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1995


Compiled by Steve Williams, Ian Jones and Jack Kibble-White

First published November 2002

Debuts

January …
Wise Up made its first appearance on Sunday mornings … Andrew Neil interviewed famous people including Fatima Whitbread and Jimmy Savile in Is This Your Life? … Frankie Howerd was the first subject of Heroes of ComedyThe 3000 Mile Garden had the Atlantic Ocean in the middle and horticulturists from the US and UK tending either end … and would-be Prime Ministers announced their manifestos in The Number 10 Show.

February …
The pilot of ER launched the first series of the ultra-successful drama … Gaby Roslin introduced The Real Holiday Show … Jimmy McGovern’s Hearts and Minds began … Secret Lives opened with the story of Walt Disney … while The Legend of the Tube was followed by 13 weeks of highlights from the music show.

March …
Party of Five was the latest American import … after the previous year’s pilot, The White Room got a full series on Saturday nights … Ice T fronted Baadasss TV … and Deadline looked behind the scenes of Yorkshire Television’s regional news programme, as part of the Whose News? season that also included Naked News, looking at the cult of the anchor and the rise of CNN, and The Daily Planet, a 90-minute programme made up of one day’s news bulletins from around the world.

April …
Dominik Diamond invited viewers to choose the presenters for new youth show Watch This Space, but read the wrong results out … the current state of Israel and Palestine was examined over three nights in The Holylands … Greg Dyke looked behind the scenes of sport in Fair Game … while two sitcoms called Friends and Father Ted sneaked quietly into the Friday night schedules.

May …
Takeover TV discovered Adam and Joe but was most famous for the talking bottom of Norman Sphincter … Joanna Trollope’s The Politician’s Wife starred Juliet Stevenson and Trevor Eve … centrepiece of the Century of Cinema season was the snappily-titled A Personal Journey with Martin Scorsese Through America Movies … Robert Llywellen passed on home movie tips in I Camcorder … and John Sparkes and Pete Baikie overdubbed natural history footage in Sqwakietalkie.

June …
The World of Lee Evans began … while Edward Windsor (yes, that one) tried to get us all playing Real Tennis.

July …
My So-Called Life began its first, and only, series.

August …
Unedited Bird and Fortune monologues from Rory Bremner … Who Else? were shown as The Long Johns … the ragga star travelled to Bombay for Apache Goes Indian … and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall was the Chef on the Wild Side.

September …
Alan Davies starred as a disillusioned travel agent in One For the Road, a curious sitcom that gathered dust on a shelf for a year before being flung out opposite EastEnders … while Dani Behr and Laurie Pike launched Absolutely Animals.

October …
Alan Bleasdale took Robert Lindsay and Julie Walters from GBH and gave them their own series, Jake’s Progress … Antoine de Caunes, Carolyn Marshall and Maria McErlane dispensed Love in the Afternoon … money matters were dealt with in DoshStreet-Porter’s Men saw Janet interview members of the opposite sex she found “interesting” … Pete McCarthy investigated alternative beliefs in Desperately Seeking Something … there was animated comedy in Crapston Villas … and Hollyoaks began..

November …
Paul Watson examined industrial relations in The Factory … one of the most popular characters from Desmond’s got his own show in PorkpieDressing for Breakfast was a feminine counterpoint to a growing range of laddish sitcoms … while short films were showcased in Shooting Gallery.

Finales

Don’t Forget Your Toothbrush
Chris Evans’ prime time debut was almost scuppered before it appeared on screen, with an unusually high number of pilots, and it wasn’t until Fifteen-to-One legend William G Stewart was drafted in that it started to gel. And how. Toothbrush won awards both in Britain and around the world, Evans making millions from selling the format to dozens of countries. But he always said that he felt uncomfortable fronting the show, claiming his persona on screen was a million miles away from what it was in real life. Hence after just two series, Evans packed it in. The format went on to inspire many future light entertainment shows, including C4′s Last Chance Lottery, and the BBC even purchased the rights in an attempt to re-launch it with MTV VJ Ray Cokes in charge – however it never made it to the screen. The fact that Ant and Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway in 2002 is still reminiscent of Toothbrush shows the impact the series continues to have on TV producers, despite the fact that only two dozen episodes were ever made.

Misc …

Brookside ran daily for a week in January and again in May, with the Jordache storyline picking up some of its biggest audiences … 4 March was Pot Night, with eight hours of programming devoted to cannabis … C4 got the rights to The Cheltenham Festival from the BBC … Red Light Zone devoted eight Saturday nights to matters sexual … while other channels were marking the 50th anniversary of VE Day on 8 May, C4 celebrated Glam Rock, including the first ever Top Ten … a six-week season of Vintage Thames on Saturday nights included The Kenny Everett Video Show, Man About the House, The Sweeney and Rumpole of the Bailey while Auf Weidershen, Pet also got a repeat run … nine years after being filmed, chat show Sex with Paula was finally screened … 2 and 3 December was Soap Weekend with documentaries and classic episodes of EastEnders, Neighbours and Brookside … and the festive season was marked by Beastly Christmas.

On Screen

Paula Yates
Even by Paula’s standards, this was a curious year. In January she was still in charge of The Big Breakfast‘s interview bed, but in February news of her relationship with Michael Hutchence broke. Separation from her husband Bob Geldof followed, and so, obviously, did her departure from The Big Breakfast in March. While all this was going on, highlights from The Tube were rerun on Wednesday evenings, and she joined Jools Holland back at the Newcastle studios where once again they introduced acts in as unbriefed a manner as was possible. Indeed, Paula began one edition complaining that she was hardly in it. In December, Sex with Paula was finally transmitted – a programme where she asked celebrities about their love lives. The show was originally filmed in 1986, but with the rise of AIDS it was felt it encouraged promiscuity and was unsuitable for screening at the time. With, perhaps, her new status as a headline maker in mind, it was now considered acceptable.

Hollyoaks
Phil Redmond went back to the writing chair to pen the first episode of C4′s new teen soap, claiming that Brookside was where he dealt with serious issues and here was where he was going to have fun. Hence, the first few episodes of the Chester-based show contained such memorable plotlines as “Louise can’t decide what to do with her hair”, and Alvin Stardust was a regular. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the intended audience was not particularly taken with the froth and demanded issues, so the emphasis abruptly changed a few months in. Original lead character Natasha was killed off at her birthday party, a storyline that drew a line under the old series. Still cautious, C4 only commissioned another 26 episodes rather than the lengthy run Mersey Television was hoping for. Viewing figures eventually rose under the new approach, but because of the commissioning procedure the series abruptly ended in June 1996. It returned in September, now twice a week, and proceeded to become a teatime staple on Channel 4 – and never again would haircuts be the main talking point.

Off Screen

• Films grabbed the headlines this year, with the premiere of The Last Temptation of Christ in June drawing C4′s highest number of complaints ever. November’s premiere of the Four-financed Four Weddings and a Funeral, meanwhile, saw the channel’s highest audience for a decade.
• From October, Fifteen-to-One was an unlikely pioneer as it began broadcasting in widescreen.
The Big Breakfast was extended by half an hour one morning in September to allow it to raise money for breast cancer; a decision approved by Michael Grade during an acupuncture session.

Four-Words

“I’m going to stick my neck out here and suggest it will never replace Wimbledon in the hearts of the nation.”
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Giles Smith in The Independent on Sunday on Real Tennis

“We spent about three or four hours very late one night talking about how a programme can basically market itself. The concept emerged of a word-of-mouth check on each show, the idea of looking at a programme after you’d done it and saying not ‘Was it a good show?’ but, ‘Are there one, two, three, four things that people would be talking about?’ Since Don’t Forget Your Toothbrush, every show that Chris Evans has done has had those moments.”
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Matthew Freud, Public Relations Director

My Favourite Channel 4 Moment …

Brookside (1993)
There’s a moment in an episode of Brookside that I remember as the all time best soap opera cliff-hanger. Bear with me because the details are sketchy. The Jordaches had not long since arrived at the Close. The other residents found themselves intrigued by this intensely insular and claustrophobic threesome; they seemed somehow oppressed and broken, yet no one knew why. To the viewer it quickly became apparent what was really happening, and the eventual arrival of Trevor Jordache (much prefigured by the Press as well as our own expectations of how a soap opera plotline should develop) signified that things were going to get nasty.

At first, Trevor attempted to persuade his family that his malevolent past was behind him, and for a time it seemed they chose to believe him. Yet inevitably the violent tendencies began to re-surface. The pivotal moment in the story occurred not when Mandy eventually plunged the knife into Trevor, but some weeks earlier.

Trevor was out and about looking to socialise with his new neighbours. The way I remember it is that David Crosby and somebody else (it might have been Mick Johnson or Eddie Banks) were having a quiet drink at the bar (was it La Luz back then?) when Trevor interrupted. On the surface he seemed friendly enough, but there was something about his demeanour that suggested he was becoming increasingly unhinged. The episode concluded, with Trevor bidding his reluctant drinking companions farewell and heading for home.

Somehow the direction and performance of this scene managed to communicate two unspoken messages to the viewer. First of all, we knew instinctively that Mandy, Beth and Rachael were heading for disaster; and secondly, we could see that in the pits of their stomachs Bing and Mick knew exactly what was going to happen but felt powerless to stop it. People say that the suggestion of violence on television is often more powerful then the actual portrayal. Here the cliché is shown to be true.

In this short scene, Brookside effortlessly portrays not only the terrible psychology of the abuser, but also the way in which those on the periphery of domestic violence almost become victims themselves, against their will becoming complicit in the act of violence. In retrospect, the cliff-hanger worked so well because Trevor showed us he was free to do whatever he wanted.
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Jack Kibble-White

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