Everything about Crossroads Tv Series totally explained
Crossroads was a
British television soap opera set in a
motel near
Birmingham,
England. Originally broadcast on the
commercial ITV network between 1964 and 1988, it was produced by
ATV until the end of 1981 and then by
Central. A byword for cheap production particularly in the 1970s and 1980s, the series was revived in a glossier format in 2001 by
Carlton Television, attracting an average of 3–4 million viewers. However,
ITV were not happy and the show came off the air for the
World Cup in June 2002
. In July and August 2002, Crossroads was only shown at 5:30pm and reached 3.3 million viewers, beating
BBC1 soap
Neighbours in the same slot. The show was taken off in September 2002 for a revamp. It returned in January 2003 to 2 million viewers, but the revamped version failed to achieve the popularity of the earlier series and the show was axed in May 2003. The last episode was on Friday, May 30, 2003, to 2.7 million viewers.
The original series was briefly known as
Crossroads Kings Oak in the last year of its run.
Production history
ATV era (1964-1981)
Crossroads first aired on Monday
November 2,
1964 and was shown five days a week. Although popular, the
Independent Television Authority (ITA) decreed in 1967 that the series should be reduced to four a week, to prevent storylines being watered-down and to improve the overall quality. In 1979 the decision was taken to reduce output to three weekly showings (beginning the following year). ATV planned to replace the fourth episode with a
spin-off series called
A Family Affair, but this was dropped with the arrival of Margaret Matheson as head of drama.
Despite being critically derided for low production values and far-fetched scripts,
Crossroads was popular (fans including
Mary Wilson, wife of prime minister
Harold Wilson), and maintained high ratings and a loyal audience throughout its original run. However, a number of regional companies (particularly the newer ones) were to drop the series because of its reputation. For example, the newly-formed
Thames Television, the franchise for the
London area, decided in 1968 to stop showing the series. This was unpopular with viewers with complaints reportedly including one from Harold Wilson; six months later the decision was reversed, but viewers in the Thames region were half a year behind the rest of the country for several years. Another example occurred in the north of England, where some viewers in the east of the
Granada region (which wasn't broadcasting the series) were reported to have redirected their aerials to receive
Yorkshire Television, who were.
Central era (1982-1988)
ATV lost its franchise at the end of 1981. The new franchisee,
Central Independent Television, continued production but the new management decided to make changes; the most notable was the dismissal of
Noele Gordon (Meg Richardson). It was a strategy by Central to get rid of a programme perceived as an embarrassment; without Meg, thought head of programmes
Charles Denton, viewers would desert Crossroads and the programme could be killed.
Further changes were carried out in March 1985, when new filming locations and sets and new characters were introduced. Many storylines were to now revolve around the new motel owner, Nicola Freeman (
Gabrielle Drake). More long-term characters, such as David and Barbara Hunter, were axed. The theme tune was also updated, and the opening titles replaced with a longer version. Finally, the show was renamed
Crossroads Motel.
In 1986, a new producer, William Smethurst, took over following the sacking of his predecessor, Philip Bowman. Ordered to change to a wittier, more upmarket serial, Smethurst decided shifted the focus to the nearby village of King's Oak. Yet more long-running characters, such as Diane Hunter and Benny Hawkins, were dropped; as with earlier changes, this was unpopular with fans, who called Central in protest. Smethurst gained the nickname "Butcher Bill" but was unfazed; he had, after all, reversed the fortunes of the BBC radio soap
The Archers. Smethurst insisted he only got the flack because his was the name the public knew.
Further changes were planned, the series being renamed
Crossroads King's Oak for a time before an intended final change to
King's Oak, the name
Crossroads being dropped both the name and in-story. However, this final change was overtaken by the decision in June 1987 to axe the series.
Crossroads King's Oak came to an end in 1988. The last, extended, episode was on
April 4 (a
bank holiday), with the Crossroads hotel becoming The King's Oak Country Hotel and the character of Jill (
Jane Rossington) riding off with her lover, John Maddingham (
Jeremy Nicholas). Asked what name she'd give the hotel she was to be running in her new life, the character remarked, a little sadly, "I always thought Crossroads was an awfully good name".
Carlton revival (2001-2003)
Crossroads was revived in March 2001 as a
Carlton Television production with a glossy format (Carlton having bought Central and acquired the rights to ATV programmes). Broadcast weekdays at 5pm on
ITV1, the only characters to return from the original were the cleaner Doris Luke (
Kathy Staff), Jill Richardson (
née Harvey), and her ex-husband Adam Chance (
Tony Adams). Initial reactions were favourable; however, changes in story from the original were puzzling for fans and didn't help ratings. Kathy Staff left in dismay at the amount of sex, and told ITV
Teletext she felt it was no longer the family-friendly show she was originally part of.
What sealed the fate of the revived Crossroads was the decision to kill original character Jill Harvey, murdered by Adam Chance three months into its re-run. Many fans were outraged as former actress
Noele Gordon was written out in a way which allowed for her return. Jane Rossington said she didn't want to commit to another long run but warned Carlton it would be suicidal to kill Jill.
The series went into hiatus from August 2002 to January 2003; when it had yet further changes. The re-modelled series, under producer Yvon Grace, appeared a self-consciously camp parody, with
Jane Asher as a new central character, glamorous and bitchy Angel Samson. The series also featured appearances from
Kate O'Mara, and people associated with
light entertainment, such as
Lionel Blair,
Les Dennis and
Tim Brooke-Taylor.
Grace admitted she was aiming the new Crossroads towards the gay market. But fans were not happy with her ambivalence towards unresolved storylines from the 2001-2002 run. Grace was reported as saying at its press launch: "Who cares if Phil is rotting in jail for a murder he didn't commit? I've changed everything, this is day one. We're not carrying on from where we left off. I was told this was its last chance."
Plans were considered to bring Adam Chance back ries in a last attempt to save it. But with ratings continuing to decline, the revived series was also axed, the final episode being broadcast in May 2003. The cast were contracted until the end of the year but continued to be paid after the series ended.
Characters and storylines
The main character in the original series was motel owner Meg Richardson, played by
Noele Gordon. Meg's children were also to play a prominent role: Jill, played by
Jane Rossington; and Sandy, played by
Roger Tonge.
Other characters during the early years of the show included the chef, Carlos Raphael (Anthony Morton); Constance Merrow (
Geraldine Newman); postman Vince Parker (
Peter Brookes), and his waitress wife, Diane (
Susan Hanson); Brummie waitress Marilyn Gates (
Sue Nicholls, but later portrayed by Nadine Hanwell); postmistress Miss Tatum (Elisabeth Croft), and charlady
Amy Turtle (
Ann George).
Amy Turtle was to be satirised by
Julie Walters as Mrs Overall in
Victoria Wood's 1985 spoof
Acorn Antiques. However,
Crossroads fans felt that while Mrs Overall's fluffing of lines and position as char at the antiques shop were based on Amy, the character's mannerisms, voice and clothing were more evocative of Charmian Eyre's character Mavis Hooper (in the series from 1981 to 1985).
Later additions included
Ronald Allen as the suave manager David Hunter,
Sue Lloyd as his wife Barbara,
Angus Lennie as obstreperous Scottish chef Shughie McFee, Zeph Gladstone as hairdresser Vera Downend,
Tony Adams as accountant Adam Chance, and
Kathy Staff as cleaner Doris Luke. However, the most memorable character proved to be the village-idiot Benny Hawkins (
Paul Henry), whose trademark was a woolly hat worn all year. His fans included
British troops serving in the
Falklands War in 1982, who nicknamed the
Falkland Islanders Bennies after the character. Instructed to stop using the name, the troops came up with "Stills" for locals - because they were "still Bennies".)
Over time the series dealt with storylines controversial for their time. Sandy Richardson was injured in a car accident and left confined to a wheelchair, the first
paraplegic regular character in British soap opera; by coincidence actor Roger Tonge himself ended up in a wheelchair as the 1970s progressed. The series also saw the first black characters to appear regularly in a British soap; Melanie Harper (played by Cleo Sylvestre) arrived at the motel in 1970 as Meg's adopted daughter (itself a taboo issue). Cleo was given the role by producer
Reg Watson after press coverage of racist tensions in the Birmingham area at that time. In 1978, garage mechanic Joe MacDonald (played by
Carl Andrews) arrived, as well as an inter-racial summer romance in 1977 between Cockney garage mechanic, Dennis Harper (played by Merlin Ward, but credited as Guy Ward), and motel receptionist Meena Chaudri (Karan David). Another story saw a
test tube baby born to Glenda and Kevin Banks (played by Lynette McMorrough and
David Moran).
Meg - axed in 1981 - was thought to have died in a fire that gutted the motel but turned up alive aboard the
QE2, about to sail to a new life overseas.
Newspapers reported that two endings were planned for Meg - Meg would die in the fire, the other ending would have her disappear for a while and turn up on the QE2. Viewers were surprised to see producers had used both.
Viewers later learned that Meg had died - Noele Gordon died shortly afterwards.
A story in the papers - but never used - would have seen Benny seeing Meg's ghost in the office (footage of Meg was to be mixed into the programme) - Benny was to approach Jill and say, "I've just seen your mum!".
With the revival in 2001,changes were made to character and story. Confusingly, the returning character of Jill Chance had married the now-dead John Maddingham but was calling herself Jill Harvey again, the name by which she'd been known prior to her marriage to Adam Chance in 1983. References were also made to the Russell family taking over a "failing motel", despite Crossroads having become a hotel in the late 1980s; in the final episode of the original series, King's Oak Country Hotel was seen over the entrance doors.
Lack of real links to the past and the killing of Jill a few months into the new run turned many fans away. Despite this, the series did pick up a respectable number of viewers to become one of ITV's highest rated daytime shows. Popular characters in the new
Crossroads included new owner Kate Russell (Jane Gurnett), supercilious receptionist Virginia Raven (
Sherrie Hewson), and womanising deputy manager Jake Booth (
Colin Wells).
The storyline of the final episode was the revelation that the glamorous hotel had been a dream of supermarket worker Angela, with all the other characters revealed as shoppers. Angela even approaches a female customer in the supermarket and tells her she recognises her as Tracey (Booth) from the "TV soap Crossroads"; Tracey's mother-in-law, Kate, was also shown as one of Angela's colleagues in the supermarket.
Locations
The fictional "Crossroads Motel" was in an equally fictional village near Birmingham, "
Kings Oak" (there are real Birmingham suburbs called
Kings Heath,
Kings Norton and
Selly Oak). A number of real-life hotels doubled for location filming; the original
Crossroads was filmed at a motel just south of Birmingham city centre called CherryTrees (the buildings were demolished in 2001). After the in-story destruction of the motel by fire, the revamped motel was filmed from 1982 at The Golden Valley Hotel in Cheltenham; from 1985 filming moved to the Penns Hall Hotel in Sutton Coldfield, the changed appearance explained as due to rebuilding. At the time of the move to Sutton Coldfield new studio sets were also introduced.
In 1970, the series gained a film unit, giving it the freedom to do location shooting. Originally,
Tanworth-in-Arden was used for King's Oak, although outside scenes were only used occasionally. Under Central more location footage began to be used. Some early King's Oak location material was also filmed in
Wolverhampton.
Other locations included the canal (including
Gas Street Basin) behind ATV's former studios in Birmingham; in-story this was the King's Oak Canal, on which Jill had a barge. The Chateau Impney Hotel also featured numerous times, most famously when Hugh proposed to Meg in 1973, and it was used to hold their wedding party two years later. The
Chateau Impney was renamed the Droitwich Hotel on-screen. Hagley church was setting for Jill and Adam Chance's wedding in 1983.
Hagley Hall was used for the wedding reception.
In 1985,
Crossroads gained its first set of full length opening titles, filmed around Sutton Coldfield and in Birmingham city centre.
The revived Crossroads (2001) was still set in the
West Midlands, however exterior shots were filmed in and around
Nottingham, such as
Bingham.
Further Information
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