Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

The Royle Family

Encyclopedia : T : TH : THE : The Royle Family


The Royle Family was a popular BBC television situation comedy (sitcom) that ran for three series between 1998 and 2000. It concerned the lives of a cash-strapped working class Manchester family, the Royles.

The series was remarkable for its simple production and realistic portrayal of working class family life at the turn of the Millennium. The scripts contain often banal conversations but each series revolves around a big family occasion; the marriage of the family's daughter Denise, the birth of her first child, and the child's christening. All the episodes take place in the rather cramped family home. The show was written by Caroline Aherne and Craig Cash, who also acted in it, along with poet and comedian Henry Normal, who left after the first series. It was produced by Granada Television for the BBC.

In a list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000, and voted on by industry professionals, The Royle Family was placed 31st. In a 2004 poll to find Britain's Best Sitcom, The Royle Family was placed 19th out of 100 nominations.

It will a return with all of the original cast for an hour long special during Christmas 2006.

Description

The show is a comic and poignant satire of family life in the Manchester area or perhaps Britain as a whole. It is commonly supposed that the series in set in the Manchester suburb of Wythenshawe, although there is nothing in the script to tie it that particular area of the city. It could actually be set in the nearby town of Stockport in the county of Cheshire however. In one episode Jim makes an enquiry as to how 'County' got on, almost certainly meaning Stockport County Football Club, and Emma hails from Altrincham a town close to Stockport but far more affluent. The family rarely do anything other than watch TV, banter and occasionally eat, smoke and drink. It could called a modern comedy of manners. Every episode takes place in the family home, in the living room and/or kitchen.

Most episodes lack a plot but most have a theme or at least a topic of discussion to hold it together. The show lacks set piece jokes. Many of the humorous situations involve awkwardness, badly told jokes, crassness (usually on Jim's part), irony and the fact that the Royle family on the television often reflect the lives of the families watching it. In this it has similarities to another BBC docu-comedy, The Office.

Although it is sometimes claimed that the series has no jokes, there are in fact many one-liners but these are spoken casually by the characters and not signposted like jokes in a regular sitcom. There is no laugh track.

Series

The first series ran on BBC2 in 1998, quickly gaining a cult following and was moved to BBC1 for the second series in 1999, when it became even more popular. A Christmas special appeared in 1999, followed by a third series and another Christmas special in 2000. This episode was the last when Caroline Aherne decided to move to Australia to escape the press, after a bout of depression and a suicide attempt. After Aherne announced that she would not write or star in any more episodes, Ricky Tomlinson also pulled out to ensure the show's end. However, on April 7, 2006, the BBC announced that Caroline Aherne and Craig Cash are writing a script for a special to be broadcast in the UK later in the year. [link].

Characters

The Royle family consists of: The Best family consists of: The Speakman family: The Carrols: Occasional characters include Antony's best friend Darren (Andrew Whyment), wealthy girlfriend Emma (Sheridan Smith), the never-seen Duckers (the local hard-man) and Jim's best friend Twiggy (Geoffrey Hughes). The character Beverly Macker (passing mention is also made of her elder brother Tony, a friend of Dave's) is repeatedly mentioned but never seen — all that is known of her is that she had two children before the age of 18, is attractive, and was a one-time girlfriend of Dave. Denise is extremely jealous of Beverly and she and Dave frequently argue about her when drunk.

Only 4 characters appear just once in the series. 2 in 'The Christening' episode viz. piss-stinking pensioner PJ (who he is exactly is never explained), and Michelle, Twiggy's loudmouthed, common, unpleasant girlfriend.

2 more appear in the 'Christmas Special', Emma's father Roger and his wife Valerie.

Examples of humour







Miscellany

Unlike most sitcoms the show is filmed in 16mm using a single camera. Multi-camera videotape is standard for UK sitcoms.

Each episode appears to take place in real time. However, the passage of time as indicated by the changing programmes on the Royles' TV sometimes suggests that the action has been compressed.

All of the action takes place in the Royles' house. The camera never leaves the house. If the Royles look out of the window the camera looks at them and not what they are looking at. The only images from outside are glimpses of programmes on the Royles' TV.

The show was made famous by Jim ending many sentences with the catchphrase "My arse".

The show's theme tune is "Half the World Away" by Oasis. The song can be found as the B-Side to "Whatever" and on the album The Masterplan.

Each series appeared to lead up to an event. The first led to Denise and Dave's wedding; the second saw Denise now pregnant with their child and led up to the birth (Denise went into labour in the Christmas special) and the third saw the addition of Baby David and the run-up to his christening and his first birthday on Christmas Day. Jim also received Sky Digital as a present.

The name The Royle Family is a pun on Britain's Royal Family. The rude manners of the Royles are in contrast with the supposed refined manners of the Queen and her family. The joke was taken to its conclusion by impressionist Alistair McGowan on his television show, with a series of sketches featuring the Royal Family as the Royle Family. The Duke of Edinburgh character played Jim, with Queen Elizabeth II as Barbara, The Prince of Wales and Camilla Parker-Bowles as Dave and Denise and The Duke of York as Anthony, wearing the top half of a Royal Navy uniform along with a pair of tracksuit trousers.

Also notable is the pairing of Sue Johnston and Ricky Tomlinson as husband and wife, as the two were well known for playing another married couple, Bobby and Sheila Grant, on Channel 4's long-running soap opera Brookside. Similarly, Ralf Little and Sheridan Smith also went on to reprise their roles as an onscreen couple, Johnny and Janet, in the later sitcom Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps.

Return

It was confirmed in July 2006 that The Royle Family will return to the BBC for a one-off special on BBC One before the end of 2006. Caroline Aherne has written the episode with Craig Cash and Phil Mealey. All the cast will return.

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: