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    • English actor

      • Malcolm Raymond McFee (16 August 1949 – 18 November 2001) was an English actor best known for his role as Peter Craven in the TV series Please Sir!, the film of the same name, and the spin-off TV series The Fenn Street Gang.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malcolm_McFee
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  2. Malcolm Raymond McFee (16 August 1949 – 18 November 2001) was an English actor best known for his role as Peter Craven in the TV series Please Sir!, the film of the same name, and the spin-off TV series The Fenn Street Gang.

  3. Dan Robinson replaced Malcolm McGee in The Virgil Brothers and also travelled to the UK where the trio recorded a cover of The Knight Brothers' "Temptation's About To Get Me". He subsequently returned to Australia and later worked with the bands, Duck, Hit and Run, Champions, and Rite on the Nite.

  4. In June, the quartet added former Wild Cherries' Melbourne-born singer, Malcolm McGee (1 November 1945 – 17 May 2012), and opened Rhubarb's club in Sydney's Liverpool Street. McGee described how Python Lee Jackson is "the ultimate name.

  5. May 17, 2012 · News just in that Malcolm McGee has passed away. One of Australia's greatest singers of the 60s - he should have been a household name. Mal was the original guitarist in the Wild Cherries, singer in Python Lee Jackson and the Virgil Brothers.

  6. The Wild Cherries were formed in 1964 by Melbourne University students John Bastow (vocals), Rob Lovett (guitar and vocals), and Les Gilbert (bass). Local bluesman Malcolm McGee soon joined on lead guitar and vocals, and the original line-up was completed by Geoff Hales on drums (although he was replaced by Kevin Murphy almost immediately). Lovett

  7. In June the quartet added former Wild Cherries singer Malcolm McGee (born in Melbourne on 1 November 1945) and opened Rhubarb's club in Sydney's Liverpool Street. In September Bentley left (and rejoined the band in 1968) and was replaced by Bob Welsh.

  8. Oct 24, 2007 · As the band’s keyboard player explains, the track was a spirited one chord groove that harked back to the band’s glory days at Sydney’s Rhubarb’s club in 1966 when Bentley occasionally took over the microphone from singer Malcolm McGee to deliver an impromptu stream-of-consciousness monologue over a repetitive riff.

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