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Bad Tidings is a British Christmas television film written by Laurence Rickard, Martha Howe-Douglas and Chris McCausland, and starring McCausland, Lee Mack, Sarah Alexander and Rebekah Staton. Synopsis
"Shooting the messenger" (also "killing the messenger" or "attacking the messenger" or "blaming the bearer of bad tidings / the doom monger") is a metaphoric phrase used to describe the act of blaming the bearer of bad news, despite the bearer or messenger having no direct responsibility for the bad news or its consequences.
In 2004 Hall starred in the second episode of the seventh series of Midsomer Murders ("Bad Tidings") as Cassie Woods, a school friend of Cully Barnaby. In 2005 Hall joined the main cast of Waking the Dead as Felix Gibson, replacing Holly Aird in the cast as the resident team pathologist, but the character lasted only one series.
In 2019, Coates made her television debut when she began playing Rachel Fielder in the BBC Three and BBC iPlayer comedy series Ladhood [3] [4] and had a recurring role as Jenny in the BBC One sitcom Warren.
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Episode: "The Bearer of Bad Tidings" 2001 Sabrina the Teenage Witch: Erato Episode: "Sabrina, the Muse" 2002 Will & Grace: Beth Episode: Dyeing is Easy, Comedy is Hard 2002 The King (short) Phyllis 2005 One on One: Caria Episode: Shock Jock 2006–2007 Help Me Help You: Darlene 13 episodes" 2008 Greek: Rental Car Worker Episode: Spring Broke ...
Timothy John Kirkby (born 13 November 1970 in Sidcup, Kent, England) is a British filmmaker, working in both the United Kingdom and the United States.He is best known for directing the science parody series Look Around You [1], the BAFTA winning BBC 2 show Stewart Lee's Comedy Vehicle, and setting up the multi-award winning Fleabag.
The story tells of three journeys taken from New Mexico to Mexico, and throughout the story and Billy's crossings, the writing contributes to the idea that crossing borders is a catalyst for bad tidings. [4] It is noted for being more melancholic than the first book of the trilogy, without returning to the hellish bleakness of McCarthy's early ...