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Jim Branning

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Jim Branning
EastEnders character
Portrayed byJohn Bardon
Duration1996, 1999–2007, 2008–11
First appearance29 April 1996
ClassificationPresent; regular (departing)
Introduced byCorinne Hollingworth (1996)
Matthew Robinson (1999)
Diederick Santer (2008)
In-universe information
OccupationRetired (since 2004)
Potman (2000–04)
Barman (2000–04)
FamilyBranning
WifeReenie Branning (1960–99)
Dot Cotton (2002—)
SonsDerek Branning
Max Branning
Jack Branning
DaughtersApril Branning
Carol Jackson
Suzy Branning
GrandsonsRobbie Jackson
Billie Jackson
Bradley Branning
Oscar Branning
Kevin
Richard Mitchell
James Branning
GranddaughtersBianca Jackson
Sonia Fowler
Lauren Branning
Abi Branning
Penny Branning
Rebecca
Amy Mitchell

James Archibald "Jim" Branning is a fictional character from the BBC soap opera EastEnders, played by John Bardon, first appearing on 29 April 1996 and becoming a regular character in 1999.

Jim was written out of the show in August 2007 due to Bardon suffering a stroke. A storyline was created that Jim also suffered a stroke. It was reported on 10 March 2008 that Bardon would be returning to the role of Jim in summer 2008.[1] Bardon returned to film four episodes in the latter half of 2008. He returned permanently from the episode broadcast on 20 August 2009. On 1 April 2011 it was reported by the Daily Mirror that Bardon had filmed his final scenes and had left.[2]

Storylines

Backstory

The patriarch of the Branning clan, Jim settled in a loveless marriage to Reenie (Joy Graham), having six children. A heavy drinker, Jim treated his children unfairly, favouring some, neglecting others. When his son Max (Jake Wood) was blamed for stealing and losing a medal that Jim's mother was given during World War II in honour of his late father for bravery, Jim severed all ties with his son and even once locked him in a coffin for associating with a black person and left him in an undertaker's establishment overnight as punishment.

He used to be an amateur boxer using the nickname 'Basher' Branning, but according to Kate Lock's book Who's Who, he had been a "semi-invalid" for much of his working life following a drunken fall from a bedroom window, though he managed to maintain a job collecting supermarket trolleys until he was forced to retire.[3]

1996–2011

File:Branningsjimdot.jpg
Jim and Dot

Jim first appears when his daughter April (Debbie Arnold) is supposed to marry her fiancé Nikos. When Nikos jilts April at the altar, Jim's second daughter Carol (Lindsey Coulson) marries her boyfriend Alan Jackson (Howard Antony) instead. Jim is racist and therefore is against Carol marrying a black man. He storms out, refusing to give her away. Three years later, Carol visits him in Southend, and later that year Jim moves to Walford following Reenie's death and it does not take him long to chase after an eligible widow on Albert Square, Dot Cotton (June Brown). She becomes his second wife, marrying him in 2002 after a proposal in the London eye. After a mishap with viagra, Dot decides that the marriage should remain purely platonic. Jim also has to fight off attention from several spinsters, including Maureen Carter (Diana Coupland) and Doris Moisey (Marcia Ashton), the latter who nearly causes the Brannings' separation.

Despite being overtly racist initially, these hostile feelings mellow, as shown through his close friendship with the Trinidadian shopkeeper, Patrick Trueman (Rudolph Walker). Jim works as a potman, collecting glasses in The Queen Victoria public house, and likes to drink and gamble, to Dot's dismay. He is initially opposed to his granddaughter Sonia's (Natalie Cassidy) lesbian relationship with Naomi Julien (Petra Letang) but later gives his blessing. He clashes with Dot after she takes in an illegal immigrant, Anya (Olga Fedori), whose baby, Tomas, they find at a church. He reports Anya to immigration and she is taken into custody, but Dot keeps Anya's baby and makes Jim promise to look after him with her. In their old age, the Brannings struggle to look after the child, and Dot eventually listens to Jim's pleas and hands the baby over to social services.

Jim goes to stay with Carol after she is taken ill, but he suffers a stroke while he is there. Unable to take care of him, Dot has Jim admitted to a nursing home. He visits his family and friends in Walford several times, the first being on his birthday in August 2008 when his daughter Suzy Branning (Maggie O'Neill) has come to stay, and later at Christmas, but he continues to reject his son Max and animosity resurfaces. Following rehabilitation, Jim is permitted to return to live at home in 2009, now in better health. Jim can speak no more than a few words, but he communicates through gestures and facial expressions, and uses a walking stick and a wheelchair to get around. In February 2010, Dot's granddaughter Dotty attempts to get Jim sent back to the care home by pouring water on his lap to make it look like he has wet himself. However, Dotty is immediately caught out. As Dot and Jim celebrate their eighth wedding anniversary in The Queen Victoria, the police arrest Dot, ruining the party and distressing Jim. Jim draws a picture of him and Dot as an anniversary present for her. Jim and Max bond over the death of Max's son Bradley (Charlie Clements). When son Jack (Scott Maslen) is in a coma, Jim is present when he is woken up. Jim then cries when he finds out Jack is paralysed, knowing the pain of living with a disability. Jim and Dot are later befriended by teenager Fatboy (Ricky Norwood). A few weeks later, when his grandson Billie Jackson (Devon Anderson) dies, Carol goes to visit Jim, and Jim starts crying and Carol breaks down in his arms.

When Carol sees Dot and Jim have no photos of Billie, she accuses them of racism. Dot says she asked Billie for photos but was not given any, and tells Carol to leave, which she does after she sees Jim nod in agreement to Dot. When Carol later arranges a family meal, she invites Jim and Dot to attend. Dot initially refuses, but later forgives her and states that Jim is still upset from what she called him and so she only attends without Jim. However Carol shouts at Dot that she meant what she said to Jim after a family argument. Carol then spends Jack's wedding day with Jim after they have reconciled.

Development

On the behest of producer John Yorke in 2000, Jim was paired romantically with pensioner Dot Cotton, played by June Brown; a slow courtship was featured, with Dot often shown to be outraged by Jim's advances, resulting in numerous rejections. Dot finally succumbed and accepted his marriage proposal in an episode that aired in November 2001; the scenes were filmed inside one of the carriages of the London Eye on the South Bank of the River Thames. Their wedding aired on 14 February 2002, Valentine's Day. The Guardian critic, Nancy Banks-Smith, described the wedding as "uniquely uneventful [...] For Dot and Jim 'In sickness and health... till death do us part' seemed to carry more resonance than for most."[4]

Bardon has revealed that both he and Brown were sceptical about their characters marrying. In an interview with American fan-based newspaper, Walford Gazette, he commented, "No way did the pair of us want to get married because we thought if we got married, we'd sit indoors and watch the telly every night. As it happened, we've had some nice things to do. And we are married, and it's worked out all right."[5] Brown has reiterated that she feared Dot would become boring if she married Jim, but that producers persuaded her that the marriage might be a good thing. On-screen, Dot had suffered the death of her grandson Ashley, and Brown felt that a traumatic event like that would have changed her character. In her opinion, the only way Dot would have got over Ashley's death "would be to have someone else to care for and when it happened there was nobody [but] with marrying Jim she gets a family - that's what persuaded me. That house will become a house again - it will have a central point, they will be able to use the house as a central point, as Dot will be there."[6]

Critic Grace Dent has likened Dot and Jim to Coronation Street's Hilda and Stan Ogden, comparing a scene in EastEnders where Dot nags Jim and he prays for a quiet life to a similar one from Coronation Street, that aired decades before.[7] June Brown discussed Dot's relationship with Jim in 2004: "Initially, Jim wasn't the sort of person that Dot approved of. He drank, he gambled, he lied - he wasn't reliable at all. But Jim decided that he quite fancied Dot - heaven knows why! I think that you always have to work out for yourself how you can make the character work in a new situation. I could see that Jim was kind to Dot [...] His kindness drew her towards him. [...] Dot's definitely in control of Jim. She quite enjoys bossing him around."[8] Brown stated that she enjoys her screen partnership with John Bardon, saying "We work very well together - he's got great timing and he can be very tender too."[8]

The on-screen relationship between Dot and Jim was halted in 2007 when Jim was written out of the soap due to Bardon's health problems.[9] In the script Jim suffered a stroke and was placed in the care of off-screen relatives. Dot and Jim remained together, with Jim making sporadic appearances between 2008 and 2009 to visit Dot.[10] A more permanent return for the character was hinted at in 2009.[11]

Reception

In 2002, Bardon was nominated in the Best Comedy Performance category at The British Soap Awards,[12] and along with Brown, won Best On-Screen Partnership in 2002[13] and again in 2005.[14] They also won Best Couple at the Inside Soap Awards in 2005[15] and Bardon was nominated for Funniest Star for his portrayal of Jim.[14] In November 2010, EastEnders won the Sainsbury's Award for Mainstreaming Disability at the 2010 Cultural Diversity Network Awards, where the judges praised the character.[16]

References

  1. ^ Nathan, Sara (2008-03-10). "Jim Branning back in Walford". The Sun. London. Retrieved 2008-03-10.
  2. ^ Love, Ryan (1 April 2011). "'Enders actor 'films Albert Square exit'". Digital Spy. London: Hachette Filipacchi UK. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  3. ^ Lock, Kate (2000). EastEnders Who's Who. BBC Books. ISBN 0-563-55178-X.
  4. ^ Banks-Smith, Nancy (15 February 2002). "Cotton shocks". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  5. ^ "Actor John Bardon Explains: The Wit and Wisdom of Jim Branning". Walford Gazette. 2005. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  6. ^ "Ask June Brown transcript". BBC. 14 February 2002. Retrieved 16 August 2009.
  7. ^ Dent, Grace (22 March 2005). "Crowned with glory". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2008-12-06.
  8. ^ a b "June Brown". BBC Online. Archived from the original on 5 November 2004. Retrieved 3 August 2009. {{cite web}}: |archive-date= / |archive-url= timestamp mismatch; 25 August 2007 suggested (help)
  9. ^ "'EastEnders' actor suffers stroke". Digital Spy. 17 June 2007. Retrieved 2009-08-17.
  10. ^ "Bardon makes first post-stroke appearance". Digital Spy. 26 June 2008. Retrieved 2009-08-17.
  11. ^ "June Brown hints at Bardon return". Digital Spy. 17 April 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-17.
  12. ^ "Awards for "EastEnders"". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  13. ^ "EastEnders sweeps soap awards". BBC News. 19 May 2002. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  14. ^ a b "British Television Soap Awards". thecustard.tv. Archived from the original on 2 February 2008. Retrieved 20 April 2009.
  15. ^ "EastEnders on top at soap awards". BBC News. 27 September 2005. Retrieved 27 March 2009.
  16. ^ Wightman, Catriona (30 November 2010). "'EastEnders', 'Gypsy Wedding' win awards". Digital Spy. Hachette Filipacchi UK. Retrieved 2 December 2010.