End of Part One

For a compilation album of Wet Wet Wet, see End of Part One: Their Greatest Hits. For a video compilation by the same band, see End of Part One: Their Greatest Hits (video).
"End of Part One" may also refer to a message shown before commercial breaks.
End of Part One
Created by David Renwick and Andrew Marshall
Directed by Geoffrey Sax
Country of origin United Kingdom
No. of series 2
No. of episodes 14
Production
Producer(s) Simon Brett (Series 1) and Humphrey Barclay (Series 2)
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) LWT
Distributor ITV Studios
Release
Original network ITV
Picture format 4:3
Original release 15 April 1979 (1979-04-15) – 23 November 1980 (1980-11-23)

End of Part One was a British television comedy sketch show written by David Renwick and Andrew Marshall; it was made by London Weekend Television. It ran for two series on ITV, from 1979 to 1980 and was an attempt at a TV version of The Burkiss Way. The first series concerned the lives of Norman and Vera Straightman, who had their lives interrupted by various television personalities of the day. The second series was mainly a straight succession of parodies of TV shows of the time, including Larry Grayson's Generation Game and Nationwide.

Cast

The cast included Sue Holderness, Denise Coffey, Fred Harris, Dudley Stevens, David Simeon, and Tony Aitken. Coffey had appeared in The Burkiss Way's first 6 episodes, but Harris was the only permanent cast member to appear in End of Part One. One of the directors was future feature film director Geoffrey Sax.

Episodes and timeslot

Marshall and Renwick blamed the show's relative lack of success at its being shown on a Sunday afternoon, lamenting in an interview that it was "a show no-one knows about, at a time no-one would watch it anyway". They decided not to write another series because LWT would not move it to a more favourable time slot.

First series repeats

Some ITV companies did repeat series one at a more favourable time slot.

DVD

The complete series was released on 5 November 2012 in a release from Network DVD. All fourteen episodes are included.[2]

References

External links

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