Monday, 26 October 2015
261 George and Mildred
First watched : 6 September 1976
ITV was generally an arid desert as far as good sitcoms went - forget the racist angle, Love Thy Neighbour was complete shite anyway - but George and Mildred was better than most including the one from which it was a spin-off.
George and Mildred took the middle-aged couple the Ropers letting the flat in Man About The House and replanted them in a nice neighbourhood ( through the unlikely device of a CPO on the old property ) next door to the impeccably middle class Fourmiles with annoying little boy Tristram.
Mildred ( Yootha Joyce ) wants to move up in the world to compensate for her sexual frustration with George ( Brian Murphy ) who by contrast doesn't want to lose contact with his old mates down the boozer. Jeffrey Fourmile ( the giant Norman Eshley ) is appalled tby having them as neighbours though his wife Ann ( Sheila Fearn ) is more easy going and Tristram ( Nicholas Bond-Owen ) is adept at , apparently innocently, giving voice to the sentiments the adults are trying to disguise. Roy Kinnear as George's dishonest mate Jerry headed a strong supporting cast.
George and Mildred was never very subtle in its exploration of class conflict but it was pretty funny and very popular . Although Ann was a sympathetic character who often defused situations with common sense you never quite decided who you wanted to side with among the other three with their conflicting agendas. As for Tristram it was a fertile subject of playground discussion as to what grisly fate would suit him best
It was only brought to an end by the unexpected death of Yootha Joyce in 1980 from chronic alcoholism, unexpected because none of her colleagues were aware of the problem. I suspect I wasn't watching by then as I have no recollection of seeing Tristram getting older.
Apart from Kinnear, George and Mildred was a high point for all the cast. Murphy, now in his eighties , has worked steadily since including inevitably a stint in Last of the Summer Wine . Eshley was an extremely busy actor in the seventies usually in serious roles but then it all seemed to go a bit quiet for him in the eighties. In 1993 he was involved in a serious road crash sustaining head injuries which left him unable to work in theatre though he still pops up on telly in small roles. Fearn quit acting after the childrens sitcom News at Twelve in 1988 and disappeared into private life. And finally what of little Tristram. Nicholas Bond-Owen whose acting was just about passable continued in acting to the end of his teens then worked for Penguin Books as a distributor. He now works in the same capacity for City A.M.
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