Casualty | |
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Series 4 | |
Starring |
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No. of episodes | 12 |
Release | |
Original network | BBC One |
Original release | 8 September – 1 December 1989 |
Series chronology | |
The fourth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 8 September 1989 and finished on 1 December 1989.
The fourth series of Casualty features a cast of characters working in the emergency department of Holby City Hospital. [1] Derek Thompson continues his role as charge nurse Charlie Fairhead, while Brenda Fricker plays state enrolled nurse Megan Roach. Cathy Shipton stars as sister Lisa "Duffy" Duffin, and Eddie Nestor appears as staff nurse Cyril James. Geoffrey Leesley portrays paramedic Keith Cotterill, and Susan Franklyn appears as administrator Valerie Sinclair. [2]
Robson Green was cast as Geordie hospital porter Jimmy Powell following the decision to delocalise the show's setting. [3] Three actors were cast in single-series regular roles. Tam Hoskyns joined the cast as senior house officer Lucy Perry, who was billed as "all books and brains but no practice and compassion". [3] Alex Spencer, portrayed by Belinda Davidson, was introduced as a middle-class student nurse, and Julie Stevens, played by Vivienne McKone, appeared as the overcompensating receptionist. [3]
Episode one also marked the first appearance of paramedic Josh Griffiths, portrayed by Ian Bleasdale. The actor had been hired by director Andrew Morgan in a guest role for a couple of episodes and would later join the regular cast in future series. [4] William Gaminara appeared in four episodes as registrar Andrew Bower, who became a love interest for Duffy. He departed after writers decided to create tragedy for the character of Duffy. [3] At the conclusion of the series, Nestor and Franklyn left their roles as Cyril and Valerie, respectively. [2]
Peter Norris serves as the producer of series four, replacing original producer Geraint Morris, who left to produce The Bill . [5] He was hired by Jonathan Powell, the head of drama at the BBC, following his work on The Rainbow . Norris admitted that he jumped at the chance to produce Casualty. [5] He then hired a casting director and worked with script editor Susan Gander to create new characters. [3] Casualty is based in the fictional city of Holby, which was originally localised to Bristol, where the drama is filmed. Norris wanted to change this and removed the show's obvious Bristolian mannerisms. One of these included Duffy's West Country accent, which was dropped suddenly, as well as the introduction of Geordie character Jimmy Powell. [3]
The drama was moved to a post-watershed Friday night time slot from a Saturday night time slot for this series. [5] Shipton explained that producers wanted to create an "urban feel" to the show by moving it to a later time slot. [6] Norris wanted to use this opportunity to portray "tougher" stories, so he hired writers who wanted to tell stories about special issues and gave them the freedom to do so. [5] While the first three series of Casualty explored the political side of the NHS, Norris wanted series four to explore social issues which were not portrayed in the media. [5] The change in time slot and difference in stories proved successful and ratings grew to over 13 million viewers. [7]
The series opens with a road accident, described as "spectacular" by Hilary Kingsley, the author of Casualty: The Inside Story. [7] The stunt features the most vehicles the show had included to date and used drums of hydrofluoric acid. During filming, one of the drums was pushed too fast, causing it to head towards the camera crew. Norris confessed that he was completing paperwork about the incident for a year afterwards. [7] The series finale features a terrorist attack at a department store. Norris described the making of the episode "a lark" and compared the set to Gone with the Wind with the blood stains on-set. [7] The episode was scheduled for the same week as a remembrance service for the victims of the 1987 Remembrance Day bombing, which concerned the production team. However, there was no complaints, which Norris accredited to Morris previously defending other series of the drama. [7]
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
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41 | 1 | "Chain Reaction" | Andrew Morgan | Ginnie Hole | 8 September 1989 | |
New senior house officer Lucy Perry (Tam Hoskyns) treats a young woman with cervical cancer before being called out with paramedic Cyril James (Eddie Nestor) to a road crash. A car has collided with a lorry carrying drums of chemicals and a second car has rolled over killing the driver. A young female hitchhiker is thrown through the car windscreen and has head injuries. The lorry driver needs a chest drain which Lucy performs at the roadside. A policeman is burned by a pool of acid and dies in CRASH as his wife arrives to see him. | ||||||
42 | 2 | "Accidents Happen" | Jeremy Silberston | Bill Gallagher | 15 September 1989 | |
A housewife trips on her hoover cable falls downstairs and is found unconscious by her neighbour, a mentally handicapped boy. Her husband angrily accuses the boy of causing the accident. Cyril finds out he lost out on the ITU job to nurse Sally; he becomes annoyed with charge nurse Charlie Fairhead (Derek Thompson). Porter Jimmy Powell (Robson Green) is reprimanded again by Charlie; he pleads with Charlie not to call the head of portering and give him another chance. | ||||||
43 | 3 | "A Grand in the Hand" | Sue Butterworth | Sam Snape | 22 September 1989 | |
A suicidal woman ploughs her Volvo estate into a yellow car containing four young people. Two die instantly and a girl dies in CRASH. A policeman spots cans of lager in the wrecked car and wants to breathalyse the driver who has a serious head injury but Medical registrar Andrew Bower (William Gaminara) tells the policeman that this will prove fatal. Later, the suicidal woman admits the accident was her fault. A worker on a building site slips and hot bitumen falls on him. His boss tries to silence him with £1,000 but his wife won't allow it. Charlie finds state enrolled nurse Megan Roach (Brenda Fricker) stealing Valium and makes her flush it away. | ||||||
44 | 4 | "Day Off" | Steve Goldie | Jacqueline Holborough | 29 September 1989 | |
In the Kings Arm pub, Jimmy finds the pub comedian, Arthur Drury, stabbed in the toilets. He needs a chest drain. Two policemen, DS Prescott and DS Monahan, suspect Jimmy, until they find evidence the killer is a deranged young man, who came in earlier with slashed wrists, but fled. His flatmate is also brought in, after being attacked by him; his skull has caved in and he dies. Student nurse Alex Spencer (Belinda Davidson) gives a patient a painkiller before a doctor sees him, causing Sister Lisa "Duffy" Duffin (Cathy Shipton) to snap at her. It emerges that Duffy is pregnant and when Andrew discusses his new position, Duffy informs him that she will be a single mother and that she does not love him. | ||||||
45 | 5 | "Vital Spark" | Terry Iland | John Fletcher | 6 October 1989 | |
Lucy receives a letter in the post, which makes her angry: she has failed her primary exams. Megan throws her pills down the toilet and receptionist Julie Stevens (Vivienne McKone) jokes with Jimmy that his dancing is not good. An elderly man, Alfred Newcombe (Edward Judd, is out with his grandson, Eric Newcombe (Charlie Creed-Miles), showing him his childhood home, when he collapses. Eric drives him to A&E where Lucy diagnoses him with carcinomatosis, a terminal cancer. Eric tries to get him and his father, Graham Newcombe (Rod Culbertson), to make peace and Graham says he loved him once. Alfred later dies peacefully with Eric by his side. Father Dominic struggles with his penance. | ||||||
46 | 6 | "Charity" | Sue Butterworth | Margaret Phelan | 13 October 1989 | |
A child has an asthma attack in a caravan. Her father tries to bring her into A&E, but his car breaks down. The ambulance transporting Katie becomes blocked en route so that when she eventually arrives in A&E, she dies in CRASH. An elderly man, Ivor Maitland (Edward Jewesbury), with thrombosis continues to mistreat his wife, Avril Maitland (Kathleen Byron). Lucy treats a woman with an ectopic pregnancy as well as a man who has had a stroke. Since there is a bed shortage, an elderly woman suffering from cancer has to wait in the corridor. Alex is reprimanded by Duffy when she swears at a man who gropes her, although Alex is cheered up when she saves a man who has swallowed a tooth. | ||||||
47 | 7 | "Victim of Circumstances" | Andrew Morgan | Ginnie Hole | 20 October 1989 | |
An Asian school boy, Vijesh Patel (Dinesh Shukia), is beaten up while delivering newspapers. The staff try to persuade his family to call the police but they think the police won't do anything. Vijesh's father, Bharat Patel (Badi Uzzaman), is brought in with multiple injuries after being attacked by four youths in his shop. A 7 year old boy, Sam Langman (William Phillips), is brought in by his teacher. Lucy diagnoses him with appendicitis. He needs a life-saving operation, but they can't get hold of his mother, Carrie Langman (Lia Williams), so she can sign the consent form. Duffy considers an abortion as she worries about life as a single mother. Carrie reassures Duffy and tells her much Sam means to her. Charlie learns that local hospital, Queen's, will be given a new trauma unit rather than Holby. | ||||||
48 | 8 | "Deluge" | Steve Goldie | Bill Gallagher | 27 October 1989 | |
Charlie tackles administrator Valerie Sinclair (Susan Franklyn) about the department's bed shortage. Megan is annoyed when Mrs. Curtis (Gil Brailey), who has just miscarried, spends a whole shift on a corridor. Trudy Cossey (Melissa Wilson) gets drunk at the grand opening of her father, Don Cossey's (Timothy Davies), garden centre after he warns Trudy not to visit her mother. Trudy collapses and has her stomach pumped at the ED. Megan criticises Don when she realises Megan is regularly drunk; Trudy goes into cardiac arrest although the team save her. Bruce Hillage, an asthamtic boy, is boxing with his trainer and father, Don Hillage (Stephen Bent), when he is knocked out, leaving him with a tooth trapped in his lung. While Bruce has an operation to remove the tooth, Don is told by Bruce's mother, Jean Hillage (June Page), that he is not Bruce's biological father as she had an affair before they married. Alex spends her shift travelling with paramedics Josh Griffiths (Ian Bleasdale) and Keith Cotterill (Geoffrey Leesley). | ||||||
49 | 9 | "Union" | Gerry Harrison | Jacqueline Holborough | 3 November 1989 | |
Megan talks to reporters about the suffers the ED are facing, creating front page headlines. She is supported by her colleagues but Valerie warns Megan that she could face a disciplinary hearing. Charlie is at a seminar, leaving Duffy as the nursing lead. Agency nurse Glen Buchanan (Grant Piro) arrives for a shift and catches the eye of Julie. Raqi Darboush (Tope Martins), a 12-year-old Sudanese girl, is admitted to A&E seriously ill after being circumcised by her grandmother (Jeillo Edwards). Raqi's father (Abi Gouhad) is enraged and when Raqi dies, Lucy warns the family that the practice is illegal. Alex becomes upset by Raqi's death so Jimmy comforts her and Duffy reminds her that it is good to become upset sometimes. The surgical consultant observes Lucy demonstrating relaxing techniques on an anxious man, Clive Jolly (Godfrey Jackman), with heart palpitations; the consultant decides Clive is neurotic and warns Lucy that if she wants to succeed, she should not follow these ideas. | ||||||
50 | 10 | "Taking Stock" | Sue Butterworth | Barry Purchese | 10 November 1989 | |
A couple, Dennis Sedgeley (Peter Tilbury) and Joan Sedgeley (Caroline Mortimer), argue as they prepare to auction their bankrupt farm. Joan tells Dennis that their marriage is over; Dennis taunts her and she shoots him. He forgives her, but dies as doctor Mr. Lewis (Christopher Villiers) performs surgery on him in CRASH. Joan is taken away by police. A working mother, Emma Foster (Anna Lindup), who has left her two-year-old son, Ben Foster (Sam Perez), home alone, finds him with an empty aspirin bottle and takes him to A&E. She is hysterical as they give him ipecac to make him sick and give him blood tests, which come back negative. Lucy wishes to keep him in overnight and Emma is worried they'll take him away from her. Jimmy finds a man, Peter Cunningham (Jeremy Bulloch), in the street with severe eye pain, and admits him, although he is reluctant and very agitated. He tells staff he has been mugged, but when Julie tells the police this, it emerges he matches the description of a rapist whose eyes were sprayed by gas. | ||||||
51 | 11 | "Banking for Beginners" | Jim Hill | Bryan Elsley | 24 November 1989 | |
Alex meets with a friend, Jonathan (Peter McCulloch), who offers her a banking job, which would double her pay. She decides to think about it. As she is about to leave, a man collapses on the next table. She resuscitates him and takes him to Queens Hospital, but he dies. After Alex arrives to work late, Duffy snaps although Alex explains her delay. With Charlie away, Duffy is stressed; management have cut their agency budget so they do not have enough staff. An elderly lady, Mrs Calthan (Patricia Hayes), is admitted with a broken hip after falling. Jimmy suspects her daughter, Mary Calthan (Eileen Nicholas), has pushed her downstairs, and tries to warn Lucy, but she dismisses it, believing the old lady is senile. When Mary pushes Mrs Calthan off her cubicle bed, injuring Duffy in the process, Lucy realises that Mary has dementia, not Mrs Calthan. Jimmy becomes annoyed that nobody considers his opinions and tells Alex that he is considering a career in nursing. | ||||||
52 | 12 | "Hanging On" | Steve Goldie | Sam Snape | 1 December 1989 | |
A surprise leaving party is thrown for Alex at the end of her shift. However, a bomb explosion in the city centre puts the team on red alert and two surgeons, Arnold Richardson (Julian Glover) and Simon Spencer (Philip Lowrie), are drafted in to assist the team. Two schoolgirls, Janet (Kelly Fennell) and Anna Robson (Melina Michael), are admitted after a school trip to a panto. Janet has minor head injuries, whereas Anna is taken to the operating theatre for a laparotomy; Anna survives the operation. The husband of the schoolgirls' teacher, Peter Marshall (Michael Dyerball), frantically searches for his wife. Cyril discovers a patient is a shoplifer when he notices her bag is full of jewellery. Jimmy waits with bodies; under a sheet, a mobile phone rings; Jimmy answers and tells a worried wife that he will get her husband to call her back. |
Catherine Ellen Shipton is an English actress, known for portraying the role of Lisa "Duffy" Duffin in the BBC medical drama Casualty. After leaving the series in 2020, she has since appeared in the Channel 4 soap opera Hollyoaks as Lydia Smith.
The first series of the British medical drama television series Casualty began airing on 6 September 1986, and concluded on 27 December 1986. The show was created by Jeremy Brock and Paul Unwin after the pair were both hospitalised for different reasons. Brock and Unwin were deeply concerned with what they saw within hospitals and decided to pitch a document in 1985 for the BBC. It was reported the pitch document 'read like a manifesto', and the show was then commissioned. Geraint Morris was appointed as the show's producer. Casualty was commissioned to boost ratings on BBC One at peak times after ratings began to decline between 1984 and 1985. Prior to first series airing, Brock and Unwin visited a hospital in Bristol where they met a charge nurse called Pete Salt. Salt was appointed the series medical advisor.
The second series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 12 September 1987 and finished on 19 December 1987.
The third series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 9 September 1988 and finished on 11 November 1988. This series consists of ten episodes, a decrease from the previous series. The broadcast of episode 10 was delayed until November 1988 following the death of guest actor Roy Kinnear. Succeeding episodes were brought forward one week in the schedule as a result.
The sixth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 6 September 1991 and finished on 27 February 1992.
The fifth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 7 September 1990 and finished on 7 December 1990.
The seventh series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 12 September 1992 and finished on 27 February 1993.
The eighth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 18 September 1993 and finished on 26 February 1994.
The tenth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 16 September 1995 and finished on 24 February 1996. Notable events of the series include Ash's marriage to Laura, Baz's affair with Charlie, Baz's pregnancy, and a gas explosion.
The eleventh series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 14 September 1996 and finished on 22 February 1997. Notable events of the series include the death of Josh's wife and children as a result of a house fire, the birth of Charlie and Baz's son Louis, and the near-fatal stabbing of Jude at the end of the series.
The twelfth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 11 September 1997 and finished on 28 February 1998. The first episode was originally due to be shown on the evening of Saturday 6 September, but this was delayed until the following Thursday due to coverage of the Funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales earlier on that day, as the BBC felt it would be inappropriate to air the episode so soon after such an event.
The thirteenth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 5 September 1998 and finished on 13 March 1999. It saw another increase, this time to 28 episodes, including a feature-length Christmas episode. This was the first series to be broadcast in widescreen. The series also acted as a launchpad for characters and storylines in the spin-off series Holby City, which started in January 1999.
The fourteenth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 18 September 1999 and finished on 25 March 2000. It saw another increase, this time to 30 episodes.
The fifteenth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 16 September 2000 and finished on 28 April 2001. It saw another increase, this time to 36 episodes, including two hour-long self-contained 'specials', "Sympathy for the Devil" and "Something from the Heart", which were shown in addition to the regular Saturday night episodes.
The sixteenth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 15 September 2001 and finished on 29 June 2002. It saw another increase, this time to 40 episodes. On 30 March 2002, Episode 350 had to be shown on BBC Two, due to some schedule changes on BBC One resulting from the death of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother earlier that day.
The eighteenth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty began airing on BBC One in the United Kingdom on 13 September 2003, and concluded on 28 August 2004. The series consists of 46 episodes, which focus on the professional and personal lives of medical and ancillary staff at the emergency department (ED) of the fictional Holby City Hospital. Foz Allen serves as the series producer, while Mal Young and Mervyn Watson act as the executive producers of the series. Twelve regular cast members reprised their roles from the previous series and six actors joined the cast during the series. Original cast member Julia Watson, who portrays Baz Wilder, also returned.
"Too Old for This Shift" is a special feature-length episode of the British medical drama television series Casualty. It was broadcast as the premiere episode of its thirty-first series on 27 August 2016, on BBC One, to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the show. The special, which is 99 minutes long, was co-written by Matthew Barry and Andy Bayliss, directed by Steve Hughes, and produced by Lucy Raffety.
Lisa "Duffy" Duffin is a character from the BBC medical drama Casualty, played by Cathy Shipton. Duffy was created by Jeremy Brock and Paul Unwin as one of the serial's ten original characters. Shipton received her audition just as she was thinking of giving up her acting career. She thought her chances of being cast were slim, as she had on bandages following a fall; however, the producer, Geraint Morris, was fascinated by the incident and asked her about her time in the hospital. Shipton was considered for the role of receptionist Susie Mercier, before being cast as Duffy. She made her debut in the pilot episode of the first series, broadcast on 6 September 1986.
"One" is the thirty-first series finale of the British medical drama television series Casualty and the 1,049th episode of the overall series. The episode is written by Paul Unwin, the show's co-creator, and directed by Jon Sen. It premiered on BBC One and BBC One HD on 29 July 2017. "One" is a fly on the wall episode following an hour in Holby City Hospital's emergency department (ED) with additional focus on sister Lisa "Duffy" Duffin mentoring two work experience girls and paramedic Jez Andrews grieving the death of a baby.
The thirty-fourth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty began airing on BBC One in the United Kingdom on 17 August 2019, one week after the end of the previous series. The series consists of 43 episodes. Lucy Raffety continues her role as series producer, while Simon Harper continues his role as the show's executive producer; this is Raffety's final series as producer, and she was replaced by Loretta Preece. Production on the series was postponed in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which also resulted in multiple transmission breaks. A single episode was also pulled due to comparisons between its content and the pandemic; the episode was broadcast as the final episode of the series at a later date. The theme of the series is reflecting how the National Health Service (NHS) is "under pressure", with elements focusing on "the hierarchy of pressure on the doctors". The series is also promoted through multiple trailers.