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http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Minister_Who_Falls_to_Pieces
http://dbpedia.org/ontology/abstract "The Minister Who Falls to Pieces", also k"The Minister Who Falls to Pieces", also known as "The Minister Who Falls Apart" and "The Disintegrating Minister," was a surreal British comedy sketch. Though it was first heard on radio in a 1966 episode of I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again, with John Cleese as the titular minister and David Hatch as the interviewer, it is probably best known in the version performed on television by Tim Brooke-Taylor and Graham Chapman in 1967 on At Last the 1948 Show. The sketch can be heard on the original soundtrack album of At Last the 1948 Show, which has been transferred to CD. Video of the sketch does exist and has circulated but is not at present commercially available. is not at present commercially available.
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rdfs:comment "The Minister Who Falls to Pieces", also k"The Minister Who Falls to Pieces", also known as "The Minister Who Falls Apart" and "The Disintegrating Minister," was a surreal British comedy sketch. Though it was first heard on radio in a 1966 episode of I'm Sorry, I'll Read That Again, with John Cleese as the titular minister and David Hatch as the interviewer, it is probably best known in the version performed on television by Tim Brooke-Taylor and Graham Chapman in 1967 on At Last the 1948 Show. The sketch can be heard on the original soundtrack album of At Last the 1948 Show, which has been transferred to CD. Video of the sketch does exist and has circulated but is not at present commercially available. is not at present commercially available.
rdfs:label The Minister Who Falls to Pieces
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