Casualty series 14
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Casualty | |
---|---|
Series 14 | |
No. of episodes | 30 |
Release | |
Original network | BBC One |
Original release | 18 September 1999 25 March 2000 | –
Series chronology | |
The fourteenth series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 18 September 1999 and finished on 25 March 2000. It saw another increase, this time to 30 episodes.
Cast
Overview
The fourteenth series of Casualty features a cast of characters working in the emergency department of Holby City Hospital.[1] The series begins with 13 roles receiving star billing, which is an increase from the previous series. Robert Gwilym stars as emergency medicine consultant and clinical director Max Gallagher and Gerald Kyd appears as senior house officer Sean Maddox. Derek Thompson continues his role as charge nurse Charlie Fairhead while Barbara Marten portrays sister Eve Montgomery. Cathy Shipton features as Lisa "Duffy" Duffin, a senior staff nurse who is promoted to sister. Jan Anderson, Claire Goose and Jonathan Kerrigan star as staff nurses Chloe Hill, Tina Seabrook and Sam Colloby. Pal Aron appears as bed manager Adam Osman, who is later hired as a staff nurse. Ian Bleasdale and Donna Alexander portray paramedics Josh Griffiths and Penny Hutchens. Rebecca Wheatley stars her role as Amy Howard and Vincenzo Pellegrino features as Derek "Sunny" Sunderland. Susan Cookson also continues her semi-regular role as nurse Julie Day.[2]
Sandra Huggett joins the cast in episode 1 as Holly Miles, a senior house officer.[2] Kerrigan departs in episode 5, Pellegrino makes his final appearance in episode 7 and Marten exits in episode 8.[2] Michelle Butterly and Kwame Kwei-Armah debut in episode 9 as paramedics Mel Dyson and Fin Newton respectively.[2] Ronnie McCann made his first appearance as staff nurse Barney Woolfe in episode 12, while Ian Kelsey joins the cast in episode 15 as Patrick Spiller, a specialist registrar in emergency medicine.[2] Ben Keaton guest appeared in episodes 16 and 18 as Spencer, a role he would reprise in the following series.[2] Holby City character Julie Fitzjohn, portrayed by Nicola Stephenson, guest starred in episode 17.[2] In December 1999, Goose announced her plans to leave the series.[3] Kyd also chose to leave after becoming disheartened with his character.[4] Goose and Kyd's characters depart in episode 30 in scenes filmed in Australia.[5]
Main characters
- Donna Alexander as Penny Hutchens
- Jan Anderson as Chloe Hill
- Pal Aron as Adam Osman
- Ian Bleasdale as Josh Griffiths
- Michelle Butterly as Mel Dyson (from episode 9)
- Claire Goose as Tina Seabrook (until episode 30)
- Robert Gwilym as Max Gallagher
- Sandra Huggett as Holly Miles (from episode 1)
- Ian Kelsey as Patrick Spiller (from episode 15)
- Jonathan Kerrigan as Sam Colloby (until episode 5)
- Kwame Kwei-Armah as Fin Newton (from episode 9)
- Gerald Kyd as Sean Maddox (until episode 30)
- Barbara Marten as Eve Montgomery (until episode 8)
- Ronnie McCann as Barney Woolfe (from episode 12)
- Vincenzo Pellegrino as Derek "Sunny" Sunderland (until episode 7)
- Cathy Shipton as Lisa "Duffy" Duffin
- Derek Thompson as Charlie Fairhead
- Rebecca Wheatley as Amy Howard
Recurring and guest characters
- Sam Barriscale as Reuben Hurst (episode 18)
- Sharon Bower as Joan Gallagher (episodes 23 and 24)
- Susan Cookson as Julie Day (until episode 30)
- Ian Fitzgibbon as Jon Crowe (episodes 19−23)
- Grahame Fox as Jonathan Lewis (episodes 14 and 24)
- Michael J. Jackson as Mike Branscombe (episodes 6 and 7)
- Ben Keaton as Spencer (episodes 16 and 18)
- Ian Keith as Gary Milton (episode 4)
- Tobias Menzies as Frank Gallagher (episodes 18−23)
- Tanya Myers as Joanne Foster (episodes 27−30)
- Greg Prentice as Jake Foster (episodes 27−30)
- Doraly Rosen as Angie Lynch (episodes 19−24)
- Morag Siller as Leona (from episode 23)
- Nicola Stephenson as Julie Fitzjohn (episode 17)
- Darren Tighe as Matt Tyler (episodes 19−23)
- Jade Williams as Gemma Foster (episodes 27−30)
Episodes
No. overall | No. in series | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | UK viewers (millions) [6] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
255 | 1 | "Calm Before the Storm - Part One" | Paul Wroblewski | Simon Mirren | 18 September 1999 | 11.90 |
256 | 2 | "Calm Before the Storm - Part Two" | Paul Wroblewski | Simon Mirren | 19 September 1999 | 12.37 |
257 | 3 | "Truth or Dare" | Julian Holmes | Tony McHale | 25 September 1999 | 11.47 |
258 | 4 | "Words and Deeds" | Roberto Bangura | Ben Cooper | 2 October 1999 | 11.28 |
259 | 5 | "Crossroads" | Gill Wilkinson | Tony McHale | 9 October 1999 | 11.09 |
260 | 6 | "Lost Souls" | Gill Wilkinson | Andrew Rattenbury | 16 October 1999 | 11.23 |
261 | 7 | "Everybody Hurts" | Robert Del Maestro | Katharine Way | 23 October 1999 | 10.81 |
262 | 8 | "Seeing the Light" | Alan Wareing | Katharine Way | 30 October 1999 | 9.12 |
263 | 9 | "Off the Wall" | Paul Wroblewski | Len Collin | 6 November 1999 | 8.52 |
264 | 10 | "Benny and the Vets - Part One" | Julian Holmes | Chris Murray | 13 November 1999 | 8.62 |
265 | 11 | "Benny and the Vets - Part Two" | Julian Holmes | Chris Murray | 14 November 1999 | 10.14 |
266 | 12 | "Sins of the Mother" | Gill Wilkinson | Jeff Povey | 20 November 1999 | 11.72 |
267 | 13 | "Looking After Number One" | Roberto Bangura | Nick Saltrese | 27 November 1999 | 12.42 |
268 | 14 | "To Have and to Hold" | Dominic Lees | Sam Wheats | 4 December 1999 | 10.37 |
269 | 15 | "Free Fall" | Michael Owen Morris | Andrew Rattenbury | 11 December 1999 | 10.83 |
270 | 16 | "Just a Kiss" | Alan Wareing | Graham Mitchell | 18 December 1999 | 11.23 |
271 | 17 | "Peace on Earth" | Gill Wilkinson | Tony McHale | 26 December 1999 | 9.16 |
272 | 18 | "The Morning After" | Tim Leandro | Christopher Reason | 1 January 2000 | 11.96 |
273 | 19 | "Untouchable" | Alan Wareing | Katharine Way | 9 January 2000 | 10.96 |
274 | 20 | "Fall Out" | Ged Maguire | Ben Cooper | 15 January 2000 | 12.14 |
275 | 21 | "Full On" | Ashley Pearce | Jeff Povey | 22 January 2000 | 9.45 |
276 | 22 | "Mirror Image" | Robert Del Maestro | Sam Wheats | 29 January 2000 | 11.99 |
277 | 23 | "Burned Out Hearts" | Tim Leandro | Susan Boyd | 5 February 2000 | 11.74 |
278 | 24 | "Tough Love" | Dominic Lees | Simon Moss | 12 February 2000 | 12.34 |
279 | 25 | "Not Waving But Drowning" | Ashley Pearce | Andrew Rattenbury | 19 February 2000 | 11.36 |
280 | 26 | "Seize the Night" | Gary Love | Simon Mirren | 26 February 2000 | 11.76 |
281 | 27 | "Life Support" | Julie Edwards | Barnaby Marshall | 4 March 2000 | 11.56 |
282 | 28 | "Blood Brothers" | Tim Leandro | Graham Mitchell | 11 March 2000 | 11.44 |
283 | 29 | "Being There - Part One" | Robert Del Maestro (UK) Ashley Pearce (AU) | Katharine Way | 18 March 2000 | 11.17 |
284 | 30 | "Being There - Part Two" | Robert Del Maestro (UK) Ashley Pearce (AU) | Katharine Way | 25 March 2000 | 11.72 |
References
- ^ Pryer, Emma (25 June 2016). "Casualty celebrates 1,000 episodes, 30 years and 2,500 gallons of fake blood". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Series 13 (1999-2000)". BBC. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
- ^ Morgan, Kathleen (28 August 1999). "Just what the doctor ordered". Daily Record. Retrieved 1 September 2016.
- ^ Fulton, Rick (16 October 2000). "TV Doc Gerald Is Making Home Visits; Exclusive Casualty Pin-Up Is Back .. but Now He Lives in Scotland". Daily Record. Archived from the original on 8 October 2016. Retrieved 4 September 2016.(subscription required)
- ^ Patience, Jan (18 March 2000). "Television; Casualty; Saturday, BBC1, 8.05pm". Daily Record. Retrieved 4 September 2016.
- ^ "Top 30 Programmes". Broadcasters' Audience Research Board. Retrieved 8 February 2014. (User must select "BBC1" in the Channel field and then select the appropriate year, month and week to retrieve the figure for each episode)