Giles Coren & Sue Perkins Re-enactment Documentaries
- Type:
- Video > TV shows
- Files:
- 18
- Size:
- 5.75 GiB (6173977937 Bytes)
- Uploaded:
- 2021-06-11 07:39 GMT
- By:
- Ravenwilde
- Seeders:
- 4
- Leechers:
- 6
- Info Hash: CFDFF6E8632E9D50002A5C7712673A6ECD6C51A0
Edwardian Supersize Me This programme set the format for the subsequent television series in that Coren and Perkins adopted the persona of a couple living in the Edwardian period and for a week ate the food which people from that period would have eaten.[1] In addition they would take part in the interests and activities of them too, even going so far as adopting the dress and mannerisms of the time, with plenty of sarcastic humor. Before and after the experience they were subject to medical tests to see how the diet affected them The Supersizers Go Wartime, Restoration, Victorian Seventies, Elizabethan and Regency the Supersizers Eat Eighties, Medieval, French Revolution, Twenties, Fifties and Ancient Rome GIles and Sue Live the Good Life Thirty-five years after sitcom the Good Life first aired, writer Giles Coren and comedian Sue Perkins step back to 1975 to try to learn some self-sufficient skills and techniques. Although not living the life round the clock, the duo throw themselves in to recreating a distinctly Tom and Barbara lifestyle. Giles and Sue a Royal Wedding They have dined together through two series of Supersizers and attempted to live The Good Life. Now Giles Coren and Sue Perkins take their relationship to the next level as they prepare for their very own royal wedding. The pair assume the roles of a modern prince and his princess-to-be as they agonise over every step of the wedding planning process, from choosing the dress to arguing over the vows. Along the way they don historical costumes to step back in time and draw inspiration from past royal couples, including royal-wedding veteran Henry VIII, the fast-living George, Prince of Wales and his 'mail order bride Caroline of Brunswick, and Queen Victoria's eldest son Prince 'Bertie' and the original 'people's princess' Alexandra of Denmark