Demob (TV series)
Demob | |
---|---|
Written by | Dean Lemmon and Andrew Montgomery |
Directed by | Robert Knights |
Starring |
Griff Rhys Jones Martin Clunes Amanda Redman Samantha Womack Les Dawson |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 6 |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | Adrian Bate |
Release | |
Original network | ITV |
Original release | 15 October 1993 – 19 November 1993 |
Demob was a short-lived British comedy-drama television series, which screened for one six-episode series in 1993 on ITV.
The series was set in the late 1940s and early 1950s, and starred Martin Clunes and Griff Rhys Jones as two ex-army friends who decide to try to form an entertainment act, with the aim of getting work on BBC radio. The series also starred Samantha Womack, Amanda Redman and Les Dawson.
Plot
The series follows the ups and downs of two World War II veterans who decide to form a comedy duo after returning home to England. They experience various personal and professional problems as they strive for success.
Characters
Lead characters
- Ian Deasey (Griff Rhys Jones): A cheerful ex-soldier who struggles to adjust to his dull pre-war life and decides to become a comedy team with his army pal, Dick Dobson. Ian is known for singing humorous songs.
- Dick Dobson (Martin Clunes): An irresponsible ex-soldier who always gets into scrapes and has to be rescued by Ian. He is an excellent piano player and forms one half of the comedy duo Dobson and Deasey.
- Janet Deasey (Amanda Redman): Ian's beautiful wife who grows dissatisfied with her husband's desire to become a comedian and begins an affair to stave off boredom.
- Hedda Kennedy (Samantha Womack): A beautiful dancer, who is desperately searching for her American husband, believed to be missing in action. She works in various establishments of Rudy Lorimer's as a singer and dancer. She later becomes a film actress. She is good friends with Ian and Dick and lives next door to their London rooms.
- Moreton Stanley (Les Dawson): A corpulent short-tempered comic who makes improper advances to Hedda.
- Rudy Lorimer (James Faulkner): A disreputable businessman who continually ensnares Dick in his shady business ventures. Lorimer is an alias; his real name is not known.
Supporting characters
- Alan Deasey (Luke Marcel): Ian and Janet's only child, he is a perceptive, sensitive boy vulnerable to teasing. When his father returns from the war he hardly recognises him.
- Annabel (Tilly Blackwood): Janet's best friend, Annabel is engaged to be married to Dr. Palmer.
- Edith (Liz Fraser): Janet's mother who dispenses advice freely.
- Dr. Jeremy Pollock (Harry Burton): Annabel's fiancé who develops an interest in Janet. He has a fondness for Gilbert and Sullivan musicals.
- Oliver Lee (Don Gilet): Hedda's American GI friend who assists her in her search for her missing husband. Oliver plays the saxophone at a London jazz club.
- Frank Parsons: (Tony Melody) Ian's boss at the council.
- Ottie Pond (Roberta Taylor): The producer of "Radio Playtime", a BBC Radio children's programme.
- Keith Koster (Jeremy Child): The notoriously difficult ventriloquist star of "Radio Playtime", Koster seems to believe that his dummy is actually sentient.
- Claudette (Colleen Passard): Dick's wife who he marries only to help her gain entry into the UK. Originally from France, she is a prostitute who works for Rudy Lorimer.
- Moira Stanley (Pat Keen): Moreton Stanley's wife who also serves as his manager.
- Mrs. O'Callagan (Barbara Ashcroft): The duo's Liverpool landlady who takes a shine to Dick much to his horror.
Episode list
# | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Episode 1" | Robert Knights | Dean Lemmon and Andrew Montgomery | 15 October 1993 |
Veterans of the African campaign and Army mates Ian Deasey (Griff Rhys Jones) and Dick Dobson (Martin Clunes) are demobilised at the close of World War II. Ian returns to his wife Janet (Amanda Redman) and his young son Alan and his boring pre-war job at the local council. Dick poses as a flight squadron leader so he can live in style at the Allied Officer's Club. He convinces Ian to perform a two man comedy routine with him in Soho. | ||||
2 | "Episode 2" | Robert Knights | Dean Lemmon and Andrew Montgomery | 22 October 1993 |
Ian is sacked after too many late nights performing as one half of his new comedy partnership. Ian and Dick befriend beautiful dancer Hedda (Samantha Womack) who is looking for her husband. Meanwhile, Dick assists shady businessman Rudy Lormier with his dealings and becomes the manager of The Blue Parrot nightclub. | ||||
3 | "Episode 3" | Robert Knights | Dean Lemmon and Andrew Montgomery | 29 October 1993 |
Deasey and Dobson get a three week booking in Liverpool opening for comedy legend Moreton Stanley (Les Dawson). When their routine arouses audience hatred they must enlist Hedda to assist them. Janet grows increasingly frustrated with her husband's absence when Alan comes down with chicken pox. | ||||
4 | "Episode 4" | Robert Knights | Dean Lemmon and Andrew Montgomery | 5 November 1993 |
Disgusted with his behaviour, Janet kicks her husband out of the house and decides to take a job at the surgery working for Dr. Pollock. Hedda and Ian try to form an act without Dick, but it ends in disaster. An opportunity for Ian and Dick to earn cash by helping Lorimer with a summer camp goes awry when they meet and try to help some fellow veterans. | ||||
5 | "Episode 5" | Robert Knights | Dean Lemmon and Andrew Montgomery | 12 November 1993 |
Things heat up between Janet and her boss. Ian and Dick find a job working on a BBC Radio children's radio programme opposite a neurotic ventriloquist. While singing in a swanky new nightclub, Hedda receives some devastating news. | ||||
6 | "Episode 6" | Robert Knights | Dean Lemmon and Andrew Montgomery | 19 November 1993 |
Ian decides to stand by Dick when he discovers a shocking secret and Hedda becomes a film actress. Moreton Stanley offers Ian a job and he and Janet make a decision concerning their marriage. |
Home media
Demob was first released on DVD by BFS Entertainment on 10 September 2002. It was re-released by Acorn Media on Region 1 and Region 4 DVD on 26 April 2011.[1]
References
- ↑ "New on DVD". Waterloo Record. 27 April 2011. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
External links
- Demob at the Internet Movie Database