Yuppy Love

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Only Fools and Horses episode
"Yuppy Love"
Series 6
Writer John Sullivan
Director Tony Dow
Producer Gareth Gwenlan
Duration 50 minutes
Airdate 8 January 1989
Audience 13.9 million

Yuppy Love is an episode of the BBC sit-com, Only Fools and Horses. It was the first episode of series 6, and was first screened on 8 January 1989. With a running time of 50 minutes, it was also the first regular episode of the time to be longer than 30 minutes.

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Having seen and been strongly influenced by the film Wall Street, especially its lead character, the ruthless corporate high-flyer Gordon Gekko, Del Boy has decided to adopt a new "yuppy" image, donning a striped shirt and red braces, and carrying a filofax and a silver briefcase. Rodney in turn has joined an evening computer class, where he meets Cassandra Parry. He later meets her again at a nightclub, where she offers to give him a lift home. Embarrassed at the thought of Cassandra seeing their council flat in Nelson Mandela House, Rodney instead leads her to The King's Avenue, an expensive and very up-market road, implying that he lives there. Despite soon finding out that he actually doesn't Cassandra still phones and agrees to meet Rodney again.

The episode also features a now-famous British comedy scene;[1] Del, leaning against a bar flap in a local bistro, moves away from it and then leans back again, unaware that the bartender has just lifted it up, and he promptly falls straight down. On 21st December 2006, this scene was nominated in the UKTV Gold Top 40 Greatest Only Fools Moments. It was voted in as the most popular scene of the entire programme.[2]

[edit] Episode cast

Actor Role
David Jason Del Boy
Nicholas Lyndhurst Rodney
Buster Merryfield Uncle Albert
Roger Lloyd Pack Trigger
Gwyneth Strong Cassandra
Patrick Murray Mickey Pearce
Stephen Woodcock Jevon
 
Actor Role
Francesca Bell Emma
Laura Jackson Marsha (girl in bar)
Diana Katis Dale (girl in bar)
Hazel McBride Snobby girl
William Thomas Barman
Tracy Clarke Girl in disco

[edit] First Appearances

[edit] Story Arc

  • We learn the Trotters have been living in Nelson Mandela House since 1962, and that Rodney was born in it.

[edit] Trivia

  • The scene where Rodney is dropped off at a posh area called the King's Avenue is based on a real-life occurrence for John Sullivan as a schoolboy.
  • The script was based on Gordon Gekko from the movie Wall Street, to reinvent a new image for Del, and bring in Cassandra and Raquel into the series.

[edit] Errors

  • When Rodney is going to his evening class, he is wearing a black suit. Rodney attends class, then tells Del that he isn't going back to the flat ("Not with Albert there.") He goes to the disco instead, dances with Cassandra, gets dropped off at the King's Avenue in the rain, then comes home, while wearing a grey suit all the while.

[edit] Famous Line

  • When Del and Rodney chat about Rodney selling Gas Conversion Kits down the Mountbatten Estate and Del's short lived romance with an old girlfriend, Annie Oakley is mentioned in the conversation. Rodney said: "You bastard! You sent me all the way down the Mountbatten Estate, knowing I had chicken pox, just so you and Annie 'Bloody' Oakley could have the flat to yourselves!"

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Dates
Only Fools and Horses
8 January 1989
Succeeded by
Danger UXD