Casualty (series 11)
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Casualty series 11 | |
---|---|
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
No. of episodes | 24 |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | BBC |
Original run | 14 September 1996 – 22 February 1997 |
Home video release | |
DVD release date | Unknown |
Series chronology | |
List of Casualty episodes |
The eleventh series of the British medical drama television series Casualty commenced airing in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 14 September 1996 and finished on 22 February 1997.[1]
Notable events of the series include the death of Josh's wife and children as a result of a house fire, the birth of Charlie and Baz's son Louis, and the near-fatal stabbing of Jude at the end of the series.[2]
Cast
- Derek Thompson as Charlie Fairhead
- Julia Watson as Barbara "Baz" Hayes
- Ian Bleasdale as Josh Griffiths
- Sue Devaney as Liz Harker
- Sorcha Cusack as Kate Wilson
- Gray O'Brien as Richard McCaig
- Ganiat Kasumu as Gloria Hammond
- Jonathan Kerrigan as Sam Colloby (Episode 2 onwards)
- Peter Birch as Jack Hathaway (Episode 11 onwards)
- Vas Blackwood as David Sinclair (Episodes 21–24)
- Clive Mantle as Mike Barratt (Episodes 1–10)
- Lisa Coleman as Jude Kocarnik
- Jason Merrells as Matt Hawley
Episodes
Episode No.[nb 1] | Series No. | Episode | Director | Writer(s) | Original airdate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
177 | 1 | "Chain Reaction" | Roger Gartland | Andrew Holden | 14 September 1996 |
Richard McCaig and Gloria Hammond are introduced, Baz Hayes takes Maternity leave. Guest starring Sammy Johnson as Greg Bailey | |||||
178 | 2 | "Relative Values" | Graeme Harper | Chris Lang | 21 September 1996 |
Sam Colloby is introduced | |||||
179 | 3 | "It Ain't Me, Babe" | Michael Owen Morris | Rob Gittins | 28 September 1996 |
180 | 4 | "Thicker Than Water" | David Penn | Kate Lock | 5 October 1996 |
181 | 5 | "Waterwings" | Laurence Moody | Simon Stirling | 12 October 1996 |
182 | 6 | "Still Waters" | Robert Gabriel | Manjit Singh | 19 October 1996 |
183 | 7 | "Nightfall" | Sallie Aprahamian | Simon Ashdown | 26 October 1996 |
184 | 8 | "Vital Signs" | Tim Prager | Barbara Machin | 2 November 1996 |
185 | 9 | "Another Day in Paradise" | Tony McHale | Tony McHale | 9 November 1996 |
Baz Hayes Returns after 3 months maternity leave | |||||
186 | 10 | "Flesh and Blood" | John Bruce | Lilie Ferrari | 16 November 1996 |
Mike Barratt departs | |||||
187 | 11 | "Made in Britain" | Romey Allison | Lisa Evans | 23 November 1996 |
Jack Hathaway is introduced | |||||
188 | 12 | "Mother's Little Helper" | Ian White | Peter Mills | 30 November 1996 |
189 | 13 | "Trapped" | Alan Bell | Andrew Holden | 7 December 1996 |
190 | 14 | "Do You Believe in Fairies?" | Johnathan Young | Deborah Cook | 14 December 1996 |
191 | 15 | "Dying of the Light" | Indra Bhose | Christopher Reason | 21 December 1996 |
192 | 16 | "The Homecoming" | Tim Prager | Chris Lang | 28 December 1996 |
193 | 17 | "Hidden Depths" | Beryl Richards | Simon Stirling | 4 January 1997 |
194 | 18 | "Tall Tales" | Robin Shepperd | David Joss Buckley | 11 January 1997 |
195 | 19 | "Déjà Vu" | Tim O'Mara | Lilie Ferrari | 18 January 1997 |
196 | 20 | "Treasure" | Ken Hannam | Lisa Evans | 25 January 1997 |
197 | 21 | "United... By Blood" | Tony McHale | Tony McHale | 1 February 1997 |
David Sinclair is introduced | |||||
198 | 22 | "Make Believe" | Peter Barber-Fleming | Kate Lock | 8 February 1997 |
199 | 23 | "Monday, Bloody Monday" | Graeme Harper | Barbara Machin | 15 February 1997 |
200 | 24 | "Perfect Blue" | Graeme Harper | Barbara Machin | 22 February 1997 |
Gloria Hammond, Jude Korcanik, Matt Hawley and David Sinclair depart |
Notes
- ↑ "Episode No." refers to the episode's number in the overall series, whereas "Series No." refers to the episode's number in this particular series.
References
- General
- Specific
External links
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