The Kumars at No. 42

The Kumars at No. 42
Format Comedy chat show
Created by Hat Trick Productions
Sharat Sardana
Starring Sanjeev Bhaskar
Meera Syal
Indira Joshi
Vincent Ebrahim
Country of origin United Kingdom
Language(s) English
Production
Executive producer(s) Anil Gupta
Running time 30 minutes
Broadcast
Original channel BBC Two
Original run 12 November 2001 – 18 August 2006
External links
Website

The Kumars at No. 42 was a British television show. It won an International Emmy in 2002[1] and in 2003.[2] It ran for seven series totalling 53 episodes.[3]

Contents

Plot

The show stars a fictional British Indian family, including Madhuri and Ashwin Kumar (played by Indira Joshi and Vincent Ebrahim), their thirty-something son Sanjeev (played by Sanjeev Bhaskar), and Sushila, Sanjeev's grandmother, normally referred to as Ummi (played by Meera Syal). The family live in Wembley, London, England. The show's central premise is that Sanjeev's parents have supported his dream of being a TV presenter by having a TV studio built on what used to be their back garden. Running jokes include Sanjeev's apparent social ineptitude, and Ashwin's obsession with financial matters and his tendency to tell long stories with no real point. It is also a regular conceit that the guests' appearance fees are paid in chutney.

The show has an improvisational feel, though in reality much of the regular cast's performance was scripted. In the early episodes only Meera Syal improvised to any great extent, though as the cast became accustomed to their characters the improvised content increased.

Production

The show's UK debut was on 12 November 2001 on BBC Two. It was produced by Hat Trick Productions and Pariah Television. Seven series of the programme have aired on BBC Two (and latterly on BBC One), with the seventh shown in 2006. In an interview for Radio Times in May 2007 Bhaskar confirmed that the show had run its course and there were no plans for any further series.

The Kumars also made a guest appearance on the 2003 Comic Relief single "Spirit in the Sky" performed by Gareth Gates. They also starred in the video. It reached number 1 in the charts and sold more than 550,000 copies.

International

The Kumars at Number 42 was also shown in Asia (including India and Malaysia) on the Star World satellite TV channel and on SABC in South Africa The Australian Broadcasting Corporation screens it in Australia and, due to its previous time slot being right before hugely successful Australian comedy Kath & Kim, has made the programme hugely successful in Australia, and it is also very popular in New Zealand, where it is screened by Television New Zealand. It has been broadcast in the United States on BBC America, and in Canada, the programme can be viewed on BBC Canada, a digital cable channel, weeknights at 9:00 North American Eastern Time.[4] It was shown in Sweden, as Curry Curry talkshow, by SVT2 in 2004, and in the Netherlands on the public broadcasting foundation NPS (Nederland 3). Currently it is also shown in Switzerland on Swiss TV station DRS.

In August 2002 the American channel NBC entered a deal to buy the format but later dropped out.

A new version of the show was planned for Sunday evenings on Fox, restyled as a show in the 2003-04 season featuring a Latino-American family called The Ortegas and featuring Cheech Marin.[5] However the program was dropped from Fox's post-baseball playoffs schedule to focus the network's schedule on the success of The O.C. at the time,[6] and became another one of Fox's series which were scheduled, but never made it to air. Six episodes were produced, but never aired.

The Australian version, Greeks on the Roof (featuring Greek Australians), debuted in 2003 but was soon taken off the air because of very low ratings.

ARY Digital has produced a Pakistani Version of the show called Ghaffar at Dhoraji featuring a Gujarati family living in Karachi. Sony Television has produced an Indian version of the show called Batliwalla House No. 43 featuring a Parsee family living in Mumbai.

Trivia

When talking about The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy for the British Book Awards, Sanjeev Bhaskar stated that he chose 42 as the house number because in the Hitchhiker's series 42 features prominently as the Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything.

Sanjeev Bhaskar told interviewer Mark Lawson in August 2007 that the inspiration for the series was an embarrassing evening when he took a girlfriend to meet his parents. They asked her awkward questions and he wondered how they would react if he invited a famous person to his home. Ashwin and Madhuri are exaggerated versions of his own parents.

References

External links