BUTTERFLIES
Series One (6) 10 Nov-15 Dec 1978 BBC2
Series Two (7) 29 Oct-10 Dec 1979 BBC2
Special 22 Dec 1979 BBC1
Series Three (7) 9 Sep-21 Oct 1980 BBC2
Short special (10 mins) The Funny Side Of Christmas Dec 1982 BBC1
Series Four (7) 7 Sep-19 Oct 1983 BBC2
Short special (10 mins) part of Children in Need 17 Nov 2000 BBC1
MAIN CAST
Ria Parkinson
Ben Parkinson
Russell Parkinson
Adam Parkinson
Leonard
Thomas
Ruby
CREDITS
Writer
Directors
Producers
Wendy Craig
Geoffrey Palmer
Andrew Hall
Nicholas Lyndhurst
Bruce Montague
Michael Ripper
Joyce Windsor
Carla Lane
John B Hobbs
Sydney Lotterby
Mandie Fletcher
Sydney Lotterby (15)
Gareth Gwenlan (14)

Though neither attracting the huge audiences of Bread nor defining an era like The Liver
Birds, Butterflies is arguably the most successful of Carla Lane's sitcoms in terms of its
style, oblique yet revolutionary theme and the affection in which it remains held. The
story depicts Ria Parkinson, an attractive middle-class woman approaching middle-age and
worrying that she has not made the most of her life. Her husband Ben, a dentist and
collector of butterflies, is a stable yet essentially dull man; their children Russell and
Adam are typical teenagers, with a typical teenage rivalry.
On the surface, Ria seemed an extension of other Wendy Craig TV characters (Not In Front Of
The Children ... And Mother Makes Three/Five) but whereas they wondered aloud at their lot,
Ria became obsessed with it in her every waking moment, her thoughts being dominated by the
notion that time was slipping through her fingers. The series' bitter-sweet nature and
sometimes downbeat atmosphere set it apart from other sitcoms, and dramatic undertones
allowed it to deal with subjects (like teenage pregnancy and suicidal feelings) that many
others series would have avoided. The central theme in Butterflies, indeed, was the
temptation of adultery, with Ria being wooed by a wealthy businessman, Leonard, who
represented the sort of adventure missing from her life. But Ria's upbringing and natural
timidity made it impossible for her to consummate the relationship, so instead she
daydreamed about it and, in this way, actually seemed to achieve some solace.
The series was very well cast. Wendy Craig brought believability and vulnerability to the
part of Ria, Geoffrey Palmer proved that 'less is more' with his fine, understated
performance as Ben, and Andrew Hall and Nicholas Lyndhurst were excellent as Russell and
Adam. Bruce Montague as Leonard, Michael Ripper as his enigmatic chauffeur and Joyce
Windsor as the Parkinsons' cleaning lady Ruby, all supported well. But they couldn't have
made it work without Carla Lane's finely judged script, which had just enough traditional
sitcom elements (the family's reaction to Ria's gruesome attempts at cookery, the
adolescent bickering of the boys) to keep the mood light before exploring the darker areas
of her frustration, her marital boredom and ageing.
In 1979 the format of Butterflies was sold to the USA and Carla Lane flew to Los Angeles to
work on the script (also to be titled Butterflies) with the producer Milt Josefsberg. A
pilot episode was screened by NBC on 1 August 1979 with Jennifer Warren as Rea (sic)
Parkinson, John McMartin as Ben, Craig Wasson as Russell, Robert Doran as Adam and Jim
Hutton as Leonard. Lane was hugely disappointed with the US version, lamenting the loss of
most of the idea's subtlety, and it failed to graduate to a full series.
The title Butterflies seems to suggest many things, among them the idea that Ria and her
family were pinned down (like the butterflies in Ben's collection) for us to study each
week. Publicity for the US version suggested that the title came from the saying 'We are
like kids chasing butterflies - we see it, we want it'. But introducing the series in an
article in Radio Times, Carla Lane remarked that the title could refer to lost
opportunities and the sudden realisation that time is running out, leaving people
fluttering around, 'like butterflies with so much to do and so little time to do it'.
Note. Wendy Craig reprised her Butterflies role in The Last Waltz, a specially scripted
production featuring characters from four Carla Lane series (Bread, Solo and The Liver
Birds were the others) aired by BBC1 on 10 March 1989 as part of Comic Relief.
Mark Lewisohn
The cast of Butterflies, Wendy Craig, Geoffrey Palmer, Andrew Hall, Nicholas Lyndhurst, Bruce Montague and Joyce Windsor all appeared in a short special, screened on BBC1 on November 17, 2000 as part of Children in Need. The family, now seventeen years on, still retained its former appeal, with Carla Lane proving, yet again, that she is a master of this genre.
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