Seven of One

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Seven of One

Open All Hours and Porridge were the two successful pilots from the Seven of One series.
Format Comedy
Created by Ronnie Barker
Starring Ronnie Barker
Country of origin United Kingdom
No. of episodes 7
Production
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel BBC1
Original run 25 March6 May 1973
External links
IMDb profile

Seven of One is a British comedy series that aired on BBC1 in 1973. Starring Ronnie Barker, Seven of One is a series of seven separate comedies that would serve as possible pilots for sitcoms. Originally it was to be called Six of One, which Barker planned to follow up with another series called Half Dozen of the Other.


The seven programmes were individually called:

  • Open All Hours: Arkwright, a miserly North country shopkeeper and his put upon nephew Granville (David Jason).
  • Prisoner and Escort: Norman Stanley Fletcher, a career criminal and his escorts - soft-hearted Mr Barrowclough (Brian Wilde) and authoritarian Mr Mackay (Fulton Mackay) going up to prison.
  • My Old Man: An embittered former train driver is forced to leave his condemned home, and decides to go & live with his daughter and her 'posh' husband by the railway.
  • Football Blues: The tale of ailing football team, Ashfield Athletic, and its trainer, local cabbie / hot dog salesman / chauffeur, Norman Spanner.
  • Meat: A man is forced to go on a starvation diet by his wife (Prunella Scales). (Barker wrote this episode under the pseudonym Jack Goetz.)
  • Another Fine Mess: Ronnie Barker and Roy Castle as two Laurel and Hardy impersonators who become their characters as an evening's farcical events escalate around them.
  • Flying For A Quid: A Welsh family, the Owens, who bet on absolutely everything and anything, discover that their grandfather backed a winner on the day he passed away - but where is the betting slip?

While the majority did not go beyond the Seven of One series, both Open All Hours and Prisoner and Escort did become much loved sitcoms. The first was the sitcom of the same name, while the second became Porridge, giving Ronnie Barker two of his best known roles. Both were voted amongst the top 10 Greatest British Sitcoms in 2004 [1].

My Old Man also became a short-lived series for Yorkshire Television including ITV but with an entirely new cast led by Clive Dunn of Dad's Army fame.

Seven of One also featured Roy Castle, Bill Maynard, Sheila Brennan, Talfryn Thomas, Prunella Scales, Glynn Edwards, Joan Sims, Keith Chegwin, Leslie Dwyer, Robin Parkinson, Sam Kelly, Christopher Biggins, Richard O'Callaghan and Avis Bunnage in supporting roles. The series was released on BBC DVD in 2005.

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