Bread (TV series)
Bread is a British television sitcom, written by Carla Lane, about a close-knit, working-class family in Liverpool, England. It was produced by the BBC and screened on BBC1 from 1 May 1986 to 3 November 1991. In 1988, the ratings for the series peaked at 21 million viewers.[1]
Bread | |
---|---|
Elswick Street: Where the exterior shots were filmed. | |
Created by | Carla Lane |
Written by | Carla Lane |
Directed by | Susan Belbin (1986–1988) Robin Nash (1987–89) John B. Hobbs (1990–91) |
Starring | Jean Boht Peter Howitt Nick Conway Victor McGuire Jonathon Morris Gilly Coman Kenneth Waller Ronald Forfar Bryan Murray J. G. Devlin Graham Bickley Melanie Hill Deborah Grant Pamela Power |
Opening theme | David Mackay |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of series | 7 |
No. of episodes | 74 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer | Robin Nash (1986–91) |
Producers | Robin Nash (1986–91) John B. Hobbs (1990–91) |
Production locations | Dingle, Liverpool, England |
Editors | John Dunstan (1986–91) Chris Wadsworth (1987) |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time | 30 mins |
Production company | BBC |
Distributor | BBC Worldwide 2entertain Universal Pictures ABC (Australia, home video) |
Release | |
Original network | BBC1 |
Original release | 1 May 1986 – 3 November 1991 |
Plot summary
The series focused on the extended Boswell family of Liverpool, in the district of Dingle. The family were Catholic and working class, and led by the acid-tongued matriarch Nellie Boswell (Jean Boht) who ruled over her family with an iron fist. Early series focused on her children attempting to make enough money (in English slang, "Bread") to support the family through various illicit means.[2][3][4] Later series saw less emphasis on making money schemes, and more storylines focusing on the characters' love lives and marriages.
Characters
The Boswell family consisted of Nellie's philandering, free-spirited husband Freddie (Ronald Forfar) who spent most of the series with one foot in the family household, and the other with his mistress, the red-haired Irish siren Lilo Lil (Eileen Pollock). This union led to one of the series' most famous catchphrases, which Nellie frequently declared about Lilo Lil in a storm of rage: "She is a tart!"
Eldest child Joey (Peter Howitt/Graham Bickley) was essentially the level-headed household head, with his leather trousers, classic Jaguar, and charming demeanor ("Greetings!" was his catchphrase), Joey was involved in tax fraud after making a fortune selling personalized number plates and not declaring this to the taxman. Throughout the series, Joey was in love with dour, demanding divorcee Roxy (Joanna Phillips-Lane), whom he finally married in the final series. The character was extremely popular for the first four series, and Peter Howitt was considered the series' heartthrob and breakout star. When he decided to leave Bread to concentrate on directing and other acting opportunities, his replacement was not as popular with viewers, so the character wasn't as prominent in the later series.
Second-eldest child Jack was the thoughtful, sensitive type who ran an antique-dealing business, often with disastrous results. Actor Victor McGuire was absent in series 4, and Jack went to America for a year. He returned in series 5 and eventually fell in love with an older woman, Leonora (Deborah Grant), who moved in across the road. Adrian (Jonathon Morris) was the theatrical poet, who had his poetry published ('My Granny's Bucket'). His real name was Jimmy, but he changed his name to Adrian which he considered "less common". He endured relationships with several highly-sexed women and was frequently seen emerging red-faced from the bushes. The youngest Boswell son, Billy (Nick Conway), was loud-mouthed, annoying, and immature. He somehow managed to father Francesca with his miserable mistress Julie (Caroline Milmoe/Hilary Crowson) who lived across the road. Billy married Julie in series 3, but they were divorced by series 5, and Julie moved to Sefton Park (and left the series), leaving Billy devastated. Billy drove an old Volkswagen Beetle which constantly backfired when driven, as well as a van from the back of which he sold sandwiches.
The only Boswell daughter was Aveline (Gilly Coman/Melanie Hill), a colourful, enduring model who married Protestant vicar Oswald Carter (Giles Watling) at the end of series 4 (to staunchly-Catholic Nellie's outrage); after trying to conceive throughout series 5, Aveline gives birth to Ursula in series 6.
Next door is grumpy, permanently-hungry Grandad (Kenneth Waller). The series doesn't make explicitly-clear whether he is Nellie's or Freddie's father, as he is only ever referred to and called Grandad. However, in a fleeting sequence in a series-4 episode, Freddie is arrested for stealing his rubbish cart. When the family arrive at the Police Station to collect him, Nellie refers to Freddie as Grandad's son-in-law for the only time, confirming that he is, in fact, her own father. He appeared in all seven series and was in the last episode's final scene, alongside Jean Boht. Grandad was frequently seen telling people to "Piss off!" and reminiscing about his childhood sweetheart Edie Matteson.
There are also several notable supporting characters seen throughout the series: the deadpan Department of Health and Social Security clerk Martina (Pamela Power) spent all seven series enduring the various tales the Boswells spun to get more dole money. She perfected her catchphrase "Next!" but ultimately failed to snare her favorite Boswell, 'Shifty' (Bryan Murray), after several attempts at a relationship with him. Shifty arrived in series 4, ostensibly to cover Jack's absence in the series, but he stayed on in Bread after Jack's return and lived next door with Grandad until the end of the sixth series.
Other neighbours include Celia Higgins, played by Rita Tushingham during series 4; in series 6 and 7, Leonora Campbell (Debra Grant) moved into Julie's old house and eventually began dating Jack.
The show's title is a reference to "bread" meaning "money"; though this is not a Liverpudlian Scouse expression but cockney rhyming slang ("bread and honey"). Liverpudlians at the time largely referred to money as "dough". A regular scenario in each episode was that of Nellie opening a cockerel-fashioned kitchen egg-basket prior to the evening meal into which the family would place money for their upkeep. The amount of money placed in the pot by each depended on how successful a day they'd had. The pot would be at the forefront of the screen at the end of each episode as the credits rolled.
Other frequently-seen scenarios included Nellie answering a cordless phone (a newfangled item in the mid-1980s) which she kept in the pocket of her pinny; she always said "Hello, yes?" when answering, followed by a series of frantic "Thank you"s when it was Derek (Peter Byrne), Nellie's secret park-bench pal, on the other end, ensuring the parking places outside the terraced house were kept free for the family's many vehicles, by putting out illicitly-acquired police traffic cones.
The show featured soap opera-style cliffhangers, meaning that viewers had to watch each week to see how the previous week's cliffhanger would be resolved. This also meant that each episode was not self-contained, but the plot unfolded as the series progressed. This was unusual for a comedy at the time, but has been used to great effect by comedies since.
Cast
Regular characters
Actor | Role | Episodes | Duration | Years |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jean Boht | Nellie Boswell | 74 | 1–7 | 1986–91 |
Ronald Forfar | Freddie Boswell | 62 | 1–1990 Christmas Special | 1986–90 |
Peter Howitt | Joey Boswell | 39 | 1–1988 Christmas Special | 1986–88 |
Graham Bickley | 35 | 5–7 | 1989–91 | |
Victor McGuire | Jack Boswell | 61 | 1–3, 5–7 | 1986–87, 1989–91 |
Jonathon Morris | Adrian Boswell | 74 | 1–7 | 1986–91 |
Gilly Coman | Aveline Boswell | 39 | 1–1988 Christmas Special | 1986–88 |
Melanie Hill | 35 | 5–7 | 1989–91 | |
Nick Conway | Billy Boswell | 74 | 1–7 | 1986–91 |
Kenneth Waller | Grandad | 73 | 1–7 | 1986–91 |
Bryan Murray | Cousin Shifty | 49 | 4–1990 Christmas Special | 1988–90 |
Pamela Power | Martina | 37 | 1–6 | 1986–90 |
Eileen Pollock | Lilo Lil | 43 | 3–7 | 1987–91 |
Joanna Phillips-Lane | Roxy | 19 | 3-7 | 1987-91 |
Caroline Milmoe | Julie Jefferson | 12 | 1–2 | 1986–87 |
Hilary Crowson | 41 | 3–1989 Christmas Special | 1987–89 | |
Giles Watling | Oswald Carter | 49 | 4–7 | 1988–91 |
Rita Tushingham | Celia Higgins | 11 | 4 | 1988 |
Deborah Grant | Leonora Campbell | 19 | 6–7 | 1990–91 |
Guest appearances
- Linda McCartney was friends with writer Carla Lane and had a guest appearance in series 4, episode 7 (1988). Her husband Paul appeared briefly at the end of the episode.[5]
- Singer Sonia Evans also appeared series 4, episode 11 (1988) as Ellia, a girlfriend of Adrian Boswell. The following year, she launched her pop career with the #1 hit 'You'll Never Stop Me Loving You'.
- Supporting characters 'Yizzell' and 'Yizzell's mate' were played by Charles Lawson and Simon Rouse from 1986 to 1989. Both went onto greater fame, with Lawson starring in Coronation Street on-and-off for 30 years as Jim McDonald, and Rouse going on to star in The Bill as DCI Jack Meadows from 1990 until the series' end in August 2010.
Episodes
Series | Original broadcast date |
---|---|
1 | 1986 |
2 | 1987 |
3 | 1987 |
4 | 1988 |
Christmas special | 25 December 1988 |
5 | 1989 |
Christmas special | 25 December 1989 |
6 | 1990 |
Christmas special | 25 December 1990 |
7 | 1991 |
Spin-offs
The theme tune was sung by the cast members and was released on BBC Records but failed to make the UK singles chart. The theme was re-recorded for the fifth series of the show, due to BBC1's transition from mono to NICAM stereo sound – the original theme had been recorded in mono - and also to allow Graham Bickley and Melanie Hill, who joined the cast in Series 5 replacing the original Joey and Aveline respectively, to replace the originals in the vocals.
A comic strip based on the series featured in the BBC's Teen magazine Fast Forward, although the overall tone was altered for the magazines younger readership, and most of the featured stories were of a generic nature, not following the continuity of the television series and mostly just using the characters to tell simple joke stories .
After the series had finished, a stage play of the show entitled "Bread – The Farewell Slice" toured the UK.
Also following the end of the series, Jonathon Morris announced his desire for a follow-up series about his character, theatrical poet Adrian, feeling that the character 'had a lot of potential and a lot of stories yet to tell beyond the Bread setting', and suggested the premise of Adrian moving down to London in hopes of cracking the bigger theatrical scene. He proposed his idea to the BBC and even announced his hopes for the series during an appearance in March 1991 on Saturday morning programme Going Live![7] as filming for the final series of Bread was drawing to a close. The BBC declined on the suggestion; Morris went on to co-write a one-man play based around Adrian which he intended to tour with, and also in hope of using it as an example to the BBC of what could be done with the character. The project was eventually dropped, due to ownership rights for the character with Carla Lane. However the effort was not completely detrimental to Morris, as his enthusiasm led to Going Live! host Phillip Schofield recommending Morris for his replacement as presenter for Children's BBC series The Movie Game, a position which Morris went on to fill.[8]
In 2017, it was reported that the BBC was considering reviving the series with much of the surviving cast, with Graham Bickley returning as Joey Boswell, now effectively head of the household, and Jean Boht playing the now elderly Nellie Boswell ("Gran"), in essence serving as a vaguely more mild-mannered version of Grandad from the original series. The series was set to revive the tale of the Boswell clan 25 years later, with several of their family's offspring born since the end of the original series, to feature as regular characters. However, the proposal was eventually dropped when the rights couldn't be settled with Carla Lane's estate, and the BBC later confirmed that they would not be proceeding with the project.
Criticism
Though the show was popular, and received audiences over 21 million, Bread was criticised for mocking Liverpudlian culture and people, who had suffered significant economic downturn and unemployment in the 1980s. Lane countered these criticisms saying that her characters were cartoonish and one-dimensional, and were not intended to be a serious social comment on the state of Liverpool.[2]
In 1989, at the height of Bread's success, the departure of two of the series leading actors, Peter Howitt as Joey, and Gilly Coman as Aveline, led to the characters being re-cast. Bread was also criticised several times in both the Radio Times and on Points of View for its bad language before the 9pm watershed - Grandad's catchphrase "Piss off!" was often the cause of complaints.
DVD releases
In the UK, the first four series were released in two 3-DVD sets in 2003. However, the first series' episodes had some, but not all, profanity bleeped out or muted. A 16-DVD "Complete Collection" followed in 2014, containing all 74 episodes and the three Christmas specials. This time, episodes from series three onwards and the specials were uncensored but the first two series consisted of the previously-released censored discs.
In Australia, only the first 5 seasons have been released so far and it is unknown if the remaining seasons will follow.
UK Region 2
- Series 1 & 2 - 17 March 2003
- Series 3 & 4 - 2 June 2003
- The Complete Collection (Series "1-8") - 29 September 2014
- The Complete Collection (HMV Exclusive) - 22 January 2018
Australia Region 4
- Series One and Two - 17 November 2005 (Re-Released 1 February 2012)
- Series Three and Four - 3 October 2007 (Re-Released 1 February 2012)
- Series Five - 3 November 2011
References
- "BBC – Comedy Guide – Bread". 29 December 2004. Archived from the original on 29 December 2004. Retrieved 8 February 2017.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
- Jones, Bronwyn (3 June 2016). "Carla Lane's sitcom Bread and its legacy in Liverpool". BBC. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
- Newcomb, Horace; Newcomb, Lambdin Kay Distinguished Professor for the Peabody Awards Horace (3 February 2014). Encyclopedia of Television. Routledge. ISBN 9781135194727. Retrieved 6 February 2017 – via Google Books.
- Huq, Rupa (15 August 2013). Making Sense of Suburbia Through Popular Culture. A&C Black. ISBN 9781780932248. Retrieved 6 February 2017 – via Google Books.
- Badman, Keith (1999). The Beatles : After the Break Up. Omnibus Press. p. 409. ISBN 978-0-711-97520-0.
- https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02zm1qc/episodes/guide
- "BBC One London, 30 March 1991". 30 March 1991. Archived from the original on 7 September 2007. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
- "The Movie Game, BBC One London, 3 April 1991". 3 April 1991. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
External links
- Bread at BBC Online
- Bread at BBC Programmes
- Bread at IMDb
- Bread at British Comedy Guide
- Bread at Phill.co.uk
- Bread Illustrated article on Collecting Books and Magazines website