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- This spin-off of Upstairs, Downstairs (1971) follows Sarah (parlour-maid) and Thomas (chauffeur) some time after leaving service with the Bellamys.
- A series of nineteen musical and comedy "vaudeville" sketches presented in the form of a live broadcast hosted by Tommy Handley (as himself). There are two "running gags" which connect the sketches. In one, an actor wants to perform Shakespeare, but he is continually denied air-time. The other gag has an inventor trying to view the broadcast on television. Four of the sketches are in color (in shades of yellow and brown only).
- The children of Barton United are trying to win the cup in their local football league. Nasty councillor Mr Bates doesn't like them and wants the team his son plays for to win instead so he makes life as difficult as he can for them. However, Barton United are offered help by the local professional team that just happens to be Manchester United with its manager Matt Busby.
- A group of youngsters have fun using their ingenuity to build their own go-kart - with the hope of eclipsing a rival children's gang, and beating them at the local race track.
- What happens to the saints and sinners of a small Irish village on the day the world is supposed to end.
- A vampish actress comes between a happily married couple.
- A robot is used by children to carry out their chores.
- A betrothed artist loves a girl engaged to a jewel thief.
- A girl helps a composer win fame despite a flirtatious socialite.
- A group of young railway enthusiasts attempt to stop the closure of the local railway by trying to raise money to buy it and the steam engine "Matilda." They get help from a pair of men saying they are also enthusiasts. What the children don't know though is that these men are impostors and are really robbers who plan to rob the mail train. They find out the truth when a lorry is parked on the line. After a lengthy chase with the express train, Matilda ends up in London, crashing into buffers at the terminus and the children are pleased when the branch line and Matilda are reprieved. The two robbers are then arrested after hiding under coal in Matilda.
- Jane Bell has lived on an old barge moored in the Thames with her feckless father and sister ever since their mother died, but she would prefer her life to be more like the movies; reality is being courted by inarticulate boatman Fred Green and cleaning the studio of local artist Bryan, on whom she has a hopeless crush that leads her refuse Fred's offer of marriage. When her father loses his job and her sister takes up with a rich young gambler, she becomes engaged instead to Ernest, whose Communist beliefs represent the only fixed set of ideals in her life. But her position as Bryan's sometime model and muse is too precious to give up, even if he doesn't pay any attention to her... and even if Ernest resents it bitterly.
- A lighthouse on a lonely coast of New Zealand is looked after by lighthouse keeper William Kell. Kell marries Eileen, a dancer in a cabaret, who winds up having an affair with Kell's assistant, Cass. Eileen then begins flirting with a stranger, Kingsley, an absconder who is rescued from the wreck of a motor launch. Kingsley and Cass quarrel; the woman rushes upon the scene with a revolver, fires blindly, and Cass Is shot dead.
- A mix-up with suitcases lands a wealthy racing driver (Stanley Lupino) into an embarrassing situation with his fiancée at a party.
- Recently married Henry is accused by his mother-in-law of seeing a showgirl, the ex-girlfriend of a close friend. Manservant Joy (Gus McNaughton) attempts to help matters with a scheme involving Henry posing as his own double.
- Opera adaptation: the story of a duplicitous Spanish gypsy girl working in a cigarette factory, whom men fight over.
- Leslie Fuller and Syd Courtney team up once again, this time a 1930s musical set aboard ship on its way to the Middle East.
- In a slapstick comedy set in a school, a teleportation device causes all sorts of mayhem and muddles.
- A Goodwin Sands lifeboatman rescues a shipwrecked girl who tries to win him away from his fiancée.
- (1930) Jameson Thomas, Muriel Angelus, Jack Rain. Early British thriller about a master criminal named 'Flash Jack', who heads a gang of top-hatted thieves that rob the wealthy. A detective tracks the crimes to a posh night club.
- A children's adventure. Hal V is a car owned (and loved) by the Hayward family and their children. Then a wicked garage owner tries to steal their beloved car to sell for lots of money, but the children are too quick for him and foil his wicked plots at every turn.
- Cast and crew discuss making the 1960s series _"Champions, The" (1968)_.
- A frugal coal miner in the north of England turns into a spendthrift when he wins £20,000 on the football pools.
- Gene Gerrard stars as the king of a tiny European country who has a night out at the home of an English duke, falling in love with his daughter after being mistaken for a jewel thief.
- In this adventure, a ship's captain attempts to return some diamonds to their original owner. Unfortunately, some mutinous crewmen want the gems for themselves.
- Catherine Schell recounts her Space 1999 debut.
- Alfred Shaughnessy and Simon Williams discuss their work on all five series of Upstairs Downstairs, recorded shortly before Alfred Shaughnessy passed away.
- Documentary detailing the making of all the seasons of Due South, from casting to how it eventually ended.
- An inventor and his new bride go on their honeymoon, only to be pursued by criminals after his latest invention.
- Barry Morse, recounts his time with Gene Barry.
- Thomas and Sarah go into the service of a depressed and dissipated aristocrat with a death wish, but their good cheer lifts him out of his doldrums.
- Thomas becomes suddenly homesick for his native Wales and with Sarah travels back to his village home for the first time in ten years with dire consequences.
- Nouveau riche Sarah and Thomas have the use of the Andover townhouse, but their egalitarian attitude towards their servants is frowned upon by their butler Wilson.
- James' weekend visit to Somerby Park, with Hudson in tow as his valet, presents an opportunity for both to appreciate their beloved Eaton Place and what they've left behind there.
- Elizabeth's affair with Julius is over, James returns to England with his fiancée, Phyllis, and a major event marks the end of an era.
- The race is on downstairs -- who will marry first upstairs -- Captain James or his father, Richard?
- News of the Titanic disaster arrives at Eaton Place, and the entire household anxiously await word of Lady Marjorie's fate.
- In a gesture of goodwill, the Bellamys offer generous hospitality to a family of Belgian refugees and Edward is feeling increased pressure to enlist.
- While running an ordinary errand, Rose's life takes an extraordinary turn.
- As Britain tries to rebound from the war, James Bellamy runs for political office. Daisy and Edward are struggling and get their jobs back.
- Elizabeth joins the suffragette movement, but in her effort to protect her, Rose is imprisoned.
- Frederick considers his future when he feels his talents are largely wasted in the Bellamy household.
- James returns to England, with new found vigor and untold wealth, on the eve of the October 1929 stock market crash.
- Everyone's nerves are frazzled when Lord Southwold dies, Lady Southwold and her companion, Miss Hodges, spend some time with Richard and Lady Marjorie and a valuable diamond brooch goes missing.