THE LIVER BIRDS
Pilot (b/w) 14 Apr 1969 BBC1
Series One (4 x b/w) 25 July-15 Aug 1969 BBC1
Series Two (12) 7 Jan-25 Mar 1971 BBC1
Series Three (13) 11 Feb-12 May 1972 BBC1
Short special part of Christmas Night With The Stars 25 Dec 1972. BBC1
Series Four (13) 2 Jan-3 Apr 1974 BBC1
Series Five (7) 5 Sep-17 Oct 1975 BBC1
Special (40 mins) 23 Dec 1975 BBC1
Series Six (5) 13 Feb-12 Mar 1976 BBC1
Series Seven (8) 17 Oct-5 Dec 1976 BBC1
Special (40 mins) 22 Dec 1976 BBC1
Series Eight (7) 23 Sep-4 Nov 1977 BBC1
Special (35 mins) 23 Dec 1977 BBC1
Series Nine (6) 24 Nov 1978-5 Jan 1979 BBC1
Series Ten (7) 6 May-24 June 1996 BBC1
MAIN CAST
Beryl Hennessey
Dawn
Sandra Hutchinson
Carol Boswell
OTHER APPEARANCES
Mrs Hutchinson
Mr Hutchinson
Mrs Hennessey
Mr Hennessey
Joe
Gerry
Paul
Robert
Mrs Boswell
Mr Boswell
Lucien
Derek Paynton
CREDITS
Writers
Script editor
Main Directors
Producers
Polly James (pilot, series 1-4 & 10 & specials)
Pauline Collins (pilot & series 1)
Nerys Hughes (series 2 onwards)
Elizabeth Estensen (series 5-9)
Mollie Sugden
Ivan Beavis (series 1-3 & special)
John McKelvey (series 4)
William Moore (series 8 & 9)
Sheila Fay (series 1 & 2)
Carmel McSharry (series 10)
Cyril Shaps (series 1 & 2)
George Leyton (series 1 & 2)
Mike Lucas (series 2)
John Nettles (series 3-6)
Jonathan Lynn (series 4)
Eileen Kennally (series 5-7)
Carmel McSharry (series 8)
Ray Dunbobbin (series 5-9)
Michael Angelis (series 5-9)
Tom Chadbon (series 8 & 9)
Carla Lane (64)
Carla Lane/Myra Taylor (9)
Carla Lane/Myra Taylor/Lew Schwarz (8)
Jack Seddon/David Pursall (6)
Eric Idle (series 2)
Ray Butt (1969-79 series)
Douglas Argent (1969-79)
Angela de Chastelai Smith (1996)
Sydney Lotterby (48)
Douglas Argent (19)
Roger Race (14)
Philip Kampff (1996 series)
The Liver Birds - the key word is pronounced 'lie-va' - was the distaff answer to The Likely Lads, charting the exploits of two
young female friends in Liverpool, sharing a flat in Huskisson Street and a keen interest in the opposite sex. The city was still,
just, exuding a certain glamour from the boom period that followed the success of the Beatles and other pop groups earlier in
the 1960s (indeed the series' theme song was sung by the Scaffold, a pop/poetry trio that included Paul McCartney's brother, Mike).
The series' title originated in the name given to two sculpted birds perched atop the Royal Liver Building at the city's Pier Head.
Originally the 'two liver birds' were Dawn (Pauline Collins) and Beryl (Polly James), but after five episodes Dawn moved on
(or, rather, moved out) and was replaced by Sandra (Nerys Hughes), a pairing that resulted in the series' most popular period.
At the end of the fourth series James left the cast (Beryl got married) and she was replaced by Carol (Elizabeth Estensen) who
stayed throughout the remaining 1970s episodes.
Launched as a Comedy Playhouse pilot, The Liver Birds was the creation of first-time writers Carla Lane and Myra Taylor, Liverpool
housewives who loosely based the characters and storylines upon their own experiences. The BBC initially teamed them with veteran
writer Lew Schwarz, whose mission was explain sitcom-writing technique, and then employed Eric Idle as script editor, but from the
third series the women were left alone; Taylor then departed soon after and Lane took sole charge of the writing.
The episodes concentrated on the relationship between the two lead players as they went about their everyday life, dealing with
boyfriends, jobs, parents, lack of money and the quest for a more comfortable standard of living. This was a breakthrough period
for young, single women following centuries of repression - they had independence, both sexual and financial, and the opportunity
to live life as they wanted it, and Carla Lane's scripts reflected this admirably, as well as sketching the uncertainties and
philosophies of being single when everyone else seemed to be married. (Although liberated, none of the main characters indulged
in casual sex.) The Liver Birds was only the start of Lane's remarkable sitcom career but her ability to conjure laughs out of
pathos and, as she called them, 'little tragedies', was apparent even here.
During its heyday, with Beryl and Sandra, there was a robust energy about the desperation in which the girls went to parties,
trawled for 'talent' and threw themselves into relationships. Beryl was the more common one, spontaneous, scatty and with a
voice so staggeringly piercing that you could hear it on the other channel; Sandra was quieter, more cautious, optimistic and
refined, mainly thanks to the influence of her snobbish and overbearing mother (played in exaggerated music-hall style by Mollie
Sugden). In hindsight, however, the series seems to have made as much impression for its reflections of fashion trends as for
its humour, the young women wearing everything from caftans, maxi-coats and mini-skirts to trouser-suits, hot-pants and platform
shoes. Carol, who replaced Beryl, dressed particularly loudly.
The arrival of scatty Carol was also used to introduce a wider circle of characters, including her larger-than-life Catholic
parents and rabbit-obsessed brother Lucien. (Their family name, Boswell, reappeared in Carla Lane's 1980s seriesBread.) The
Liver Birds continued much as before until the eighth series, when the women worked as kennel maids and Sandra became
romantically involved with a vet, Derek Paynton. They eventually married, and Derek narrowly avoided having to move to
Africa to study wildlife. In the ninth series Sandra fell pregnant and Carol returned to live with her parents, but after
the Boswells were evicted from their home she moved in with Sandra and her husband.
That should have been the end of it, for by this time the format had moved far away from the concept of two whackey young
women sharing a flat, and with the greater emphasis on the fringe characters and Carol's family The Liver Birds was moving
closer to the area that Carla Lane would explore in the extended-family sitcom Bread. Although fondly remembered, the series
did not age well and (apart from screenings on cable/satellite nostalgia channels) has never enjoyed the mainstream re-run
appeal of, say, Dad's Army or Are You Being Served? But in the 1990s, following the US trend of resurrecting old sitcoms,
the BBC recommissioned three former hits for a new generation of viewers: the Doctor series (Doctor At The Top), Reginal
Perrin (The Legacy Of Reginal Perrin) and The Liver Birds. Back came Polly James and Nerys Hughes from the show's golden
period, playing their characters nearly 20 years on. There was some liberty taken with continuity (Lucien, who had been
Carol's brother, was now Beryl's brother; and Carmel McSharry, who had played Carol's mother Mrs Boswell, now appeared as
Beryl's mother Mrs Hennessey) but the two lead characters were believable developments of their earlier selves: wiser,
sadder, perhaps even more desperate - but both bouncing back from failed relationships and marriages to throw themselves
into the maelstrom of middle-aged single life. The new series was not a great success, however - while the public might
nostalgically reminisce about old television comedies, it rarely takes to updated revivals.
Note. Nerys Hughes and Polly James appeared in The Last Waltz, a specially scripted celebration that brought together the
key characters from four Carla Lane series (The Liver Birds, Solo, Bread and Butterflies), screened by BBC1 on 10 March
1989 as part of Comic Relief.
Mark Lewisohn
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