Talk:In Sickness and in Health

I had to make one change. Winston, the home help, made his first appearance during the first series of In Sickness and in Health in 1985, a series in which Dandy Nicholls (Else Garnett) did perform though it was to be her last. Her final episode was the Christmas show of 1985 where Winston is pushing her wheelchair at the church meal which they were all invited to. User:AlfredG (no not the real Alf!) 28-08-05

I was wandering does anyone know anything about the epiosde Else dies in? Would love to know what happens in it. December 7, 2005.

I also have wandered about that episode.. 2/5/06

Need Fact Check
This article has many questonable facts. Was BBC really going to cancel in 1985 after Nicholls died? And I dont think that Alf and Miss Hollingberry were engaged when the show ended in 1992. H.J. Bellamy 18:10, 13 October 2006 (UTC)

Disambiguation needed!
This desperately needs a disambiguation with this page, which refers to an album:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_Sickness_and_In_Health

The only difference between the two at the moment is that one capitalizes the word "in" and the other doesn't! 69.208.253.52


 * Now done. --A bit iffy 10:49, 27 August 2006 (UTC)

Down Under?
I remember seeing an episode of this where Alf went to Australia. Not sure if it was a BBC production or if it was made by an Australian TV network under license. It had Warren Mitchell & some of the original cast. I was young at the time and only remember Alf stumbling out of a car in the middle of the bush. Does anyone else remember this? British TV shows often used to transfer out to Australia and get remade with the same cast members - Are You Being Served was one. 80.4.202.8 (talk) 20:00, 24 April 2009 (UTC)

It's talked about briefly in the article: "...in the Fourth series they travelled to the Outback to meet Mrs Hollingberry's long lost brother and to get married".kow (talk) 20:39, 24 April 2009 (UTC)

Thanks for that - I missed it because it says "Outback" and the episode I saw was in the bush, not outback. I've now of course realised that for non-Australians these words are probably used to mean the same thing! (i.e. Australian countryside, whereas Australians would use outback = desert; bush = forest) 80.4.202.8 (talk) 21:31, 9 May 2009 (UTC)