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Brief Encounters (TV series)

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Brief Encounters
Series title over a typewriter
GenreDrama
Created by
Based onGood Vibrations: The True Story of Ann Summers
by Jacqueline Gold
Written by
Directed by
Starring
ComposerMark Thomas
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series1
No. of episodes6
Production
Executive producers
Producers
  • Anne-Louise Russell
  • Carolyn Parry-Jones
  • Jo Willett
Production locationsSheffield, United Kingdom

Cubley, United Kingdom

Pensitone, United Kingdom
Cinematography
  • Nick Dance
  • Ollie Downey
  • Tim Palmer
EditorsBen Drury, Colin Sumsion & Tim Hodges
Running time45 minutes (excluding adverts)
Production companyCPL Productions
Original release
NetworkITV
Release4 July (2016-07-04) –
8 August 2016 (2016-08-08)

Brief Encounters is a British comedy-drama series created by Oriane Messina and Fay Rusling. The series is loosely based on Gold Group International CEO Jacqueline Gold's 1995 memoir, Good Vibrations,[1] details the beginning of the Ann Summers retailer company, through four women who see the potential of finding happiness and fulfillment by selling lingerie and sex toys to women in the privacy of their own homes.[2][3] The series is produced by CPL Productions for broadcast on ITV and aired from 4 July to 8 August 2016. Filming took place between January and April 2016 in Sheffield.[4] It has become known for its innuendo, twists and comedy and has been well received by critics gaining 8.4 out of 10 on IMDB[5] ITV confirmed on the 7th November 2016 that the channel had "taken the difficult decision not to recommission Brief Encounters for a second series [6]

Plot

In the early 1980s the lives of four ordinary women, their husbands, mothers, families and community are turned around when they become Ann Summers party plan saleswomen.

Episodes

Episode 1 It's 1982 when Sheffield factory worker Terry Kirke loses his job. His wife Steph, who cleans for wealthy butcher's wife Pauline Spake, sees the chance to make extra money by selling saucy undies and sex aids. Despite Terry's objections and her own inhibitions, she joins fellow school run mum Nita and hairdresser Dawn, girlfriend of Pauline's husband Brian's shop boy, as salespersons but lacks a venue - until Pauline, bored by her lonely existence, offers to host the party. Pauline is initially nervous but rises to the occasion when her prudish friend Bunny objects and the evening is a success. Brian and Terry are less impressed however and Steph is shocked by Terry's subsequent actions.[7]

Episode 2 Terry is working away after Steph discovered his infidelity and, strapped for cash, she uses some of her sales money to pay the rent. Pauline over-rules Brian by allowing Dawn, who is exhausted by skivvying for her lazy father and older brothers, to be their lodger but Dawn's spiteful father Len counters by banning her from seeing little brother Stanley. Needing the money Steph agrees to host a party for Lisa, the woman she caught Terry with, organized by Lisa's innocent boyfriend Barry, who takes Steph's 5-year-old son Dean out to the cinema - and loses him, though sympathetic policeman Danny helps Steph find him. Nita's husband Kieren meanwhile reluctantly agrees to be the getaway driver in a robbery, which spells disaster for Brian.[8]

Episode 3 Steph goes on an over-night date with Johnny but Terry returns, vowing to make amends and, whilst both he and Steph's mother Joan know about Johnny, she agrees to a reconciliation with her husband. With Brian incapacitated after Kieren ran him over fleeing the robbery Pauline finds he is in debt to his suppliers and, to raise cash, encouraged by Dawn, hosts her first solo party which is a huge success. Returning home in triumph she finds that Dawn wants to move Stanley in after other family members have been arrested. Meanwhile, Nita learns the truth about Kieren's part in the robbery.[9]

Episode 4 Now the family's sole earner a confident Steph confides in fellow salesperson Hellie, spirited daughter of Bunny, her ambitions for the future. She secretly goes to meet Johnny who tells her that he is an adoptee who has come to Sheffield to find his birth mother. Pauline enjoys hosting Dawn's hen party but Russell, over-awed by the wedding arrangements, seeks to cry off the nuptials, being emboldened by a kindly Brian to save the situation. Nita lies to the police to save Kieren whilst Pauline disappoints Johnny and Terry puts himself on the line for Steph.[10]

Episode 5 (broadcast 1 August 2016) Three weeks have passed and Nita's son Richie has gone missing with his father's share of the stolen money. However Nita and Kieren join the others for Dawn and Russell's wedding. At the registry office Steph gives Terry some home truths having learned that Lisa is pregnant, most likely by him, but at the reception Brian is a hero, not only acting as father of the bride to give away a grateful Dawn but buying off her real father, the hateful Len, who arrives demanding to take back Stanley. Pauline blanks Johnny whilst Nita encourages him that Steph is worth fighting for but unfortunately a real fight breaks out when Terry catches his wife kissing Johnny before storming off. Pauline lies to Johnny and then to Steph in an effort to keep the young man out of her life whilst Hellie has a confession to make to Dawn. Back home Nita is shocked when Kieren tells her that he so admired Brian's gesture at the wedding he feels he should give himself up. However they are interrupted by Richie, who has returned with an unwelcome companion.[11]

Episode 6 Stephanie plans a big exotic lingerie event and asks the other women to help model. Nita worries about Richie working for Dougie. As tensions with Pauline come to a head, Johnny asks Stephanie for one last favor before he leaves town.

Cast

Location

One of the locations of the filming was a Sheffield company, Pryor Marking Technology.[13] Based in the centre of Sheffield, and being established since 1849, the exterior of the company is a Grade II listed building, meaning an ideal area for filming period dramas such as Brief Encounters and This Is England. Some of the shots used for Claybin & Boyd were on the rear of the company on Egerton Lane.

The episode 2 scenes, within the cinema, were filmed at Penistone Paramount Cinema. The Berni Inn scenes were shot at nearby Cubley Hall in Cubley.

The production team was based at the old Finnegan [14] builders yard on Ecclesall Road and the interior of the main character's house was a set built in the former joiners shop.

Reception

  • The New Statesman said: 'Brief Encounters is warm and joyful – but no-one in Sheffield calls [the evening meal] "dinner": I can pinpoint the exact moment when I fell, somewhat embarrassingly, for Brief Encounters (Mondays, 9pm), ITV’s new comedy drama about naughty knicker parties in the early Eighties. An Aldi version of The Full Monty, it arrives on our screens with every cliché of character and plot intact. But my heart is simply not up to the job of resisting it.'
  • The Daily Telegraph gave it 4 out 5: 'Brief Encounters: these desperate housewives were funny and full of heart: Brief Encounters (ITV) is a sparky new six-part drama about Ann Summers reps in Eighties Yorkshire, set against a backdrop of unemployment. An unpromising pitch on paper, perhaps, but this first episode was a revelation: frank, funny, and full of heart. Going against her family’s wishes, married mother Steph (Sophie Rundle) made a life-changing decision to run parties selling “exotic lingerie and marital aids”. She roped in two working-class pals and Pauline (Penelope Wilton), the well-to-do lady for whom she cleaned. This motley quartet soon declared: “It’s our duty to sexually awaken the women of Sheffield." It was as if Victoria Wood had rewritten The Full Monty. Brief Encounters was drama by women, about women – but not just for women.'


Awards and nominations

Year Association Category Nominee(s) Result
2017 Diversity in Media Awards Programme of the Year Brief Encounters Nominated

References

  1. ^ "ITV is making a drama about Ann Summers. Yeah, that Ann Summers". Metro. 3 December 2015. Retrieved 3 March 2016. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ "ITV making an Ann Summers drama, obviously called Brief Encounters". The Independent. 3 December 2015. Retrieved 3 March 2016. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ "ITV to make drama about Ann Summers' parties". The Daily Telegraph. 2015. Retrieved 3 March 2016. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ "ITV's Brief Encounters to start filming in Sheffield". Prolific North. 18 January 2016. Retrieved 3 March 2016. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  5. ^ http://gb.imdb.com/title/tt5299596/?ref_=tt_ep_pr
  6. ^ http://www.radiotimes.com/news/2016-11-07/itv-cancels-brief-encounters-after-just-one-series
  7. ^ http://gb.imdb.com/title/tt5299598/?ref_=tt_ep_pr
  8. ^ http://gb.imdb.com/title/tt5299596/?ref_=tt_ep_pr
  9. ^ http://gb.imdb.com/title/tt5299600/plotsummary?ref_=tt_ov_pl
  10. ^ http://gb.imdb.com/title/tt5299602/plotsummary?ref_=tt_ov_pl
  11. ^ http://gb.imdb.com/title/tt5299604/plotsummary?ref_=tt_ov_pl
  12. ^ "ITV drama about Ann Summers casts Sharon Rooney, Penelope Wilton, Sophie Rundle and Angela Griffin". Radio Times. 18 January 2016. Retrieved 3 March 2016. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  13. ^ "Permanent Marking Solutions | Pryor Marking Technology". www.pryormarking.com. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
  14. ^ J F Finnegan Ltd www.j-f-finnegan.co.uk