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- A comedy centered on a loud-mouthed Irish matriarch whose favorite pastime is meddling in the lives of her six children.
- When Queen Victoria's husband Prince Albert dies, she finds solace in her trusted servant, Mr. John Brown, but their relationship also brings scandal and turmoil.
- A series of films following the story of loud, foul-mouthed Irish matriarch Agnes Brown and her children as they navigate through life with marriages, secrets, and conflicts.
- A company tries to shut down Mrs Brown's fruit and veg stall. They can feck off.
- Mrs Brown and family open the doors to her feckin' house for a Saturday night brawl.
- Friends Herman, Karl, Keith, Derek, and Barry are working-class Manchester lads who aren't getting far in their working lives. That fact is epitomized by Herman's failure to get the promotion to junior account executive at the advertising company at which he works. Regardless, his Grandmother Gloria, with whom he lives, has faith in him. What Herman really wants to do is race Mrs. Brown, a greyhound inherited from his now-deceased grandfather. Mrs. Brown is a natural racer and has the potential to win. His four mates have bought equal ownership of Mrs. Brown. Their problem is that what little money they collectively have goes into the care and feeding of Mrs. Brown, which doesn't leave them enough money for race entry fees, and the ultimate race takes place in London. So they try to raise money by their band Herman's Hermits playing at any and every gig they can get. In their quest to get themselves to London and Mrs. Brown into the race, they get into one misadventure after another. Along the way Herman, whose neighborhood friend Tulip is in love with him, falls in love with model Judy Brown, the daughter of wealthy greengrocers and greyhound-race aficionados Mr. and Mrs. G.G. Brown (short for George George). Judy's mother ends up being not the only Mrs. Brown whom Herman believes has a lovely daughter.
- Featuring your favourite characters from the series, the live show is even ruder and cruder than the hit TV show and guaranteed loads of big laughs.
- A deserted husband makes such a mess of the housework that his wife returns.
- Unbroadcast pilot.
- A wife ejects her husband but welcomes him back to fight a burglar.
- Mrs. Brown is walking through the streets and reading her paper. She is so much interested in the news that she does not see a crowd of children, who play her tricks and throw her down in the mud. With difficulty she manages to escape, only to run against a gentleman, whose cane pierces her eye. Arriving at the park she selects a seat on one of the many benches and starts to darn her husband's socks. She is so occupied in this work that she does not see a tradesman who is sleeping on that same bench and whose balloons get punctured through Mrs. Brown's sharp needle. When he discovers his ruin, he attacks the poor lady, who is very much astonished at his sudden hostility. She continues walking, but, unfortunately, street cleaners left the entrance to the sewer open and Mrs. Brown falls through it. The workmen, who don't know what has happened, close the trap door, and Mrs. Brown is left in the dark. She wanders around and, collapsing from fatigue and fright, is awakened by rats, who are plentiful in these parts. Finally she comes to an opening and, in spite of the water torrents, she manages to come to the level of the street, and by catching the leg of a man, she attracts his attention. The engine arrives, and with rope and ladder Mrs. Brown is brought back to the surface and carried home to her husband in a frightful condition.
- Brown was a married man who liked to go on sprees and stay out late. Mrs. Brown was well aware of his propensity, and did her best to curb it. While Brown, their ten-year-old son, had an exceeding fondness for jam and frequently raided the pantry, but when detected, invariably felt the weight of his parents' displeasure. Willie's likeness for jam was the first of a combination of circumstances which created "Mrs. Brown's Burglar." He was caught enjoying his favorite dainty and soundly spanked by his father, whereupon Brown departed for a night of gaiety. Willie's resentment towards his parents grew stronger. He knew his mother feared burglars, so he made a dummy with a suit of his father's clothes. He placed it under the bed in his parents' room and then summoned his mother. She promptly decided that the form under the bed was a burglar, and fled to a nearby drug store, where she telephoned the police, in the meantime, a passing tramp, noticing that the door of the Brown home was open, entered and went to sleep on the open bed. The policemen, summoned to the drug store, listened to Mrs. Brown's story and then hurried to the house. The tramp was a husky individual and he was more than a match for the three officers. While they wore struggling in the bedroom, the husband, much the worse for wear, entered his home. He heard the commotion upstairs, concluded, in his half-drunken condition, that burglars were in the house, and made his preparations. The officers, badly worsted in their fight with the hobo, fled helter-skelter down the stairs and were greeted by a volley of water from the garden hose. Finally they got the hose away from Brown and marched him off to the station. He was thrown into a cell, and had ample time to sober up and reflect upon his wrongs. Mrs. Brown, summoned to her husband's aid, proved that he was not a burglar, and Brown was released. Unfortunately for Willie, his parents discovered that he was the author of the burglar scare, and the trouncing he got was one that he long remembered, and he never, never touched jam again, not even when it was offered to him.
- Rejected from a hotel, an unhappy and destitute theatrical troupe took refuge by a railroad station. There the comedian, F. Funnymore, found an old news-paper containing an "ad." He read it to his destitute companions and they beat it madly for the address, for the "ad" stated that a certain Mrs. Brown wanted professionals to assist in a church entertainment. Making a feast of the fruit in Mrs. Brown's dining room, they are finally all hired. The comedian is given the part of a baby. In baby clothes, Mr. J. Funnymore was quite the funniest baby Mrs. Brown or yourself has ever seen. He was a fairly contented baby until Mre. Brown began to rehearse her part as Leah, the Forsaken. Then Mr. J. Funnymore beat it, beat it hard, in baby clothes and mighty glad he had them.
- A henpeck's wife causes trouble trying to do her wartime duty.
- A look at James and Tomi Rae Brown's marriage, as well as their respective musical careers.
- Dr. Chester North asks Eleanor Eastman to become his wife. She tells her mother, who is as much pleased as her daughter. The next morning, while the doctor is busy in his office, a poor chorus girl enters and asks him to attend her little sister, who is dying. He readily consents and hurriedly makes his way to her home. Eleanor, riding down the street, sees Chester with the chorus girl. At noon on the same day, Chester sends Eleanor her engagement ring, and although she is disturbed by what she saw in the morning, she forgets it when she beholds the glistening solitaire. Chester asks her to go to the matinee with him. She tells him she will go, but by 2:00 he hasn't arrived, and Eleanor peevishly decides to go to the theater herself. The doctor cannot resist the pleadings of the little girl for her sister, who is taking part in the very play that Eleanor is witnessing. The doctor goes to the theater, and while waiting at the stage door for her, Eleanor sees with the chorus girl again. She returns her engagement ring to Chester with a note that she wants nothing more to do with him. Dr. North tries to explain, but she will not listen. He throws the ring upon the office floor and destroys the rose she pinned on his coat the night before. The chorus girl happens in at this moment to pay the doctor. He refuses to accept compensation and she notices his agitation, picks up Eleanor's note from the floor, and learns the cause. She hurries to the home of Miss Eastman, tells her of the doctor's kindness and how he saved her little sister's life. Eleanor, ashamed of herself, tries to make amends. She strikes upon a happy idea from Mrs. Browning's poem. She writes: "And the first time I will send a white rose bud for a guerdon." Enclosing a white rose, she sends it to Chester, but he refuses to respond. Again she writes: "And the second time a rose." She accompanies this with a full-blown rose, similar to the one she gave him the night of their engagement. To this Chester responds in person, and together they read: "And the third time I will bend my pride and whisper, 'Pardon,' when he comes to claim my love." There is but one answer that is silently expressed as they lovingly glance into each other's eyes.
- Martin learns Mrs. Brown is in financial straits from her overgenerous nature. Martin gives her subliminal messages to save money and they have an extreme effect. Not trusting the bank, she withdraws all her money and a thief is nearby.
- Pete Dudley, a shifty real estate salesman, convinces Mrs. Brown that she should sell her house which causes a problem for Tim and Martin, especially in hiding the spaceship. Dudley already has prospective buyers, Edgar and Emily Graham.
- 1970–TV EpisodeToday's theme is James Brown Documentary: Life on the Road with Mr. and Mrs. Brown.
- Lily is concerned with Matt's behaviour and gets her brother, a doctor, to examine him. Then chaos ensues when Matt's mother arrives and Lily mistakes her for a man-hungry Maria Bellcanto. - and then Maria arrives.
- 1962–1986TV Episode
- 2011–7.4 (62)TV EpisodeAgnes receives a ghostly visitor from her past.
- 2011– 28mPodcast Episode
- Shake your groove thing, baby, because Musical March (in September) 2022 is taking the stage. Our first number is Herman's Hermits' 1968 feature, "Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Beautiful Daughter."
- 2021– 2h 54mPodcast Episode
- 2020–Podcast Episode
- 2014–Podcast Episode
- Cleveland and Cookie pose as husband and wife to get into a private club, and Cleveland Jr. is forced to do "hard time" when Rallo doesn't confess to stealing a candy bar.
- 2002–20088.2 (37)TV Episode
- 2002–20087.4 (21)TV Episode
- 2017– 52mPodcast Episode
- 2017– 1h 2mPodcast Episode
- 2002–20087.4 (16)TV Episode
- 2021– 14mPodcast Episode
- 2022– 1h 1mPodcast Episode
- 1986–2010TV-PGTV Episode