Weavers Green
Weavers Green was a British television soap opera, made in 1966 for ITV by Anglia Television. It was notable for being one of the first television programmes to be shot on location using videotape and outside broadcast equipment, rather than film, as had usually been the case for non-studio shooting until this point.[1]
Its budget was £500,000.[2][3]
The series dealt with life in a small country town and provided an early TV role for Kate O'Mara as a student vet, a far cry from her later TV bitch characters.[4]
49 half hour episodes were produced, all written by Peter and Betty Lambda.
The village of Heydon, north of Reepham, Norfolk was used for the main outside filming, and County School railway station was also used for some scenes.
Cast: Eric Flynn, Megs Jenkins, Grant Taylor, Georgina Ward, Richard Coleman, Susan Field, Vanessa Forsyth, John Glyn-Jones, Maurice Kaufmann, Marjie Lawrence, John Moulder Brown, Pat Nye, Kate O'Mara, Wendy Richard, Gerald Young, Brian Cant, Edward Underdown, Susan George.[5]
Unlike many ITV series of the 1960s, the series survives intact in the archives except for the untransmitted pilots.[6]
References
- ^ "BFI Screenonline: Weavers Green (1966)". www.screenonline.org.uk.
- ^ "Australian Rod Taylor's BBC role". The Canberra Times. National Library of Australia. 20 January 1966. p. 19. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
- ^ "The Light Horseman rides again". The Australian Women's Weekly. National Library of Australia. 15 June 1966. p. 9. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
- ^ "Kate O'Mara". HeraldScotland.
- ^ "Weavers Green[07/05/66] (1966)".
- ^ "TVBrain - Kaleidoscope - Lost shows - TV Archive - TV History". www.lostshows.com.
External links
- Weavers Green at IMDb
- Weavers Green at the British Film Institute's Screenonline
- 1966 British television programme debuts
- 1966 British television programme endings
- 1960s British television soap operas
- British television soap operas
- ITV soap operas
- Television series by ITV Studios
- Television programmes produced by Anglia Television
- Black-and-white British television programmes
- English-language television programs