Jericho (UK TV series)

This article is about the ITV drama. For the 2006 CBS television drama, see Jericho (2006 TV series).
Jericho
Genre Crime drama
Created by Stewart Harcourt
Developed by Granada Television
Starring Robert Lindsay,
David Troughton,
Ciarán McMenamin,
Lydia Leonard
Composer(s) Dominik Scherrer
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 4
Production
Executive producer(s) Rebecca Eaton,
Damien Timmer,
Michele Buck,
Producer(s) Cameron McAllister
Location(s) State Theatre, Grays, Essex, England, UK
Running time 51 mins (inc. adverts)
Production company(s) Granada Television
WGBH Boston
Release
Original network ITV
Picture format 16:9
Audio format Stereo
Original release 16 October 2005 (2005-10-16) – 6 November 2005 (2005-11-06)
Chronology
Related shows Foyle's War

Jericho is an ITV British crime drama series which was transmitted for four episodes between 16 October and 6 November 2005. It was created and written by Stewart Harcourt and starred Robert Lindsay as Detective Inspector Michael Jericho, who is loved by the public but who is embarrassed by his status as a hero. The series was set in London in 1958.

The series was shown in the United States in 2006 and 2007 as part of the PBS Mystery! series and by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 2008.

Inspector Michael Jericho

Detective Inspector Michael Jericho who has a Jewish background is the son of an English policeman who came back from World War I a violent and changed man. When Jericho was in his early teens he witnessed his father being shot and killed in his own front hall by two gunmen. In his father's right hand was his pocket watch, which Jericho now keeps with him constantly. In the series Jericho carries on a private feud with a local crime boss, who Jericho believes, but cannot prove, either brought about his father's death or knew who had him killed; the boss in turn has suborned a thuggish Scotland Yard Inspector named Christie to constantly anger Jericho by planting newspaper scandal sheets under his very nose about his father being a "corrupt policeman" or by implying Jericho has a less than professional relationship with a neighbour a French prostitute. Jericho's mother is still alive although they only meet on the anniversary of his father's death in the cemetery.

Jericho served in World War II. Besides his off again-on again relationship with his downstairs neighbour/prostitute it is unknown what previous relationships Jericho has had. For assistants Jericho has a faithful secretary; a tough Sergeant and for comic relief an asthmatic younger DI assistant and a street fence. The last episode, "The Hollow Men", had several in-jokes about the TV industry a director replaces Jericho with a comic actor, starring as Jericho in a fictionalized series of Jericho's Scotland Yard cases; at a banquet meeting of police widows and orphans, Christie tries to get Jericho as the master of ceremonies after guest speaker Benny Hill can't come.

Production and reception

The series was seen as an attempt to exploit ITV's success in period crime drama, best exemplified in Foyle's War, and to rival the BBC's Sunday night dramas such as Waking the Dead.[1][2] The first episode had 5.9 million viewers, but this was down to 4.7 million for the second episode, less than its BBC rival.[3] Critical response was cautious,[4] but the series was not deemed a complete success and a second series was not commissioned.

References

  1. Deans, Jason (14 November 2003). "Detective drama lures Lindsay to ITV". Media Guardian. Retrieved 2007-11-16.
  2. Gibson, Owen (14 September 2005). "ITV's big hope for Sunday nights". Media Guardian. Retrieved 2007-11-16.
  3. Plunkett, John (24 October 2005). "Jericho's audience comes tumbling down.". The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-11-16.
  4. Banks-Smith, Nancy (17 October 2005). "The weekend's TV". The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-11-16.

External links

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