "behind the scenes" look at the Comic Strip comedy club in the early 1980s, which '
01 January 2012
The film revolves a supposedly pivotal moment in Brown's life – his decision to quit accountancy in 1950s Glasgow for comedy after the death of his uncle Harry, a regular character in his routines 'who began with socialism, drifted into Buddhism and ended up with rheumatism'.