Potter (TV series)

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Potter
Potter (BBC title card).jpg
Title card of episode one, featuring Arthur Lowe as Potter
Starring Arthur Lowe
Robin Bailey
Noel Dyson
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series3
No. of episodes20
Production
Running time30 minutes
Production company BBC
Original release
Network BBC1
Release1 March 1979 (1979-03-01) 
28 August 1983 (1983-08-28)

Potter is a British sitcom written by Roy Clarke. Running for three series, it originally starred Arthur Lowe as Redvers Potter, a busybody former sweet manufacturer ("Pottermints - the hotter mints") with time on his hands following retirement. Set in Surrey, the series followed Potter in his various attempts to keep himself occupied by interfering in other people's business.

Contents

The series co-starred Noel Dyson as his wife Aileen, John Barron as the Vicar, Lally Bowers as Redvers' sister Harriet, Ken Wynne as Harriet's eccentric and camp husband Willie and John Warner as "Tolly" Tolliver, his next-door neighbour. Characters in later series included Harry H. Corbett as the comic ex-gangster Harry Tooms and Brenda Cowling as Jane. [1]

Episodes

The first series comprised 6 episodes, and aired in March–April, 1979.

The second series comprised 7 episodes, and aired the following year, from February–April, 1980.

Plans for a third series were already underway when Lowe died (in April 1982), so Lowe was replaced by Robin Bailey in the 7-episode third series, which aired the following year between July–August 1983, after which the series was discontinued. [2]

Most episodes end with Potter and the Vicar sitting on a sofa discussing the events that unfolded throughout the episode, and in Series 3 end with them sitting outside in the vicarage.

Third series

There were plans that the third series of Potter, starring Arthur Lowe, would be recorded in the summer of 1982, with six further episodes. They would most likely have been broadcast in the spring of 1983. [3]

Reception

Mark Lewisohn notes that although many of the characters (long-suffering wife, vicar, neighbour) were sitcom clichés "they seemed less so in the skilled hands of writer Roy Clarke, who had already proved a master of naturally humorous dialogue". [2]

Cast and characters

Novelisation

A book written by Roy Clarke and Christine Sparks was released in 1979. [4]

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References

  1. Potter at IMDb, retrieved 3 September 2010
  2. 1 2 Potter at the former BBC Guide to Comedy (archive), retrieved 3 September 2010
  3. Arthur Lowe's Pebble Mill at One interview, recorded and broadcast live on 15 April 1982, the same day as his death.
  4. Potter. Corgi. January 1979.