Grace & Favour

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This article is about the sitcom. For the term, see Grace and favour.
Grace & Favour
Format Sitcom
Created by Jeremy Lloyd & David Croft
Written by Jeremy Lloyd & David Croft
Directed by Mike Stephens
Starring Mollie Sugden
Frank Thornton
John Inman
Wendy Richard
Nicholas Smith
Fleur Bennett
Joanne Heywood
Billy Burden
Michael Bilton
Country of origin Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
No. of series 2
No. of episodes 12
Production
Producer(s) Mike Stephens
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel BBC1
Original run 10 January 19928 February 1993
Chronology
Related shows Are You Being Served?
External links
IMDb profile

Grace & Favour was a British sitcom that was the sequel to the long-running and successful series Are You Being Served?. It aired on BBC1 for two series from 1992 to 1993, and marked the return of Are You Being Served? writers Jeremy Lloyd and David Croft. In the United States, it aired as Are You Being Served? Again!.

Contents

[edit] History

The idea of a spinoff was originally suggested by the cast of Are You Being Served? almost immediately after the original series ended in 1985. Writers Lloyd and Croft liked the idea, but agreed that the department store format was exhausted, and any spinoff would require a change of location.[1] Despite the enthusiasm of the original cast, it would be almost seven years before Lloyd and Croft brought them back to television. The plotline that brought the cast from the store to the manor was considered remarkably topical, since it aired just a few months after the death of British publishing tycoon Robert Maxwell, who was revealed to have borrowed heavily against his own employee's pensions. Grace and Favour was different from Are You Being Served? in that it involved a continuous story arc, with the plot unfolding over several episodes. Some episodes, within the timeline of the show, begin almost immediately after the previous episode ends. This device allowed Lloyd and Croft to craft more complex storylines and subplots than were allowed in Are You Being Served?, and allowed guest characters to make return appearances.

[edit] Cast

Out of the cast of the original series when it ended, only Mike Berry (Mr. Spooner), chose not to return. Though Mollie Sugden had met with limited success in her own television serial Come Back Mrs Noah she agreed to reprise her popular role of Mrs. Slocombe. Wendy Richard, successful since the original Are You Being Served? as Pauline Fowler in EastEnders, returned as Miss Brahms. Wendy Richard took time off filming for EastEnders to film these 2 series of 'Grace and Favour'. Also returning to their roles were John Inman, who played the effeminate Mr Humphries, Frank Thornton, who played the floorwalker Captain Peacock, and Nicholas Smith as the former head of the department, Cuthbert Rumbold.

Several new repeat characters were added to the show. Joanne Heywood as Miss Lovelock, Billy Burden as farmer Maurice Moulterd, and Fleur Bennett as his daughter, Mavis, all made appearances in each episode. Michael Bilton, as Mr. Grace's solicitor, Mr. Thorpe, and his assistant, Miss Prescott, played by Shirley Cheriton also held key roles in several episodes.

[edit] Cast List

[edit] Plotline

The new series has the elderly and womanizing Young Mr. Grace, head of Grace Brothers Department Store, recently deceased. He has died while scuba-diving on holiday in the Caribbean with his personal secretary, Miss Jessica Lovelock. As per the instructions in his will, the remaining workers at Grace Brothers' closing sale (coincidentally, most of the staff who were present in the original series) are named co-beneficiaries in his will.

Young Mr. Grace has invested their pension funds in a multitude of antiquated businesses, the largest of which is a country manor house called Millstone Manor. The will stipulates that they can't sell the house and split the profits, but can use the property in the manner of their choosing. After a trip to Millstone Manor to view the property, where they also learn their pensions are minuscule, they decide to live in the manor in order to run it as an inn and live off the proceeds. Miss Lovelock, given accommodations in the grooms quarters and charge of the horses, also lives at the manor much to the distress of Mrs. Slocombe and Miss Brahms. Captain Peacock is not so distressed, however.

The series begins just after the funeral of Mr. Grace, and quickly brings the cast to Millstone Manor. There they find Mr. Rumbold having trouble trying to find new staff after telling the previous staff "in no uncertain terms" that if they didn't straighten up they could leave...and they left. With time running out, the old Grace Brothers employees are obligated to "stand in" for the staff in order to have their picture taken as the inn staff for a travel brochure. Soon they find that they are running the inn themselves with the help of Mr. Moulterd, who manages the manor's farm, and his daughter Mavis, who helps out at the manor.

The series is known as Are You Being Served? Again! in America, and carries the same title on US DVD releases.
The series is known as Are You Being Served? Again! in America, and carries the same title on US DVD releases.

With Mr. Humphries forced by circumstance to share a bed with Mavis, he finds that she develops a bit of a crush on him. This series of events leads all of the cast to assume they are having an affair, which flatters Mr. Humphries, though he denies any such goings-on. Despite these events, Mr. Humphries continues to be rather ambivalent to the idea of a relationship with anyone. A young man from the village vies with Humphries for Mavis' affection, and frequently attempts to intimidate him by threatening him with violence.

On her first day in the country, Mrs. Slocombe tries to move a gypsy's wagon that blocked the road and ends up charged with wagon theft, narrowly avoiding a charge of indecent exposure since there was "just a flash" as the out-of-control wagon raced past the post office. At her trial, all of her colleagues are called as witnesses, but it's Mr. Moulterd who ends up winning the case for her. Mrs Slocombe is grateful, despite her irritation that he brings up their sexual relationship during the War, which she insists never happened. Also notable, is the unexpected appearance of the oft alluded to, but never-before-seen Mr. Slocombe, from whom Mrs. Slocombe seeks to hide her identity.

Other events include the staff putting on a traditional harvest festival dance for octogenarian American visitors, and putting on a showcase of British arts and culture for a tour group from Mongolia.

[edit] Location filming

All external filming for the series was undertaken in and around Tetbury in Gloucestershire. Primary filming was at Chavenage House, just outside of Tetbury.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Rigelsford, Adrian; Brown, Anthony & Tibballs, Geoff (1995), Are You Being Served?: The Inside Story of Britain's Funniest -and Public Television's Favorite- Comedy Series, KQED Books, ISBN 0-912333-04-9 

[edit] External links