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Outside Edge - TV Series

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Outside Edge
GenreSitcom
Created byRichard Harris
Directed byNick Hurran
StarringBrenda Blethyn
Robert Daws
Josie Lawrence
Timothy Spall
Country of originUnited Kingdom
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes22
Production
Producer(s)Paula Burdon
Running time30 minutes
(including commercials)
Production company(s)ITV Central
Release
Original networkITV
Picture format4:3
Original release24 March 1994 (1994-03-24) –
13 February 1996 (1996-02-13)
External links
[{{#property:P856}} Website]

Search Outside Edge - TV Series on Amazon.

Outside Edge is a British sitcom by Richard Harris that starred Brenda Blethyn, Robert Daws, Josie Lawrence and Timothy Spall.[1] Three series and a Christmas special were produced by Central Independent Television and were broadcast on ITV between 1994-1996. The series was adapted from Harris' original stage play which premiered in 1979; upon adapting it for television, Harris expanded on the characters' back stories and introduced more plot lines that were absent in the original play. The series focuses on the lives of two couples with contrasting attitudes, the uptight and conservative Roger (Daws) and Miriam Dervish (Blethyn) and the bohemian and adventurous Kevin (Spall) and Maggie Costello (Lawrence) and their involvement with the local Brent Park Cricket team who meet every Saturday. Other members of the cricket team are also featured, from the lecherous womaniser Dennis Broadley (Denis Lill), timid and naive Fred (Nigel Pegram), snobbish yuppy Alex Harrington (Ben Daniels/ Chris Lang) and browbeaten husband and later father Bob Willis (Jeremy Nicholas/ Michael Jayston), along with a number of other characters who also regularly appear throughout the series' run. The series was one of the more successful ITV sitcoms during the 1990's[2], and it won a number of awards at the time, winning awards for Best Comedy Drama at the British Comedy Awards in 1994, a Writer's Guild of Great Britain award for best situation comedy in 1994 for its writer/ creator Richard Harris[3] and a British Comedy Award for Best Actress in 1994 for Brenda Blethyn[4][5]. Moreover, both Robert Daws and Josie Lawrence were nominated for Best Actor and Best Actress at the British Comedy Awards in 1995.[6][7].

Cast

Main stars

Brenda Blethyn as Miriam Dervish

Robert Daws as Roger Dervish

Josie Lawrence as Maggie Costello

Timothy Spall as Kevin Costello

Co-stars

Denis Lill as Dennis Broadley

Nigel Pegram as Fred

Michael Jayston as Bob Willis (Series 2-3), Jeremy Nicholas (Series 1)

Chris Lang as Alex Harrington (Series 2-3), Ben Daniels (Series 1)

Recurring cast

Tracy Brabin as Ginnie Willis

Hillary Crane as Shirley Broadley (Series 2-3)

May Boak as Nigel's Mother (Series 2-3)

Plot

Roger Dervish (Daws) is the astute and bossy Captain of the local Cricket team who thinks, talks and dreams about the game all the time. He enlists his timid wife Mim (Blethyn) who organises the club's teas at every match, she is also constantly ordered around by her husband for everything ranging from catering, equipment and transportation to every home and away game. Their regimented lifestyle is thrown asunder when, on one match day, they are introduced to the vivacious and outgoing Maggie Costello (Lawrence) wife of Kevin (Spall), a bowler from Roger's Cricket team. A friendship soon develops between Maggie and Mim; and she encourages Mim to break out of her shell and become more assertive towards Roger, and in the process revealing some home truths and astounding revelations that come to light, which tears through their staid lifestyle like wildfire, and for Mim and Roger things will never be quite the same.

Characters

Miriam Dervish played by Brenda Blethyn

Miriam, otherwise known as Mim is the long-suffering wife of Roger, and assistant to his constant needs whether it's at the cricket ground or at home. She used to be a leading light of the operatic society but she had to give up her promising career to raise a family and look after her pushy husband. She is timid, kind and quite forgiving towards people and tries her best to avoid confrontation with others, which can sometimes be to her disadvantage and lead to further problems. At the beginning of the series, she lives a relatively sedate and humdrum lifestyle which mainly comprises of either looking after her husband or organising the Cricket club's teas every Saturday, however her efforts are rarely appreciated and she is often harangued by Roger on a constant basis. Her life is turned around when she meets Maggie, who encourages her to become more confident and express her feelings more, along with being more assertive towards Roger and less submissive towards his behaviour.

Roger Dervish played by Robert Daws

Bossy, opinionated and always to the task, Roger is the Captain of his local Cricket team, a role he takes very seriously. Outside of work, most of his life revolves around organising and planning the weekly fixtures, sometimes his excessiveness and attention to detail can be an annoyance towards others, and when things go wrong with the Cricket team or at home he is rarely able to handle it well. His constant obsessiveness about Cricket leads to Roger neglecting his wife, to the point where it almost leads to a breakdown in their marriage. Roger merely sees Mim as subservient to his whims and needs whether it's at home or at the Cricket club, and he rarely reciprocates her efforts. He is often frosty and brusque towards others, which often leads to confrontation; and his old-fashioned stiff upper lip attitude masks his inability to express his feelings. Despite his failings, he is fairly efficient at organising the local Cricket club, although his compulsiveness can be seen as a sign that he takes his role as Captain too seriously.

Maggie Costello played by Josie Lawrence

In contrast to Mim, she is outgoing, flirtatious, brash and frequently expresses her feelings about people. She is married to Kevin, a bowler of the local Cricket team; she is deeply infatuated with her husband and their passionate relationship frequently leads to public displays of affection, which often causes disquiet among the other members of the club. She lives a carefree Bohemian lifestyle and dresses in revealing tops and outfits as a means of expressing her sensuality, however her extroverted behaviour masks her sadness and inability to come to terms with the concept that she and Kevin may not be able to have children. She is resourceful, generous and a jack of all trades whether it's mending a fence, fixing a car or cleaning out the gutters, although she is utterly hopeless in the kitchen. Over the course of the series, she strikes up a friendship with Mim when she starts attending her husband's Cricket matches. She encourages Mim to break out of her shell and become more assertive towards her husband and reach out to her inner confidence.

Kevin Costello played by Timothy Spall

Unlike his wife, he can be seen as shy and is often submissive to her dominating behaviour, he will do anything for his wife whether it's trying on dresses for size or laying down patio slabs in the garden. Despite their constant squabbles, he is completely in love with his wife, and their fervent relationship is often fiery and expressive. He is the polar opposite to Roger, he is laidback, reticent and disorganised, he frequently likes to lie down and avoid asserting himself in difficult situations, often to the consternation of others, particularly Roger. He has a kind-hearted and genial nature although he often relishes in winding up other members of the club with outlandish lies which lead to all sorts of trouble. Besides his talent for Cricket, he is a genius in the kitchen and regularly rustles up gourmet meals for himself and Maggie. And although he has a frequently temperamental relationship with his wife, he is always willing to defend Maggie when criticised by others, as well as support and stand by her through thick and thin.

Episodes

Series 1 (1994)

1) "The Captain" (24 March 1994)

2) "Getting to Know You" (31 March 1994)

3) "The Committee Meeting" (7th April 1994)

4) "Sex" (14 April 1994)

5) "The Team Tea" (21 April 1994)

6) "The Night Before Cromer" (28 April 1994)

7) "The Match in Cromer" (7 May 1994)

Series 2 (1995)

1) "The Blister" (5 January 1995)

2) "Discretion" (12 January 1995)

3) "Illness" (19 January 1995)

4) "The Death of Fred" (26 January 1995)

5) "The Barbecue" (2 February 1995)

6) "Rain Stopped Play" (9 February 1995)

7) "The Club Meeting" (16 February 1995)

Christmas Special (1995)

1) "Corfu - OK?" (25 December 1995)

Series 3 (1996)

1) "The New Pitch" (2 January 1996)

2) "The New Player" (9 January 1996)

3) "The First Match" (16 January 1996)

4) "The Happy Event" (23 January 1996)

5) "Lost" (30 January 1996)

6) "Match Cancelled?" (6 February 1996)

7) "The Blessing" (13 February 1996)

Development

The series was not the first time that the play had been adapted for television, it had been previously adapted as a one-off television play that aired in 1982[8], which starred Paul Eddington (Roger), Prunella Scales (Mim), Jonathan Lynn (Kevin) and Maureen Lipman (Maggie) in the principal roles respectively. In 1991, Harris wrote a pilot for a potential TV series and submitted it to Central Television, sometime later the script eventually found its way to the attention of his former colleague Paula Burdon. As Harris recalled for an interview with Suzan Leavy from The Stage Magazine in 1994 "I was quite surprised that Paula commissioned me to write six episodes before Vernon Lawrence (TV producer) had even seen it." He continued by stating "it was quite strange because I sent the script in about three years ago, so you wait around all that time and suddenly it's all systems go and you are told to go away and write six more episodes'.[9] Harris later admitted that the first series was largely based on the original play, with the subsequent two series adding to the original idea and following up on the plot lines and characters established in the first series.[10]

Location Filming

Much of the series was filmed on location around Northamptonshire using a single camera setup which was unusual for sitcoms at the time, it was also one of the earliest series to use be shot and processed on filmized videotape that has since become the norm for most sitcoms since the early 2000's. The setting for the Cricket club changed each series, during Series 1 the scenes at the Cricket club were filmed at Thrumpton Cricket Club in Thrumpton, Nottinghamshire[11] during the Summer of 1993; for Series 2 this was switched to Wollaton Cricket Club[12][13] in Wollaton, Northamptonshire and for the 3rd and final series it was filmed at Colston Bassett, Northamptonshire; unlike the first two series which were filmed at existing Cricket clubs, a club hut and pitch were purposefully built by the production crew as a means of avoiding disruption to filming by resident Cricket teams which had been an issue before in previous series. The constant changes of location for the Cricket club was finally acknowledged in the Series 3 opener 'The New Pitch' when Roger announces that the club will be moving to a new home ground. Other filming locations included West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire for the scenes at Mim and Roger's house[14], the Hotel de Paris in Cromer, Norfolk for the episode 'The Night Before Cromer'[15], and Aslockton railway station in Aslockton, Northamptonshire for the scene in the Series 3 opener where Kevin and Maggie meet real life Cricketer, Godfrey Evans on the station platform, who plays himself in the episode. Moreover filming was done overseas in Corfu, for the 1995 Christmas Special, 'OK Corfu? Fair Enough'.[16] [17]

Home Media

The first series was originally released on VHS on the 6 June 1994[18] by the Video Collection and Central Video, the two subsequent series and the 1995 Christmas Special were also released in the ensuing years on VHS by Carlton Home Entertainment. The entire series was eventually released as a DVD boxset on the 6 October 2008[19] by Network, also included within the boxset was the 1982 one-off television play.[20]

External Links

Outside Edge at IMDb

Outside Edge at British Classic Comedy

Outside Edge at British Comedy Guide

Outside Edge at HITC

The Filming of Outside Edge at Thrumpton Cricket Club - 1993

Outside Edge - Facebook Fan Page

References


This article "Outside Edge - TV Series" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Outside Edge - TV Series. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.

  1. "Outside Edge (TV Series, 1994-1996)". IMDb. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  2. Wilson, Ollie (December 21, 1995). "Laughing in a New Direction". The Stage.
  3. "Writers' Guild Great Britain Awards - 1994". IMDb. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  4. "Past Winners 1994". The British Comedy Awards. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  5. "British Comedy Awards - Previous Winners". Chortle. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  6. Marcus, Lawrence (January 17, 2019). "Outside Edge". Television Heaven. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  7. "British Comedy Awards - 1995". IMDb. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  8. "Outside Edge (TV Movie, 1982)". IMDb. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  9. Leavy, Suzan (April 7, 1994). "Just Not Cricket For New Writers". The Stage.
  10. Vanoli, Lisa (December 29, 1995). "Pretty Impressive Batting Average". The Stage.
  11. Smithson, Ray (February 22, 2012). "Thrumpton Cricket Club". Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  12. "Outside Edge - Fan Page". Facebook. February 1, 2015. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  13. Weston, Christopher (October 7, 2019). "Where Was Outside Edge Filmed? Reruns Now on ITV3!". HITC. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  14. "Outside Edge - Fan Page". Facebook. February 1, 2015. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  15. "Outside Edge (TV Series, 1994-1996) - Trivia". IMDb. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  16. Bonner, Neil (January 28, 1995). "Easter In Corfu Sun". Staffordshire Sentinel.
  17. Grant, Peter (December 26, 1995). "Tim's career hits fever pitch". Liverpool Echo.
  18. "Outside Edge". Video Collection Wiki. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  19. "Outside Edge - The Complete Series". HMV. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)
  20. "Outside Edge - The Complete Series". Network. Unknown parameter |url-status= ignored (help)