For the Love of Ada
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For the Love of Ada | |
---|---|
Created by | Vince Powell & Harry Driver |
Starring | Irene Handl Wilfred Pickles Barbara Mitchell Jack Smethurst |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 4 |
No. of episodes | 27 |
Production | |
Producer | Thames Television |
Running time | 25 minutes per episode (30 mins with adverts) |
Original release | |
Network | ITV |
Release | 20 April 1970 26 December 1971 | –
For the Love of Ada is an ITV sitcom that ran for 27 episodes between 1970 and 1971.[1][2] It tells the story of a romance between pensioners.[1] Created by the writing duo of Vince Powell and Harry Driver, the popular sitcom starred Irene Handl as the widow Ada and Wilfred Pickles as her love interest, the gravedigger Walter.[2][1]
One of the notable points about this series was there were no opening titles or closing credits, in the real sense of the word. Instead, both were superimposed on the screen as the 'live' action and script played out on the screen.
Outline
[edit]The sitcom stars Irene Handl as Ada Cresswell, a Cockney widow, a pensioner who is prone to malapropisms. She lives with her daughter Ruth Pollitt (Barbara Mitchell) and son-in-law Leslie (Jack Smethurst). Ada starts a relationship with Walter Bingley (Wilfred Pickles), the gravedigger who buried her husband, after meeting him at the cemetery while laying flowers on her husband's grave. Walter is a Yorkshireman; his relationship with Ada slowly changes from one of companionship to one of romance. They get engaged, and later marry, after which they move in together at his cemetery lodge abode.
Cast
[edit]Main
[edit]- Irene Handl as Ada Cresswell (later Bingley)
- Wilfred Pickles as Walter Bingley
- Barbara Mitchell as Ruth Pollitt (née Cresswell)
- Jack Smethurst as Leslie Pollitt
Recurring
[edit]- Robert Keegan as Jack Pollitt, Leslie's father
- Mollie Sugden as Nellie Pollitt, Leslie's mother
- Malcolm Rogers as the Vicar
- Cecily Hullett as Freda Skinner
- Gabrielle Daye as Mrs Armitage
- Charles Lamb as Arthur Parsons
- Anna Turner as Maggie Bingley
- Patsy Rowlands as Pauline Whitehead
- Meadows White as Fred Carter
- Bert Palmer as Fred Bingley
- Ann Way as Florrie Bingley
- Ann Beach as Alice Bingley
- Gerard Hely as Albert Bingley
- Daphne Heard as the nosey neighbour
Transmission dates
[edit]Series One
(6 x 25 mins) 20 Apr-25 May 1970 – Mon mostly 9.30pm
Series Two
(7 x 25 mins) 14 Sep-26 Oct 1970 – Mon 9.30pm
Short special
Part of the All-Star Comedy Carnival 25 Dec 1970 – Fri 6pm
Series Three
(7 x 25 mins) 15 Mar-3 May 1971 – Mon 8.30pm
Series Four
(6 x 25 mins) 26 Aug-30 Sep 1971 – Thu 9pm
Christmas special
(38 mins) Boxing Day (27 Dec 1971) – Sun 6.45pm
Not seen on British TV for over 30 years, the complete series began airing again in late 2018 (and again in 2020, 2021 and 2023) on Talking Pictures TV, with certain potentially-offensive words muted out.
Film version
[edit]A film version, based on the series, was released in 1972. It was directed by Ronnie Baxter and featured the same principal cast, along with an appearance by Arthur English as a colleague of Walter. The plot revolves around a surprise party being planned for Ada and Walter's first wedding anniversary.
American version
[edit]For the Love of Ada spawned an American remake called A Touch of Grace that premiered on ABC in January 1973. This version starred Shirley Booth and J. Pat O'Malley as Grace Simpson and Herbert Morrison, who like their English counterparts fall in love. The American version faced very tough competition from All In The Family and drew low ratings, resulting in its cancellation in April 1973 after 13 episodes, but ABC ran reruns of the show in prime time until June 1973.
See also
[edit]DVD release
[edit]All four series of For the Love of Ada were released between 2009 and 2012.
DVD | Release date |
---|---|
The Complete Series 1 | 12 October 2009 |
The Complete Series 2 | 4 July 2011 |
The Complete Series 3 | 17 October 2011 |
The Complete Series 4 | 16 January 2012 |
The Complete Series 1 to 4 Box Set | 19 March 2018 |
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "A fine romance unfolds in gentle comedy For the Love of Ada: What I've Been Watching Sue Wilkinson on the 1970s working-class sitcom". Lancashire Evening Post. 9 August 2024. Retrieved 23 November 2024 – via ProQuest.
- ^ a b Hayward, Anthony (18 July 2009). "VINCE POWELL". The Independent. Retrieved 23 November 2024 – via ProQuest.