Clement Doesn't Live Here Anymore

Clement Doesn't Live Here Anymore
Genre Sitcom
Running time 30 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language(s) English
Home station BBC Radio 4
Written by Marc Haynes
Chris Heath
Produced by Chris Neill
Executive producer(s) Seb Barwell
Air dates 9 November 2005 to 18 June 2007
No. of series 2
No. of episodes 12

Clement Doesn't Live Here Anymore is a British radio comedy series that aired on BBC Radio 4 for two series between November 2005 and June 2007.

The theme tune for the show is "There's A Ghost In My House" by R. Dean Taylor.

Summary

Clement never achieved much in life, but he always assumed death would be an end to the misery. When he returns as a ghost, still overweight yet even more anonymous, he discovers a whole new world of humiliation.

Main cast

Series 1 (2005)

  1. 9 November: "The Phantom Menace"
  2. 16 November: "The Ghost Writer"
  3. 23 November: "One Wedding and a Funeral"
  4. 30 November: "The Nearly Departed"
  5. 7 December: "Chanelling the Dead"
  6. 14 December: "Goodbye Mr Clement"

Written by Marc Haynes and Chris Heath, the sitcom features Clement, an overweight, sexually liberated ghost who haunts the house in which he died - now inhabited by an upwardly mobile couple, Andrew and Georgia Dowie, with whom he shares living space, leisure time and far too much information about personal hygiene. Guests in the first series included TV presenter Richard Bacon, Sharon Horgan and Barry Cryer, who provided the voice of God.

Series 2 (2007)

Series 2 was recorded at The Drill Hall in London between January and February 2007. The series was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on Mondays at 11.30am from 14 May 2007. It was the Radio Choice of the day in The Times on the first day of broadcast.

  1. 14 May: "Truly Madly Deeply Unacceptable" (guest starring Roger Sloman as Sandy the racist)
  2. 21 May: "9½ Squeaks"
  3. 28 May: "Georgia On My Mind"
  4. 4 June: "Whoo-hoo Do You Think You Are?"
  5. 11 June: "ASBO-lutely Fabulous" (guest starring Melanie Hudson)
  6. 18 June: "Love Is Dead" (guest starring Geoffrey Whitehead and Julia Foster)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/13/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.