Sunday, 1 October 2017
802 Dear John
First viewed : February 1987
I missed this new John Sullivan comedy first time round but my Mum had caught some of it and recommended it when the first season was repeated in February 1987.
It starred Ralph Bates as the titular John , a middle aged divorcee looking to start again by joining a singles club run by overbearing Louise ( Rachel Bell ) with her prurient interest in the members' sex lives. The regulars were supposedly frigid Kate ( Belinda Lang ), chronically boring Ralph ( Peter Denyer ) and self-deceiving moron Kirk St Moritz ( Peter Blake ).
Bates seemed a strange choice to play the hapless John. He made his name as a Hammer villain in the early seventies then played the dastardly George Warleggan in Poldark . Apart from a turn as a comic French detective in Minder on the Orient Express , he had no background in comedy or sympathetic roles but was very good as John, a decent guy who can't stand up for himself.
The one episode that stands out for me is the one where Kirk sets up Ralph as DJ for a disco night as "Dazzling Darren". Unfortunately "Darren" only has one record, Shaky's Green Door so that plays continuously while Ralph reads robotically from Kirk's script of 1970s disco cliches - "Boogaloo", "Strut Your Funky Stuff " etc. As background to the other characters' conversations it was hilarious.
Dear John was surprisingly cancelled after just two series, a decision still somewhat shrouded in mystery especially as they then bought an American adaptation with Judd Hirsch shortly afterwards. I avoided that on principle but I did see a brief snatch of one episode which had Trevor Eve playing a role originally played by Kevin Lloyd.
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One of my all time favourites, and you've references my favourite episode too. I believe Sullivan's wife used to give him casting ideas; if memory serves it was she who suggested Bates here and Paul Nicholas for Just Good Friends. Bates was left field for sure, but it worked wonderfully as you say
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