I remember my dad putting this on once when I was younger thankfully I was sitting on the floor to watch it because I was rolling about the floor in tears of laughter watching it 😂😅😂
Mum was @ this recording in the king’s theatre summer of of 1988 over 36yrs old & nothing like good clean fun not a swear word or blue joke in sight & people will carry on watching this in the next 36yrs
In the 60s my dad used to take the weans, every other year, to see Francie and Josie in Glasgow or Ayr Gaiety. We thought they were hilarious. It's only when I got older that I appreciated the fact that I'd been lucky to see them in their prime, and how they made their slick comedy act seem so effortless. Ricky Fulton and Jack Milroy were comedy gold.
It is such a shame that the BBC did not have the nerve to show this lovely double act to the rest of the United Kingdom, they eventually had the courage to show Rab C Nesbitt nationwide but it would have been so nice for the rest of us to see Rikki Fulton and Jack Milroy performing. It our loss.
i remember as a wee boy in the 60's seeing them in panto in the kings theatre, i was only about 4 or 5 & the only thing i remember from it was a bit when they were onstage with a pram, i don't even recall what panto it was? in the late 90's & early 2000's i used to play their songs on my tues & thurs morning radio shows with la di da & do cherry stanes come oot being favourites with my older listeners. i also played the songs from the parahandy album that we grew up listening to in the 60's & early 70's till the oldest three of us discovered punk rock & bryan robertson's guitar licks with thin lizzy & formed a band in 1976. john grieve's land of the hee drum hadrum ho & the crinan canal for me. i remember singing that one all the way from crinan to ardrishaig basin as i steered our 55ft trawler through the canal. even into the 2010's i would annoy my kids by performing jack milroy's 'she's at arbroath' sketch, still cracks me up to this day, there was never a comedian or comedic duo to match the boys until frankie boyle came along. i started watching this & remembered i have this on an old VHS tape that i found in my late mother inlaw's 2nd hand shop when my kids were 6 & 3. my 3yr old daughter started answering ;sure josie, sure josie, sure, sure sure to any adult she met while we were out a walk in the '' wee toon'' she even said it to johnny beattie who we bumped into on campbeltown quay when he was down entertaining the local old folks. i maintain there should be a statue of them outside buchanan bus station, close enough to the coo-caddens but in a spot where most people can appreciate it. or even better, in george square instead of warmongers & slave owners. sweet violets, i used to play it several times as i got so many requests for it.
I can understand why you would think that it is in a foreign language when in fact it's in a different dialect. A dialect which was/is spoken by Glaswegian people. Perhaps it should have subtitles if someone has the patience to listen record and write down the script which is being sung and spoken. Francie & Josie were a throwback to the misinterpretation of the English language, for instance opporchancities. The doctor has a periscope not a stethoscope, a simple enough mistake as they're so similar
1:10:42 Ugh. Bloody soup with a ham shank. My great gran and my dad who she taught to cook (both sadly no longer with us) always made soup with a ham shank and I loved it. I desperately want to get the recipe so I can make it but no bugger will tell me. My gran and great auntie both know how it was made but they don't do it that way anymore. They use pre-made stock and diced bacon these days (along with a few other ingredient changes) because it's cheaper and easier. Every time I ask them specifically how to do it the way my dad and great gran did, they just say some variation of "you don't want to make it like that, it's too expensive" and try to palm me off with their modern recipes. I've tried every polite way of asking I can think of. It infuriates me because I don't care about the cost or ease of cooking, I just want to be able to make the old family recipe I grew up on. Looks like they're going to take that recipe with them to the grave (hopefully not for a long time yet).
Awww,so sad that they are long gone……..best pair ever!thank you for posting!
Stumbled upon this by accident. Superb act, and a reminder of what theatre USED to offer..
The finest comedy double act to come from Glasgow and so pleased this is still available to share with everyone !!
The fashion for doing a song was never something I took to.
Not as funny as Sturgeon and
Forbes .!! Pretending to run a
country ...! Hilarious..!
I remember my dad putting this on once when I was younger thankfully I was sitting on the floor to watch it because I was rolling about the floor in tears of laughter watching it 😂😅😂
Mum was @ this recording in the king’s theatre summer of of 1988 over 36yrs old & nothing like good clean fun not a swear word or blue joke in sight & people will carry on watching this in the next 36yrs
Thank you for showing this classic double act from Scotland.Brilliant
Two guys on a stage ,no props no support, just pure talent, this is what entertainment used to be, sadly no more.
And😶😶😶😶😶
In the 60s my dad used to take the weans, every other year, to see Francie and Josie in Glasgow or Ayr Gaiety. We thought they were hilarious. It's only when I got older that I appreciated the fact that I'd been lucky to see them in their prime, and how they made their slick comedy act seem so effortless. Ricky Fulton and Jack Milroy were comedy gold.
Lol😂Ah!!.The good old days❤Fond memories of a once simple and fun life❤Without any PC Just plain simple comedy😂😂
Really enjoyed that. Thanks for putting this on.👍
these videos are great brings back memories of my homeland now living in South Africa since 1964
I thoroughly enjoyed watching this, it was rerr n gallus
It is such a shame that the BBC did not have the nerve to show this lovely double act to the rest of the United Kingdom, they eventually had the courage to show Rab C Nesbitt nationwide but it would have been so nice for the rest of us to see Rikki Fulton and Jack Milroy performing. It our loss.
Who cares about BBC or if English like it or not
I remember watching their show at my paternal grandmother’s house on a Sunday afternoon.
Just Brilliant, legends...
Lovely, like music hall from years and I mean years, gone by.
Wish I had been in the audience with my mum.
She would laugh hysterically at them.
It's so Glaswegian !
I was there and basically brought up with these 2 the whole family every year this and the 5 o'clock gang God I miss the innocence
Brilliant. Thanks 🙏🏻.
Legends of GLASGOW COMEDY. Enough said..pure dead brilliant haha
i remember as a wee boy in the 60's seeing them in panto in the kings theatre, i was only about 4 or 5 & the only thing i remember from it was a bit when they were onstage with a pram, i don't even recall what panto it was?
in the late 90's & early 2000's i used to play their songs on my tues & thurs morning radio shows with la di da & do cherry stanes come oot being favourites with my older listeners. i also played the songs from the parahandy album that we grew up listening to in the 60's & early 70's till the oldest three of us discovered punk rock & bryan robertson's guitar licks with thin lizzy & formed a band in 1976.
john grieve's land of the hee drum hadrum ho & the crinan canal for me. i remember singing that one all the way from crinan to ardrishaig basin as i steered our 55ft trawler through the canal. even into the 2010's i would annoy my kids by performing jack milroy's 'she's at arbroath' sketch, still cracks me up to this day, there was never a comedian or comedic duo to match the boys until frankie boyle came along.
i started watching this & remembered i have this on an old VHS tape that i found in my late mother inlaw's 2nd hand shop when my kids were 6 & 3. my 3yr old daughter started answering ;sure josie, sure josie, sure, sure sure to any adult she met while we were out a walk in the '' wee toon'' she even said it to johnny beattie who we bumped into on campbeltown quay when he was down entertaining the local old folks.
i maintain there should be a statue of them outside buchanan bus station, close enough to the coo-caddens but in a spot where most people can appreciate it. or even better, in george square instead of warmongers & slave owners.
sweet violets, i used to play it several times as i got so many requests for it.
Class act.
the best ever , no one will ever come close
Amazing the material they have to remember. Esp francie
I have met them both and they are both funny gentlemen.
Absolut)y.brilliant very. Entertaining and. Funny
38:42 a love this lassie's clappin!
Such fantastic childhood memories ❤ I'm loving this x ❤
Brilliant
Great laugh at last
I was there, it was brilliant..
What was it like to be there did you ever meet rikki or Jack?
@@Vic35102 Apparently, Jack Milroy was just the same in ordinary life.
Gon yersel Josie - whit a ter See you Francie ye wer gid so ye wur.
This was the year I was born, absolutely love it
Such a pity that their original STV shows from the 1960s got wiped.
Met Jack One Sunday Morning In Bal's Shop At Knightswood Depot In The Eighty's
Comedy gold
I remember this the first time old age ain’t good lol🤪😀🤪😀
Magic to both of you r I p
Rest In Peace
Ya dancer, cannae beat it! Been a while so it huz
Ye dancin ‘ naw i5s jist theyvway am staunnin’ lmao
I can understand why you would think that it is in a foreign language when in fact it's in a different dialect. A dialect which was/is spoken by Glaswegian people. Perhaps it should have subtitles if someone has the patience to listen record and write down the script which is being sung and spoken. Francie & Josie were a throwback to the misinterpretation of the English language, for instance opporchancities. The doctor has a periscope not a stethoscope, a simple enough mistake as they're so similar
Pure gallus
1:10:42 Ugh. Bloody soup with a ham shank. My great gran and my dad who she taught to cook (both sadly no longer with us) always made soup with a ham shank and I loved it. I desperately want to get the recipe so I can make it but no bugger will tell me.
My gran and great auntie both know how it was made but they don't do it that way anymore. They use pre-made stock and diced bacon these days (along with a few other ingredient changes) because it's cheaper and easier.
Every time I ask them specifically how to do it the way my dad and great gran did, they just say some variation of "you don't want to make it like that, it's too expensive" and try to palm me off with their modern recipes. I've tried every polite way of asking I can think of.
It infuriates me because I don't care about the cost or ease of cooking, I just want to be able to make the old family recipe I grew up on. Looks like they're going to take that recipe with them to the grave (hopefully not for a long time yet).
Rer, absolutely rer.
Eh! Francie, wit Josie, member them mono days, wit yey meen, them colour tv came, aye thought a wiz colour blind.
What did the dislikers dislike?
I can understand the beeb not airing this south of the border it's difficult to follow as it's in a foreign language
God bless you Rikki, god bless you and the Glasgow Rangers 💙🇬🇧
They died, along with these two
55 🏆 🇬🇧.
@@JM-cw1er 1
1 conviction at peado dome for every title Rangers won?
Rikki's a mad Celtic fan,ya tit.
Aw my if you could bottle it plenty of laughs and not an expletive in sight
(6
Only one word : Grotesque !!
😊❤