Rock & Chips | |
---|---|
Genre | Comedy-drama |
Created by | John Sullivan |
Written by | John Sullivan |
Directed by | Dewi Humphreys |
Starring |
Nicholas Lyndhurst James Buckley Kellie Bright Shaun Dingwall Phil Daniels Paula Wilcox Paul Putner Katie Griffiths Alison Pargeter Mel Smith |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of episodes | 3 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer(s) | John Sullivan Mark Freeland |
Producer(s) | Gareth Gwenlan |
Location(s) | Peckham, London, England |
Running time | 90 minutes (Original Pilot) 60 minutes (following two Specials) |
Production company(s) |
BBC Shazam Productions |
Release | |
Original network |
BBC One BBC HD (Pilot) BBC One HD (Specials) |
Picture format | 16:9 HDTV 1080i |
Original release | 24 January 2010 28 April 2011 |
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Chronology | |
Preceded by |
Only Fools and Horses (1981–2003) The Green Green Grass (2005–2009) |
External links | |
Website |
Rock & Chips is a British television comedy-drama and a prequel to the sitcom Only Fools and Horses. The show is set in Peckham, south-east London, during the early 1960s, focusing primarily on the lives of Del Trotter, Freddie Robdal and Joan and Reg Trotter. Nicholas Lyndhurst, who played Rodney in Only Fools and Horses, plays Robdal alongside James Buckley (Del Boy), Kellie Bright (Joan), Shaun Dingwall (Reg) and Phil Daniels (Grandad). The Shazam Productions and BBC co-production was written by Only Fools and Horses creator John Sullivan, directed by Dewi Humphreys and produced by Gareth Gwenlan.
The 90 minute production was conceived in 1997 and commissioned in 2003, with the premise established in the final episode of Only Fools and Horses in 2003. It was shelved and Only Fools and Horses spin-off The Green Green Grass was developed; its success led to the prequel being recommissioned in July 2009. Filming began in October in London and the production was first broadcast on BBC One and BBC HD on 24 January 2010. It was the second most watched programme of the day but gained mixed reviews from critics.
The story starts in February 1960, by setting up the characters. Joan Trotter (Kellie Bright) is in an unhappy marriage with the work-shy Reg (Shaun Dingwall), whose father Ted (Phil Daniels) has just moved in. Her 15-year-old son Derek, often shortened to Del Boy, (James Buckley) and his friends Boycie, Trigger, Jumbo Mills and new-in-town Denzil (Stephen Lloyd, Lewis Osborne, Lee Long and Ashley Gerlach) are still in school, following an increase in the school leaving age. Joan works at the local cinema with Trigger's aunt Reenie Turpin (Emma Cooke) and Raymond (Billy Seymour) for cinema manager Ernie Rayner (Robert Daws), and at the Town Hall as "a part-time filing clerk who sometimes makes the tea". Convicted thief Freddie Robdal (Nicholas Lyndhurst) has just been released from Dartmoor Prison and returned to Peckham with explosives expert Gerald "Jelly" Kelly (Paul Putner).