The Pub Landlord is on a one-man-mission after Santa warns "confidence in Christmas has dropped faster than the Pound" The big day is almost upon us and in a last-ditch bid to claw back Christmas from the brink of disaster the nation's favourite publican, philosopher, common sense commando, scholar, sage and bald bloke is hosting the ultimate public house party. Serving up a Crimbo cocktail... no, make that a pint, (rules are rules) of festive cheer, seasonal games and celebrity guests.
You won't be properly warmed up for any yuletide celebrations until you've experienced this cracker of a lock-in with The Pub Landlord in his majestic pub, The Reindeer's Head. Backed by his house band The Remoans, the Guv leads some seasonal sing-a-longs including, "You Can't Even Say Christmas Any More," 'chats' to some of his celebrity guest audience, invites members of the public to win some early Christmas presents in two studio games "Wrong Answer" (where the right answer is, of course... the wrong answer) and "Robot Reindeer Rodeo " (requiring one lucky celebrity guest to climb on the back of the aptly nicknamed, Buckarudolph)... while also importantly reminding us that, after all, it was the British who "invented Christmas."
For over 20 years Al Murray has filled the biggest venues around the UK, including London's 02 Arena and the
Royal Albert Hall, won numerous awards and accolades and has successfully hosted an array of ITV shows including, the critically acclaimed Al Murray's Happy Hour (ITV) earning "One of the few TV performances that actually deserves the tag "genius"... very funny." (Ally Ross, The Sun) and "a resounding success for ITV, light entertainment with brains." (Mike Bradley, The Observer); hosting two Audience With... Saturday-night extravaganzas, joining an elite club as one of only four comedians to have done this in the format's long history; and make three appearances in front of Her Majesty The Queen at The Royal Variety Performance.
Al Murray's Make Christmas Great Again is produced by Avalon, executive produced by
Richard Allen-Turner and
Jon Thoday, directed by Peter Orton and produced by Mark Iddon.
Comments
To post a comment, you must
register and
login.