Endeavour is a British television detective drama series created by Russell Lewis and co-produced by Mammoth Screen and Masterpiece in association with ITV Studios. It is a prequel to the long-running Inspector Morse series and was first broadcast on ITV1 in the United Kingdom on 2 January 2012 and on PBS in the United States on 1 July 2012, as part of the Masterpiece Mystery! anthology. Nine series have been made, with the last broadcast on 12 March 2023. [1]
Series | Episodes | Originally aired | Average UK viewers (millions) inc. ITV HD and ITV+1 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | ||||
Pilot | 2 January 2012 | 8.21 | |||
1 | 4 | 14 April 2013 | 5 May 2013 | 7.04 | |
2 | 4 | 30 March 2014 | 20 April 2014 | 6.78 | |
3 | 4 | 3 January 2016 | 24 January 2016 | 6.82 | |
4 | 4 | 8 January 2017 | 29 January 2017 | 7.07 | |
5 | 6 | 4 February 2018 | 11 March 2018 | 6.67 | |
6 | 4 | 10 February 2019 | 3 March 2019 | 7.16 | |
7 | 3 | 9 February 2020 | 23 February 2020 | 6.80 | |
8 | 3 | 12 September 2021 | 26 September 2021 | 5.22 | |
9 | 3 | 26 February 2023 | 12 March 2023 | 5.13 |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] includes ITV HD and ITV +1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Endeavour" | Colm McCarthy | Russell Lewis | 2 January 2012 | 8.21 | |
June 1965. An investigation into the murder of a 15-year-old schoolgirl and the apparent suicide of her boyfriend lead Oxford City Police to the discovery of illegal sex parties where under-age girls are procured for politicians, businessmen, Oxford dons, and policemen. Endeavour's superior, Detective Inspector Fred Thursday, recognising the young constable as a detective he can trust, takes him under his wing. Determined to break the case, he and Morse bring it to a successful conclusion. [lower-alpha 1] |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] includes ITV HD and ITV +1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2 | 1 | "Girl" | Edward Bazalgette | Russell Lewis | 14 April 2013 | 7.43 | |
June 1965. The sudden death of a secretarial student named Margaret Bell and the shooting of a doctor appear unconnected, despite Morse's theories. Chief Superintendent Bright, the new commanding officer of the Oxford City Police, is unimpressed with Morse's zeal and protests to Detective Inspector Thursday that the bagman's position is a Detective Sergeant's job and the young constable is too inexperienced. Following the shooting of a vicar, Morse is reduced to general duties for dismissing a beautiful but mentally unstable girl as a suspect, and must continue his investigations alone despite warnings of possible dismissal from his superiors. [lower-alpha 2] | |||||||
3 | 2 | "Fugue" | Tom Vaughan | Russell Lewis | 21 April 2013 | 7.00 | |
July 1965. An unknown menace stalks Oxford, appearing at first to be just another deranged lunatic, killing at random. But Detective Constable Endeavour Morse uncovers an underlying method to the madness: the elaborate staging of the crimes suggests that the killer shares Endeavour's passion for opera. With Oxford city police scrambling to find the next potential victim, it seems that Endeavour has finally met his intellectual match. As the body count increases, letters containing cryptic clues, goading the police for their failures, are sent to the Oxford Mail. Only a detective of Endeavour's intellect can break them. [lower-alpha 3] | |||||||
4 | 3 | "Rocket" | Craig Viveiros | Russell Lewis | 28 April 2013 | 7.11 | |
September 1965. The prospect of a visit to Oxford by Her Royal Highness Princess Margaret, who is to unveil the British Imperial Electric Company's new "Standfast" Mark Two missile, has Chief Superintendent Bright, slated to provide security, on red alert. But when an unpopular worker is found murdered in a secluded area of the shop floor, Endeavour must pursue the truth - and then justice - from the sidelines and in the intoxicating presence of the firm's boss's secretary Alice Vexin, an old acquaintance from his days at Oxford. [lower-alpha 4] | |||||||
5 | 4 | "Home" | Colm McCarthy | Russell Lewis | 5 May 2013 | 6.62 | |
December 1965. Morse, still on general duties and studying for his forthcoming sergeant's exam, investigates an apparent hit-and-run accident that has claimed the life of an Oxford don. The victim had been at odds with his peers over the sale of a piece of college-owned land to a development company in conjunction with the town council. The case is complicated by the appearance in Oxford of an East London gangster named Vic Kasper, an enemy from DI Thursday's past, which reignites a personal feud as Thursday thinks Kasper is somehow involved with the case. In the meantime, Morse makes a trip back home to Lincolnshire to visit his dying father. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] includes ITV HD and ITV +1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 | 1 | "Trove" | Kristoffer Nyholm | Russell Lewis | 30 March 2014 | 7.01 | |
In May 1966, after returning from sick leave for several months at County (Oxfordshire) Police's Witney Station under D.I. Church, Morse investigates a suspicious suicide during an Oxford parade, a missing girl from Oxfordshire, and the theft of historical artefacts from a college. A beauty pageant and local by-election draw Morse into disagreement with Inspector Thursday and Superintendent Bright when he believes they are connected to the crimes, despite the evidence. A missing notebook and a Masonic lodge hamper the investigation. | |||||||
7 | 2 | "Nocturne" | Giuseppe Capotondi | Russell Lewis | 6 April 2014 | 6.89 | |
In July 1966 at the Museum of Natural History, almost empty, save for some schoolgirls, Adrian Weiss, a specialist in heraldry and genealogy, is murdered. The similar murder of a 12-year-old girl at her boarding school leads Morse to delve into a 100-year-old murder mystery involving a wealthy family with connections to India and an inheritance. The girls staying for the summer, as they cannot reach home for the vacation, play pranks based on the book about the murdered family 100 years earlier, but do not own up until afterwards. The fifth generation descendant of the owner of the large family home, now the school for girls, thinks he might finally inherit with a change in laws for a bastard child. He murders those in his way, worked out by Morse by reading Weiss's detailed files. A masonic ring connected to the case goes missing. [lower-alpha 5] | |||||||
8 | 3 | "Sway" | Andy Wilson | Russell Lewis | 13 April 2014 | 6.58 | |
In the period before Remembrance Sunday in November 1966, a housewife found strangled with a silk stocking in her own home becomes the third such death in Oxford in a month. All of the women are married, alone, and their wedding rings are missing. Tracing the stockings to the sole retailer, Burridges Department Store. A number of suspects surface, and for Inspector Thursday, a face from the past he thought long dead leads to complications in his family life and with Morse. | |||||||
9 | 4 | "Neverland" | Geoffrey Sax | Russell Lewis | 20 April 2014 | 6.63 | |
In December 1966, a boy with a brutal father is reported missing from his home. The body of a journalist is found on a railway line and within days an escaped convict, with only a month of his sentence remaining, is found dead. The two men have connections with Blenheim Vale, a disused correctional facility for boys in Kidlington, soon to be redeveloped as a police station for the new Thames Valley Police, into which Oxford City Police and Oxfordshire Constabulary are about to be merged. Thursday's and Morse's investigation leads to a property developer and corruption in high places including missing police evidence in Morse's last three investigations. Morse is in jail and Thursday lies shot as the episode closes. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] [8] includes ITV HD and ITV+1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 | 1 | "Ride" | Sandra Goldbacher | Russell Lewis | 3 January 2016 | 6.84 | |
March 1967. Morse is disillusioned after spending time in prison following his last case, and even though he is exonerated, ponders his future with the police. Having relocated to an isolated lake front cottage, Morse is befriended by an unhappy millionaire and his friends. At a funfair on Cowley Green a young woman, Jeannie Hearne, is spirited away into the night, seemingly without explanation. When her body is found the next morning, Inspector Thursday investigates and discovers that Morse's new friends are involved. When Morse's millionaire friend is killed, but then appears the next day, Morse realises his future is as a detective and the solution lies at the funfair where Hearne went missing. | |||||||
11 | 2 | "Arcadia" | Bryn Higgins | Russell Lewis | 10 January 2016 | 7.16 | |
April 1967. The death of an artist in a horrendous house fire leaves Oxford City Police baffled as to the cause of the blaze. A housewife dies of a ‘tummy bug’ that has seen half of Chief Superintendent Bright’s men go on sick leave. Tainted food sold at a local supermarket, Richardson's, and the blackmail of the wealthy owners who refuse to pay culminates in the kidnap of their daughter with a ransom demand from the dead artist. Morse strives to connect these elements to solve the deaths and kidnapping. WPC Shirley Trewlove joins the police station and in the end DS Peter Jakes departs. [lower-alpha 6] | |||||||
12 | 3 | "Prey" | Lawrence Gough | Russell Lewis | 17 January 2016 | 6.89 | |
Early June 1967. The missing persons case of Danish au pair Ingrid Hjort proves far from routine, pulling Endeavour into the duelling worlds of Oxford scientific academia, the city's vast parks, as well as an urban legend said to haunt the untamed wilderness of the Oxfordshire countryside. | |||||||
13 | 4 | "Coda" | Oliver Blackburn | Russell Lewis | 24 January 2016 | 6.38 | |
Mid June 1967. Gangland loyalties are tested when criminals vie to replace their dead boss Harry Rose. Police loyalties are tested when Fred Thursday is suspended for hitting an informant. Bank staff loyalties are tested where Joan Thursday works when armed robbers trap them along with Morse, who is there investigating a killing and payroll robbery. As hostages are taken, he and Joan try to conceal their identities. Morse realises he is part of someone else's plan to conceal another crime. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] [8] includes ITV HD and ITV+1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 | 1 | "Game" | Ashley Pearce | Russell Lewis | 8 January 2017 | 7.56 | |
July 1967. The body of a scientist, who disappeared over a month previously, is found floating in a local river. The initial suspected cause of death is accidental drowning, but Morse is unconvinced. When a second victim is found drowned at the local swimming baths, Morse begins to recognise a pattern. He connects the victims to a university science group who are undertaking work on one of the first working computer systems. The death of a third victim sways Morse to convince a skeptical Thursday to use the computer technology to identify a possible list of suspects, connected in particular to the second victim. The discovery of another body at a farmhouse owned by one of the possible suspects leads Morse right into the path of the killer. Meanwhile, Morse is shocked by the news that his sergeant's exam papers have gone astray. Even worse, after confronting Bright, he discovers that his paper was the only one to have mysteriously disappeared. [lower-alpha 7] | |||||||
15 | 2 | "Canticle" | Michael Lennox | Russell Lewis | 15 January 2017 | 7.18 | |
Labourer Barry Finch is found dead in the garage of a local public house, and initial reports suggest the cause of death is strangulation. Meanwhile, Morse is asked to act as bodyguard to busybody Joy Pettybon, a moral crusader who since coming to Oxford to appear on a nightly television show, 'The Almanac', has received threats to her life. Her fellow guests on the show, pop group The Wildwood, whose record Pettybon has tried to have banned from the airwaves, are prime suspects for sending the threats - and when one of Pettybon's closest allies, Reverend Golightly, is poisoned shortly after her appearance on the show, suspicions on the tearaway group begin to grow. When one of the group's founding members disappears during a writing session, Morse and Thursday are thrust out into the dark cold Oxford night to try and find him. When he finally reappears, they discover he too has been given a concoction of mysterious poison. When further tests are carried out on Barry Finch's corpse, traces of the poison are once again discovered, and Morse finds himself on the trail of a possible triple murderer. | |||||||
16 | 3 | "Lazaretto" | Börkur Sigþórsson | Russell Lewis | 22 January 2017 | 6.77 | |
Morse is called to deal with the death of an elderly Oxford resident, Mrs Zacharides, who appears to have died of natural causes. Meanwhile, the star witness in the case against the Matthews gang, Terence Bakewell, is admitted to hospital from remand, and Morse is assigned to act as bodyguard. While on the ward, he meets a regular patient, Mr. Talbot, who tells him that Bed 10 has become infamous for unexplained deaths. Back at the station, Thursday finds Bright collapsed in his office, having seemingly suffered from a perforated ulcer. Back on the ward, Morse catches an armed intruder who is trying to get to Bakewell, and gives pursuit. Following the breach of security, Bakewell is moved to the uninhabited Bed 10. The next morning, as the ward staff arrive on shift, they discover that Bakewell, who appeared to have been in recovery, has died. As Morse starts trawling back through the victims of Bed 10, he discovers that Mr. Zacharides was murdered. Suspecting that the two cases are linked, Morse tries to unravel the clues to identify the killer. Back from surgery, Bright is told that he is to be moved into the uninhabited Bed 10. | |||||||
17 | 4 | "Harvest" | Jim Loach | Russell Lewis | 29 January 2017 | 6.76 | |
September 1967. The discovery of a body on an archaeological dig sends Morse to the village of Bramford, where botanist Matthew Laxman disappeared five years earlier and where pagan customs are practised for the forthcoming Autumn equinox. All the locals, including reclusive clairvoyant Dowsabelle Chattox, deny seeing Laxman until Selina Berger, whose brother is a doctor, recalls seeing the missing man's car in the vicinity of the nuclear power plant nearby. While its director Elliot Blake assures Morse that it poses no danger, it is not a welcome presence in the village, the proposed site of a new reservoir. Morse believes the locals are lying when Laxman's jacket is found on a scarecrow and Dowsabelle and others admit that he came to Bramford and to the power station. As the celebrations begin Morse and Thursday rush to the station to prevent an aggrieved avenger destroying the whole area before unmasking Laxman's killer, with their bravery earning them both the George Medal and Morse his long-blocked promotion to Sergeant. |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] [8] includes ITV HD and ITV+1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 | 1 | "Muse" | Brady Hood | Russell Lewis | 4 February 2018 | 7.42 | |
April 1968. Ex-boxer Joey Sikes is killed on the night of a failed theft of the last Fabergé egg from the Oxford college where it is to be auctioned. Next day lecturer Robin Grey is also murdered and the link is sex worker and artists' model Eve Thorne, who was seen with both men. When the egg is stolen, suspicion falls on another of Eve's clients, latest victim Simon Lake. Morse, now a detective sergeant, discovers that Lake and Grey belonged to an elite club and were involved in a scam regarding the egg. In establishing whether the murders were linked to the club or the egg Morse must cope with a lazy new constable and the reappearance of Joan Thursday. As the episode closes, radio news announces the assassination of Dr Martin Luther King Jr. in the US. [lower-alpha 8] | |||||||
19 | 2 | "Cartouche" | Andy Wilson | Russell Lewis | 11 February 2018 | 6.61 | |
May 1968. Ex-policeman and museum attendant Ronald Beavis is murdered after watching a re-run of 'The Pharaoh's Curse' at the Roxy cinema. Of its staff only organist Leslie Garnier can recall him having a secret conversation. Morse takes Carol, daughter of Fred Thursday's flash brother Charlie, to a glossy remake of the film, witnessing museum curator, Egyptian Dr Shoutry, protest that it cheapens his culture and carries a curse. Shortly afterwards Leslie is poisoned and the film's star, Emil Valdemar is given a sinister token, stolen from the museum. Morse believes Valdemar to have been the intended victim and rushes to save him in a cinema now in flames to prevent its sale. At the same time racist attacks on properties owned by a local racketeer would appear to have links with the Roxy and its employees. [lower-alpha 9] | |||||||
20 | 3 | "Passenger" | Jim Field Smith | Russell Lewis | 18 February 2018 | 6.73 | |
June 1968. Morse suspects a connection between a woman's disappearance and the unsolved murder of a teenager four years earlier. The discovery of another body and some unusual crime-scene details, however, suggest another possibility. Thursday investigates a lorry hijack which he believes could be the work of a local gangster and Fancy takes on an informant in the case. [lower-alpha 10] | |||||||
21 | 4 | "Colours" | Robert Quinn | Russell Lewis | 25 February 2018 | 6.61 | |
Oxford seethes as a protest at a hair salon exposes rising racial tensions in the city. Meanwhile, Thursday's son discovers a murder at his Army base, and Morse must uncover long-held secrets within the regiment to solve the case. Sam Thursday departs for his military deployment. [lower-alpha 11] | |||||||
22 | 5 | "Quartet" | Geoffrey Sax | Russell Lewis | 4 March 2018 | 6.42 | |
Morse investigates the assassination of a competitor at an international It's a Knockout event and a spectator, a small boy, is hit by a stray bullet. The Metropolitan Police's Special Branch quickly take over the case but Morse delves deeper and is drawn into a web of espionage, big business and dark secrecy. Thursday faces a dilemma as he tries to protect a woman from her violent husband in his local newsagency. | |||||||
23 | 6 | "Icarus" | Gordon Anderson | Russell Lewis | 11 March 2018 | 6.25 | |
Morse investigates the disappearance of a teacher from a public school and begins to question whom he can trust when a body is discovered. Thursday grapples with the imminent closure of Cowley Station as he tries to connect Eddie Nero to a series of unsolved murders and he assigns Fancy to track down the man who may be the key to cracking the case. In the end, DC Fancy is killed (apparently in gang crossfire) and WPC Trewlove transfers to the Metropolitan Police. [lower-alpha 12] |
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] [8] includes ITV HD and ITV+1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
24 | 1 | "Pylon" | Johnny Kenton | Russell Lewis | 10 February 2019 | 7.53 | |
Early July 1969. Out of CID and sporting a moustache for the first time, Morse finds himself policing a lonely country patch in Banbury, but when he discovers the dead body of a missing schoolgirl, next to a pylon with a white horse strolling across a field, it opens the quiet backwater to the roar of Castle Gate CID, now staffed by a demoted Thursday and an old adversary. With the former's hands tied, Morse resolves to prove an accused teenager's innocence, and to uncover the truth behind the young girl's death. [lower-alpha 13] | |||||||
25 | 2 | "Apollo" | Shaun Evans | Russell Lewis | 17 February 2019 | 7.09 | |
Late July 1969. As the highly-anticipated Apollo 11 Moon landing draws near, Morse finds himself investigating the death of a promising young astrophysicist and his girlfriend. On first inspection, their deaths seem to be a result of a tragic car accident, but various clues point to foul play, and Morse enlists the help of an injured Thursday to uncover the truth. [lower-alpha 14] | |||||||
26 | 3 | "Confection" | Leanne Welham | Russell Lewis | 24 February 2019 | 7.14 | |
Mid-September 1969. The murder of a chocolate factory owner during a local hunt leads Morse to the sleepy village of Chigton Green. [lower-alpha 15] When he learns of a vicious campaign of gossip and rumour, it seems likely that two murders are connected. One of the targets, a beautiful, single mother, captures Morse's attention, giving him food for thought about the future. | |||||||
27 | 4 | "Degüello" | Jamie Donoughue | Russell Lewis | 3 March 2019 | 6.87 | |
Mid-October 1969. When a librarian is gruesomely murdered at the Bodleian, Morse and Thursday have little to go on besides a set of muddy boot prints. With the two main suspects having their own motives for killing the librarian, Morse digs deeper into their backgrounds, tracking a trail of corruption and conspiracy that appears to connect to their seemingly innocent college bequest, finally cracking a case that has haunted the Cowley boys for so long. In the end, DS Jago is shot dead by DI Box, and the latter is seriously wounded by DS Jago. [lower-alpha 16] |
Series 7 took place in 1970, with Russell Lewis writing the episodes. In the US, series 7 aired on consecutive Sundays, August 9–23, 2020 on PBS as Masterpiece Theater.
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] [8] includes ITV HD and ITV+1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
28 | 1 | "Oracle" | Shaun Evans | Russell Lewis | 9 February 2020 | 7.25 | |
January 1970. Morse, on holiday in Venice, strikes up a sexual relationship with Violetta Talenti. During Morse's two-week absence, Thursday investigates the murder of Molly Andrews on a towpath and suspects her boyfriend, Carl Sturgis, but he has an alibi. Come April, Morse is asked by Chief Superintendent Bright to take a second look at the case, and he is led to scientists researching "latent brain activity" (ESP) using volunteers, one of whom was Andrews. Soon, one of the researchers, Dr. Benford, is found dead; Benford had a highly gifted volunteer, Jenny Tate, who saw the murder in her mind. Morse has his wallet stolen in the street and an old Oxford classmate, Ludo, comes to his aid; Ludo later turns out to be Violetta's husband. [lower-alpha 17] | |||||||
29 | 2 | "Raga" | Zam Salim | Russell Lewis | 16 February 2020 | 6.73 | |
June 1970. A man is killed on the same towpath as Molly Andrews. Thursday, unwilling to close the case after a suspect confessed to Benford's murder but was also charged with Andrews's murder, patrols the towpath at night. An Indian takeaway driver is lured to his death at a flat of a TV cooking-show personality, Oberon Prince, who has gone missing. Racial tensions in Oxford rise during the run-up to the general election when an Anglo-Indian youth is fatally stabbed by a young supporter of far-right candidate Martin Gorman, whose daughter lives in the same block of flats as Prince. Morse discovers Prince was a gambler in card games run by Gorman and had recently won a lot of money. Ludo Talenti tells Morse his wife is away and invites Morse to his home but Violetta is there. She later secretly meets Morse to rekindle their affair but he rebuffs her. Violetta undeterred arrives at Morse's home and he succumbs to her advances. | |||||||
30 | 3 | "Zenana" | Kate Saxon | Russell Lewis | 23 February 2020 | 6.42 | |
Another woman is found murdered on the towpath suffering from bite marks, and Thursday arrests Carl Sturgis despite the lack of evidence. When yet another woman, Petra Cornwell, a student at the all-female college Lady Matilda, is found dead on the towpath. Morse and Thursday have a public falling out in front of pathologist Max DeBryn and Strange, making his working as Thursday's 'bagman' untenable. Morse returns to Jenny Tate, the gifted ESP student, who is haunted by her childhood past and blamed for a fire that killed her family. Ludo seeks Morse's advice concerning his belief that his wife is seeing another man and arranges a meeting of all three at a restaurant. The teachers and students of Lady Matilda lay a trap to catch the towpath killer. A fatal accident at Lady Matilda's is added by Morse to a number of fatal accidents brought to his attention by presswoman Dorothea Frazil. Chief Superintendent Bright's wife is fatally electrocuted in a freak accident. Morse claims that an insurance fraud scheme is behind the apparent accidents—a scheme that involved buying people’s life insurance policies (viaticals) and then killing off the insured. This claim is dismissed by Thursday and Bright. But Strange then assists Morse in seeking more evidence for his theory and they both end up at the house occupied by Carl Sturgis, where they discover that Jenny Tate is being held prisoner. DS Strange is injured there in a stabbing. Continuing to look for evidence to support his insurance-fraud theory, Morse heads back to Venice and the opera house where he had first met Violetta Talenti exactly a year before. Once there he discovers that he has all along been a puppet in a plan of her husband’s. [lower-alpha 18] |
Series 8 was broadcast from 12 September 2021 and took place in 1971, with Russell Lewis writing and Shaun Evans, Ian Aryeh and Kate Saxon directing the episodes. [9]
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] [8] includes ITV HD and ITV+1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
31 | 1 | "Striker" | Shaun Evans | Russell Lewis | 12 September 2021 | 5.35 | |
January 1971. Though wearied from the events of the past year, there’s no chance of ‘light duties’ at the CID – crestfallen and rarely without a scotch in-hand, Endeavour finds himself right back in the thick of it. An explosive murder at an Oxford college has potentially far-reaching political ramifications and DS Strange returns from sick leave. Meanwhile, the Irish Republican Army (IRA) have made a threat against the life of the Oxford Wanderers’ star striker and Endeavour is tasked with the duty of acting bodyguard. [lower-alpha 19] | |||||||
32 | 2 | "Scherzo" | Ian Aryeh | Russell Lewis | 19 September 2021 | 5.03 | |
May 1971. A cab driver is found dead in his taxi, owing a large debt to a colleague. Investigations into his death lead Endeavour and the team first to a nudist colony, where guests are making the most of the spring sunshine, and later to the heart of a blue movie outfit in London’s Soho. Meanwhile, at home, Endeavour receives a guest who reminds him of a past he’d sooner forget. As the investigation into the cab driver’s murder unfolds, Endeavour starts to retreat from those close to him and appears set on a course of wilful self-destruction. | |||||||
33 | 3 | "Terminus" | Kate Saxon | Russell Lewis | 26 September 2021 | 5.27 | |
November 1971. A passenger is killed shortly after leaving a bus. Morse was also on the bus but was in a drunken stupor. The Thursday family learns that son Sam has gone AWOL from the army, in Northern Ireland. The tension for them is very high. Morse begins to work on the murder of the bus passenger, learning about him. Thursday is angry about Morse drinking too much, wants him to take time off. Morse catches the same bus again two days later and it becomes trapped in a snowdrift. The passengers seek refuge at a hotel where years earlier there had been a massacre. Then the passengers start being killed. Morse's work helps him through the high tension experience of being caught with an unusual group of passengers in the closed hotel, though alcohol withdrawal symptoms also challenge him. In the end, the sun comes out as the snow finally begins to thaw. Morse agrees to take the recommended time off to address his issues. |
Series 9 was broadcast on 26 February 2023, with all three episodes set in 1972. [10] It is the final series produced, by agreement of PBS Masterpiece, ITV and the cast. [ citation needed ] Russell Lewis wrote all episodes, with Shaun Evans, Nirpal Bhogal and Kate Saxon directing. The story comes to its logical end, telling how Inspector Morse developed into the character of the Morse series, across 72 hours of television episodes in ten years. Filming started in Oxford on 22 May 2022. [11] [12] The announcement of the final series was made a week or so before series 8 began airing in the US on 19 June 2022. [10] The formal release for audiences in the United States, via PBS 'Masterpiece' was Sunday, June 18 at 9:00 p.m. [13]
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [2] [8] includes ITV HD and ITV+1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
34 | 1 | "Prelude" | Shaun Evans [14] | Russell Lewis | 26 February 2023 | 5.04 | |
Spring 1972. Endeavour’s phased return to Castle Gate coincides with another homecoming, that of the Oxford Concert Orchestra, led by conductor Sir Alexander Lermontov. A gruesome discovery in a college garden leads Endeavour and Thursday to the orchestra's door, and when a second tragedy hits, they uncover a web of secrets. Meanwhile, grisly London business turns up in Oxford and a criminal from "The Smoke" is brutally murdered in a derelict warehouse. As the mystery unfolds, Endeavour and Thursday realise there are some unsettling ties to a case the pair had hoped was long since behind them. [lower-alpha 20] | |||||||
35 | 2 | "Uniform" | Nirpal Bhogal | Russell Lewis | 5 March 2023 | 5.00 | |
Endeavour suspects a connection between a woman’s disappearance and her past employer but another missing person case demands his attention. This time, it’s a notable artist, whose work adorns the covers of a series of paperback mysteries. Meanwhile, reports flood in of stolen cars and wanton criminal damage, as a debauched group of university undergraduates wreak havoc. The murder of a uniformed copper sees Bright command all hands on deck while, much to Endeavour and Thursday’s chagrin, the cast of a television detective series, Jolly For Short, are in town filming the final series. [lower-alpha 21] | |||||||
36 | 3 | "Exeunt" | Kate Saxon | Russell Lewis | 12 March 2023 | 5.35 | |
Final episode. Endeavour's investigates a number of death notices in the Oxford Mail, each with a cryptic message. They lead him to a series of funerals, then to a funeral director's which had just ceased trading. Thursday deals with issues from his past. While Strange may be transferred to Kidlington, Bright plans retirement. In the end, Morse drives off in his black Jaguar into the sunset. [lower-alpha 22] |
Norman Colin Dexter was an English crime writer known for his Inspector Morse series of novels, which were written between 1975 and 1999 and adapted as an ITV television series, Inspector Morse, from 1987 to 2000. His characters have spawned a sequel series, Lewis, from 2006 to 2015, and a prequel series, Endeavour, from 2012 to 2023.
Detective Chief Inspector Endeavour Morse, GM, is the eponymous fictional character in the series of detective novels by British author Colin Dexter. On television, he appears in the 33-episode drama series Inspector Morse (1987–2000), in which John Thaw played the character, as well as the (2012–2023) prequel series Endeavour, portrayed by Shaun Evans. The older Morse is a senior Criminal Investigation Department (CID) officer with the Thames Valley Police in Oxford in England and, in the prequel, Morse is a young detective constable rising through the ranks with the Oxford City Police and, in later series, the Thames Valley Police.
John Edward Thaw, was an English actor in television, stage and cinema, best known for his starring roles in the television series Inspector Morse as Detective Chief Inspector Endeavour Morse and in The Sweeney as Detective Inspector Jack Regan.
Camberwick Green is a British children's television series that ran from January to March 1966 on BBC1, featuring stop motion puppets. Camberwick Green is the first in the Trumptonshire trilogy, which also includes Trumpton and Chigley.
Trumpton is a British stop-motion children's television series from the producers of Camberwick Green. First shown on the BBC from January to March 1967, it was the second series in the Trumptonshire trilogy, which comprised Camberwick Green, Trumpton and Chigley. Like the other two series, Trumpton continued to be repeated well into the 1980s as a part of the BBC's children's schedules.
I Love a Mystery is an American radio drama series that aired 1939–44, about three friends who ran a detective agency and traveled the world in search of adventure. Written by Carlton E. Morse, the program was the polar opposite of Morse's other success, the long-running One Man's Family.
Mystery! is a television anthology series produced by WGBH Boston for PBS in the United States.
Roger William Allam is a British actor who has performed on stage, in film, on television and radio.
Lewis is a British television detective drama produced for ITV, first airing in 2006 (pilot) then 2007. It is a spin-off from Inspector Morse and, like that series, it is set in Oxford. Kevin Whately reprises his character Robert "Robbie" Lewis, who was Morse's sergeant in the original series. Lewis has now been promoted to detective inspector and is assisted by DS James Hathaway, portrayed by Laurence Fox, who was promoted to inspector before the eighth series. The series also stars Clare Holman as forensic pathologist Dr. Laura Hobson, likewise reprising her role from Inspector Morse; and, from the eighth season, Angela Griffin as DS Lizzie Maddox.
Detective Sergeant/Detective Inspector Robert "Robbie" Lewis is a fictional character in the Inspector Morse crime novels by Colin Dexter. The "sidekick" to Morse, Lewis is a detective sergeant in the Thames Valley Police, and appears in all 13 Morse novels. In the television adaptation, Inspector Morse, he is played by Kevin Whately. Following the conclusion of the series, Whately reprised the role as the lead character in Lewis, in which the character has been promoted to the rank of inspector.
Jack Laskey is an English actor best known for his theatre work and his role as DS Jakes in the ITV drama series Endeavour. He is the third son of Michael Laskey, a poet. Laskey trained at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA).
Inspector Morse is a British detective drama television series based on a series of novels by Colin Dexter. It starred John Thaw as Detective Chief Inspector Morse and Kevin Whately as Sergeant Lewis. The series comprises 33 two-hour episodes produced between 6 January 1987 and 15 November 2000. Dexter made uncredited cameo appearances in all but three of the episodes.
James Hathaway is the fictional CID Detective Inspector working with Inspector Lewis in the ITV television series Lewis. He is played by Laurence Fox. Hathaway holds the rank of Detective Sergeant until the penultimate series of Lewis in 2014, in which he is promoted to the rank of Inspector following a brief break from the police.
Shaun Evans is an English actor. He is best known for playing a young Endeavour Morse in the ITV drama series Endeavour and Coxswain Elliot Glover in Vigil.
Endeavour is a British television detective drama series on ITV. It is a prequel to the long-running Inspector Morse series. Shaun Evans portrays the young Endeavour Morse beginning his career as a detective constable, and later as a detective sergeant, with the Oxford City Police CID. Endeavour is the third of the Inspector Morse series following the original Inspector Morse (1987–2000) and its spin-off, Lewis (2006–2015).
Grantchester is a British ITV detective drama set in the 1950s in the Cambridgeshire village of Grantchester. Its first series was broadcast in 2014. The first three series featured Anglican vicar Sidney Chambers ; subsequent series have featured vicar William Davenport. Each of them develops a sideline in sleuthing with the help of Detective Inspector Geordie Keating, played by Robson Green.
Prime Suspect 1973 is a British television detective drama series starring Stefanie Martini as the young Jane Tennison. It is a prequel to the long-running Prime Suspect series that had starred Helen Mirren.
Sara Louise Vickers is a Scottish theatre, television and film actress best known for playing Joan Thursday in the British television detective drama series Endeavour.
Jack Bannon is an English actor, known for his role as Christopher Morcom in The Imitation Game, as Sam Thursday on the ITV drama series Endeavour and as Alfred Pennyworth on the Epix crime drama series Pennyworth (2019–2022).