Chunky: The Best Bits from Acorn Antiques to Kitty and more

Chunky: The Best Bits from Acorn Antiques to Kitty and more

$59.99 AUD $15.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Melbourne warehouse.

Author: Victoria Wood
Format: Hardback, 160mm x 236mm, 707g, 464 pages
Published: Orion Publishing Co, United Kingdom, 2023

'There was none like her before and there's been none like her since - she was unique.' Dawn French

Published to celebrate the much-missed Victoria Wood's 70th birthday, this stunning hardback edition of Chunky contains the very best of Wood's sketches and shows, including those never seen on TV, as well as:

NEW introduction from Celia Imrie, star of many of Victoria Wood's shows

Additions and annotations from Wood's acclaimed official biographer, Jasper Rees.

'I was very proud to be part of her gang.' Celia Imrie

'She is on a par with Alan Bennett.' Clive James

'Absolutely perfect.' Sarra Manning

Victoria Wood was a writer, actor, director, singer, composer and stand-up comedian. She first appeared on national television in 1974 in the talent show New Faces and her debut stage play Talent was televised in 1979. In the 1980s her sketch show Wood and Walters was followed by Victoria Wood As Seen on TV and An Audience with Victoria Wood. She became the preeminent stand-up comedian of the age, selling out the Royal Albert Hall forty times while, in the nineties, creating the TV film Pat and Margaret and the sitcom dinnerladies. In 2005 she turned her much-loved soap parody Acorn Antiques into a West End musical, then wrote and starred in the wartime drama Housewife, 49. In 2014 she filmed her stage musical That Day We Sang for television. Given an OBE in 1997, she was made a CBE in 2008. Among countless other awards, her work won eight BAFTAs. Since her death in 2016 at only 62, her work has continued to pulse through the British bloodstream.l forty times while, in the nineties, creating the TV film Pat and Margaret and the sitcom dinnerladies. In 2005 she turned her much-loved soap parody Acorn Antiques into a West End musical, then wrote and starred in the wartime drama Housewife, 49. In 2014 she filmed her stage musical That Day We Sang for television. Given an OBE in 1997, she was made a CBE in 2008. Among countless other awards, her work won eight BAFTAs. Since her death in 2016 at only 62, her work has continued to pulse through the British bloodstream.

Vendor: Book Grocer
Type: Hardback
SKU: 9781398707504
Availability : In Stock Pre order Out of stock
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Description

Author: Victoria Wood
Format: Hardback, 160mm x 236mm, 707g, 464 pages
Published: Orion Publishing Co, United Kingdom, 2023

'There was none like her before and there's been none like her since - she was unique.' Dawn French

Published to celebrate the much-missed Victoria Wood's 70th birthday, this stunning hardback edition of Chunky contains the very best of Wood's sketches and shows, including those never seen on TV, as well as:

NEW introduction from Celia Imrie, star of many of Victoria Wood's shows

Additions and annotations from Wood's acclaimed official biographer, Jasper Rees.

'I was very proud to be part of her gang.' Celia Imrie

'She is on a par with Alan Bennett.' Clive James

'Absolutely perfect.' Sarra Manning

Victoria Wood was a writer, actor, director, singer, composer and stand-up comedian. She first appeared on national television in 1974 in the talent show New Faces and her debut stage play Talent was televised in 1979. In the 1980s her sketch show Wood and Walters was followed by Victoria Wood As Seen on TV and An Audience with Victoria Wood. She became the preeminent stand-up comedian of the age, selling out the Royal Albert Hall forty times while, in the nineties, creating the TV film Pat and Margaret and the sitcom dinnerladies. In 2005 she turned her much-loved soap parody Acorn Antiques into a West End musical, then wrote and starred in the wartime drama Housewife, 49. In 2014 she filmed her stage musical That Day We Sang for television. Given an OBE in 1997, she was made a CBE in 2008. Among countless other awards, her work won eight BAFTAs. Since her death in 2016 at only 62, her work has continued to pulse through the British bloodstream.l forty times while, in the nineties, creating the TV film Pat and Margaret and the sitcom dinnerladies. In 2005 she turned her much-loved soap parody Acorn Antiques into a West End musical, then wrote and starred in the wartime drama Housewife, 49. In 2014 she filmed her stage musical That Day We Sang for television. Given an OBE in 1997, she was made a CBE in 2008. Among countless other awards, her work won eight BAFTAs. Since her death in 2016 at only 62, her work has continued to pulse through the British bloodstream.