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  1. Phoenix Nights, also known as Peter Kay's Phoenix Nights, is a British sitcom about The Phoenix Club, a working men's club in the northern English town of Bolton, Greater Manchester.

    • Sitcom
  2. Oct 24, 2023 · When did Phoenix Nights start? Despite its cult status, the series wasn't actually on our screens for that long. Phoenix Nights ran for just two seasons, and each series was only six episodes long.

    • Martin Shore
  3. Phoenix Nights: With Peter Kay, Dave Spikey, Justin Moorhouse, Paddy McGuinness. The misadventures of club owner Brian Potter who is determined to make The Phoenix Club the best working men's club in Greater Manchester.

    • (7.7K)
    • 2001-01-14
    • Comedy
    • 25
  4. Phoenix Nights is a British sitcom about the manager, Brian Potter, and his working men's club, the Phoenix Club. The show was written by Neil Fitzmaurice, Peter Kay and Dave Spikey and is produced by Goodnight Vienna Productions.

    • Can Brian walk? When originally writing the wheelchair-bound character, Peter Kay, Dave Spikey, and Neil Fitzmaurice toyed with the idea that Brian Potter could actually walk.
    • The club. The series was filmed in various locations around Bolton and Manchester, as well as at Granada studios, but its main home was St. Gregory's Social Club in Farnworth, Bolton.
    • The real audience. For all the live performances that took place in the club, from Talent Trek to Half A Shilling's controversial folk song, all the audience reactions were genuine.
    • Family and friends. Not only was the audience made up of club locals, but Peter and the rest of the cast also offered various roles to many of their family and friends.
  5. Dec 9, 2020 · Phoenix Nights was first broadcast in January 2001. It originated as a spin-off from the January 2000 spoof documentary series That Peter Kay Thing, in which many of Phoenix Nights’...

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  7. Jan 1, 2004 · Phoenix Nights. Written and produced by natural talents Peter Kay, Dave Spikey and Neil Fitzmaurice this sitcom, with its tongue-in-cheek subtle (and not so subtle) humour, is comedy at its best. The premise originally started off as an episode of That Peter Kay Thing called 'In The Club'.

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