Last of the Summer Wine'sseventh series originally aired on BBC1 between 25 December 1982 and 27 December 1983.[1] All episodes from this series were written by Roy Clarke and produced and directed by Sydney Lotterby,[2] except for "Getting Sam Home", which is produced and directed by Alan J.W. Bell.
The seventh series was released on DVD in region 2 as a combined box set with series 8 on 3 March 2008.
Foggy volunteers the trio to help out at a church concert party, but Compo can't resist trying on a suit of armour
Second and final appearance of John Horsley as the local vicar.
The Arts of Concealment
6 March
Foggy demonstrates his army camouflage techniques, to the dismay of a group of cyclists.
The cyclists belong to the Yorkshire Terrier Cycle Collective.
Christmas Special (1983)
Title
Airdate
Description
Notes
Getting Sam Home
27 December
The lads visit Sam in hospital, and agree to his request that he wants to spend one last night with his 'other woman', Lily Bless'er. Unfortunately, while at Lily's, Sam dies. It's up to Foggy, Compo, Clegg and Sid to get him back home in such a way that his wife Sybil thinks he died in his own bed. But that's not the end of their troubles, and worse still, Ivy is determined to find out what the four are up to.
This was a 90-minute special, a film made for television.
This was the first episode to have no laughter track.
Based upon Roy Clarke's Last of the Summer Wine Novel.
The novel on which this episode is based, originally published in 1974, actually featured the character of Cyril Blamire, but was rewritten for the 1983 reprint to feature Foggy instead.
The title 'Getting Sam Home' is not given onscreen, but is used in all reference books and television listings.
This episode marked the final appearance of Sid. John Comer's voice was affected by illness, so his lines were dubbed by actor Tony Melody. Comer died 6 weeks after the broadcast, and Tony Melody would later appear as a landlord in the 2003 episode The Second Husband and the Showgirls.
This is the second time the title music, with added lyrics, was sung by The Mike Sammes Singers.
David Williams makes his first of three appearances as Norris Fairburn. He would reprise his role in the following series episode “Who’s Looking After the Cafe, Then.” as well as "Will Stella Find True Love with Norris Fairburn?" in the 2009 series 26 years later.
Included on the Series 7 & 8 boxset.
in 2023 the original film negatives were scanned in High Definition1080i and the restored television film was broadcast for the first time in HD on BBC Four on Christmas Eve 2023.[3]
DVD release
The box set for series 7 and 8 was released by Universal Playback in March 2008.