Monday, 9 April 2018
971 Families
First viewed : Early 1991
Granada launched this new daytime soap in 1990 . It was broadcast twice a week with an omnibus edition on Thursday nights after the news The hook was that half of it would be set in Cheshire, half in Australia. I had assumed that an Australian TV company co-funded it but that was not the case. It started out with two families, the Thompsons ( Cheshire ) and the Stevenses ( Sydney ) and rogue wine merchant Mike Thompson ( Malcolm Stoddard ) leaving his wife Sue ( Morag Hood ) to be with his former Australian girlfriend Diana Stevens ( Briony Behets ).
I think I first caught it around the beginning of 1991 since I recall seeing floppy-haired Martin Glyn Murray who played the elder Thompson son in, it shortly before he made the charts as a member of The Mock Turtles with Can You Dig It ? His younger brother Nathan was played by an 18-year old Jude Law , the main reason the programme is remembered today. However I was more interested in the Stevens daughter Justine played by the gorgeous Imogen Annesley.
However it didn't really grab me and I din't see it for a few weeks before the paucity of alternatives on a Thursday night drove me back and I became strangely hooked. Families was masterful in wringing out the maximum mileage from just a handful of storylines. When I came back to it there had been a major upheaval. Mike Thompson had been killed by his jealous brother , the Thompson's garage had gone up in flames and most of them had left the series as, sadly, had Justine for presumably unrelated reasons.
However Mike Thompson had left a poisonous legacy with his English daughter Amanda ( Laura Girling ) finding out that her boyfriend Andrew Stevens was really her illegitimate half-brother, yes, that old chestnut. Amanda subsequently married well meaning toff Neil Brookes ( Patrick Cremin ) but Andrew couldn't keep away. Andrew was played by a clothes horse called Tayler Kane whose terrible acting made his traumatic scenes hilarious. He was so wooden the other cast members must have got splinters just standing near him. The love triangle with Neil kept the programme going for months.
There was also a new family in England headed by Larry Richards ( John Bowe ) who owned the local pub. He also had a family skeleton ; eldest daughter Louise ( Victoria Finney ) was not his wife's child but that of her wayward sister Jackie ( Amanda Wenban ) . A memorable scene at the pub involved Larry rigging up the condom machine in the toilets to give an alarm when someone used it ( embarrassing your customers is a strange business practice ) and then getting irate when the purchaser turned out to be the boyfriend of his younger daughter Chelsea ( Tara Moran ). Jackie had her own family in Australia with two kids by accountant Brian ( Kim Knuckley ). The girl Jade was played by Sascha Huckstepp who ,by contrast to the other young females, in the cast was chubby and pock-marked.
In the summer of 1992, there was another major overhaul. The series moved to an early evening slot, following Home and Away. Amanda ran off with Andrew despite being pregnant with Neil's child and most of the other Australian characters were written out with all the action now taking place in Cheshire. A new family the Bannisters moved into the Thompson home headed by slimy barrister Charles ( Terence Harvey ). He had two ginger daughters bitchy Juliette ( Emma Davies ) and angelic Rebecca ( Karen Westwood ) who provided a new love interest for Neil. His elder son Simon ( Thomas Russell ) fell for Juliette's friend Fiona ( Claire Marchione ) aware that she was a kept woman but not that her sugar daddy was his actual dad. Mum Bannerman had a retaliatory affair with the stable man. That particular storyline ran for the rest of the series.
The most memorable episode was when slimy Aussie businessman Don McLeod ( Bruce Hughes ) came over to England. Through his business connection with Mike Thompson and affair with Jackie , he knew all the secrets so no one wanted to see him. This led to a ludicrous High Noon scenario where all the relevant characters were sat in the pub waiting for him and saying things like "Did you I hear you say Don McLeod's coming ?". Having made his grand entrance and wound everyone up, McLeod was dispatched by a punch from Larry allowing Bowe to move to Coronation Street and disposing of another Auusie character.
At the beginning of 1993 the last major original character Diana was killed off and her new husband Anton returned to Australia. Having learned of her father's affair, Juliette blackmails
him into setting her up in Anton's bar where she employs a male stripper and escort. There was quite a strong scene for early evening viewing where he persuades Louise to become an escort and she is shocked when her date puts a post-coital wad of money on the pillow.
Though it provided a talking point with some colleagues at work, the series didn't really establish itself in the new slot and eventually there was just one episode on a Thursday night. It was clear the series was on borrowed time and the axe fell with a feature length episode in August 1993. It finished on a cliffhanger with Fiona's suicide bid and the cast apparently weren't told for definite it was over according to Tara Moran who was just starting a short run in Casualty at the time.
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Looking up Glyn Murray's credits on IMDB, it seems his Mock Turtle connections have helped him snare some work on a few Alan Partridge projects. And I wonder if Jude Law helped him get the narrator gig (must be minor, as I don't remember it) for "Enemy at the Gates"?
ReplyDeleteAll about connections, that showbiz game...
I don't remember a narrator either; I suspect he may have been erased in post-production but yeah, you'd think Law must have had something to do with it.
ReplyDeleteBtw I used to get letters from Steve Coogan's dad inviting me to SDP meetings at his house in the eighties. I rather wish I'd taken up the offer now.