In a TV interview in January 2011 Lee Mack stated that Steptoe and Son was his "All time favourite sitcom" and recognised Galton and Simpson for their "outstanding contribution" to British Comedy.

Lee is outstandingly funny himself
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 Lee Mack

Septoe and Son


Albert and Harold

This is a graphical insert for the Steptoe and Son Appreciation Society Website

 

'Steptoe and Son' began life as a one-off play entitled 'The Offer' from the BBC's highly regarded 'Comedy Playhouse.' The central characters were the repulsive mitten wearing 'dirty old man' Albert Steptoe, (a wonderfully faultless performance by Dublin born actor Wilfred Brambell), and his 38 year old son Harold, (equally well played by Harry H. Corbett), two rag-and-bone men who lived in Shepherds Bush.

This is the favourite sit come of one of the best stand up comedians you will ever see, Lee Mack. If Lee say's its funny then you know you're on to a good thing.

In common with most of the truly great character driven comedies the simple premise of the series, as developed in Galton and Simpson's masterful scripts, brilliantly tightrope walked the narrow line separating laughter from tragedy. The core of this success lay in the delicately delineated dynamics of the central characters complexly antagonistic relationship. It was in the presentation of Harold's pretentiously overblown -ultimately doomed- dreams of escaping his resolutely low brow father to better himself, only to find both himself and his ambitions constantly undone by the senior Steptoe's devious and cold-blooded manipulation of the younger man's innate decency, which helped ensure that the series frequently attained the heights of genuine tragi-comedy.

Albert Steptoe was an old man when the series started he was already pension age at the start of the second series. It is highly unlikely that he has any savings for his retirement but if he had then he would have needed an annuity to provide income in old age. Given the amount of cigarettes he smoked he would have possible qualified for an impaired annuity which would have given him even more retirement income. Given his history of heart attacks an impaired life annuity would seem an almost inevitable outcome.

On the occasion of his fathers 65th Birthday Harold Steptoe does his best to make the day special for Albert. Given their circumstances his choice of present was somewhat limited.

The most obvious basic truth of the series, apparent to the viewers if not the Steptoe's themselves, was their sadly obvious co-dependence. The older Albert and the younger Harold were two sides of the same coin, neither whole without the other, no matter how much they affected an air of mutual dislike. It was this essential truth, coupled with consistently excellent scripts and performances from two actors who quite obviously understood the subtle subtext of the concept, which ensured a continuity of comedic quality rarely surpassed in television to this day. The series ran from 1962 to 1974 and there were two feature films, 'Steptoe and Son' (1972), and 'Steptoe and Son Ride Again' (1973).

The Writing team of Galton and Simspson had been responsible for the classic 'Hancock's Half Hour' scripts which included 'The Blood Donor' and 'The Radio Ham', and in 1999 the were awarded in the Queen's New Years Honours List. Wilfred Brambell appeared in The Beatles first feature film 'A Hard Day's Night,' in which he played the role of Paul McCartney's grandfather, and in purposeful contrast to his TV character was referred to throughout as 'very clean.'

Corbett's untimely and premature death excluded the chance of further series, however most of the originals (including the early black and white recordings), continue to be shown on television and are available on DVD. The series was re-made in the USA as 'Sanford and Son'. 'Steptoe and Son' might well have been rag and bone men, but the comedic legacy they palmed off on us, the viewers, was priceless beyond their wildest imaginings.