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The Detectives (1993 TV series)
British television comedy series (1993–1997)
British television comedy series (1993–1997)
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| runtime | 31 mins | |
| genre | {{Plainlist | |
| company | Celador Productions | |
| creator | Jasper Carrott | |
| starring | Jasper Carrott | |
| Robert Powell | ||
| George Sewell | ||
| country | United Kingdom | |
| language | English | |
| network | BBC One | |
| composer | Keith Strachan | |
| Matthew Strachan | ||
| first_aired | ||
| last_aired | ||
| num_series | 5 | |
| num_episodes | 31 |
Police comedy Robert Powell George Sewell Matthew Strachan The Detectives is a British comedy television series, starring Jasper Carrott, Robert Powell, and George Sewell. It aired on BBC One from 27 January 1993 to 28 December 1997, and was a spoof of police dramas. It was written by Mike Whitehill and Steve Knight.
Concept
The Detectives originated from a recurring sketch that first appeared on Jasper Carrott's comedy show Canned Carrott. Because of its success, it was turned into a television series. There were a few differences from the sketch to the TV series, such as Dave Briggs being married in the sketch (to Brenda), while in the series, both he and Louis are single and hopeless at romance.
Jasper Carrott and Robert Powell play the bumbling detective constables Bob Louis and David Briggs. They were bad at their job, to the despair of their boss, Superintendent Frank Cottam (played by Sewell). However, they usually ended up solving their cases.
The BBC compared it to the series Special Branch (1969–74), in which Sewell had also appeared. Mark Lewisohn compared it to The Sweeney (1975–78), describing Sewell's role as "a deadpan spin on that series' Chief Inspector Haskins". Moreover, the original sketches were introduced by a blue-tinted sequence and musical score that parodied The Sweeney's opening titles.
Each episode showcased different guest stars, and some of them played the same characters they had played in other television series: Leslie Grantham appeared as Danny Kane from The Paradise Club, while John Nettles and Terence Alexander reprised their roles from Bergerac.
In 2012, BBC1 broadcast a one-off sketch show The One Jasper Carrott (part of a series showcasing various comedians) which included an extended sketch about Briggs and Louis having formed an incompetent private detective agency, Sherlock and Holmes (the role of Superintendent was now played by Michael Melia, who had played the character Brian in the second episode of series 1, as George Sewell had died in 2007).
Characters
David Briggs
Briggs (Robert Powell) usually spoofs the leader of a crime-fighting duo that takes all the risks, leads the cases and comes up with the ideas, but is always unluckier with women.
Bob Louis
Though being the cynic and the voice of reason, Bob Louis (Jasper Carrott) is as hopeless as Briggs at flirting with women.
Superintendent Cottam
Frank Cottam (George Sewell) is a parody of Sewell's earlier character in Euston Films drama Special Branch. Cottam usually gives Briggs and Louis dangerous assignments to get rid of them.
Nozzer
Nozzer (Tony Selby) is a desk sergeant at West End Central police station. His first appearance was in "Rear Window", although in this episode, the character was a dog handler rather than a desk sergeant. He also appeared in "DC of Love", "The Curse of the Comanches", "Sacked" and "Best Man"
Episodes
Series 1 (1993)
Series 2 (1994)
Series 3 (1995)
Special (1995)
Series 4 (1996)
Series 5 (1997)
Special (1997)
The episode ends with all three protagonists leaving the police force: Cottam on medical grounds, Briggs and Louis to take over a pub in Canada.
DVD releases
- Series 1 – June 2006
- Series 2 – September 2006
- Series 3 – October 2006
- Series 4 and "Thicker Than Water" – February 2007
- Series 5 and "Go West, Old Man" – April 2007
- The Complete Collection – 12 November 2007
References
References
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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