Stella Street

Stella Street is a British television comedy programme, originally screened in four series on BBC Two between 1997 and 2002. It takes the form of a mockumentary filmed on a camcorder, based on the fantastical premise that a group of British and American celebrities who have all decided to move into Stella Street in Surbiton (actually Hartswood Road, London, W12).

The show (and subsequent film) was conceived and written by John Sessions, Phil Cornwell and Peter Richardson (who also directed). The main characters are played by Sessions, Cornwell and Ronni Ancona. The characters themselves are impressions of famous celebrities such as Marlon Brando, Michael Caine, Jack Nicholson, and, idiosyncratically, UK football pundit Jimmy Hill.

Stella Street '​s depiction of celebrities is mainly rooted in the popular stereotypes surrounding them. For example, Stella Street '​s Jack Nicholson is an inveterate womaniser, drug taker, and has a tacky line in Hawaiian shirts. Michael Caine is seen as an awkward wanna-be cognoscente in horn-rimmed glasses and a shock of ginger hair. Dirk Bogarde is a posh buffoon only interested in his rose garden and Country Life magazine. Al Pacino is deluded that he is a "tall actor, like Danny DeVito and Dustin Hoffman", despite the viewer knowing that he (and the others) are of short stature. Joe Pesci is portrayed in the light of his most well-known roles in violent gangster films, while Jimmy Hill inevitably appears dull when talking about the FA Cup Final to plainly uninterested greater celebrities.

Sessions and Cornwell also play other non-celebrity roles including elderly housekeeper, and lifelong Stella Street resident Mrs Huggett, couple-from-hell Pam and Graham Slurry, dopey builder Dean Barraclough and the potentially murderous gardener Len MacMonotony.

The show returned for a "fifth" series in 2008 on the comedy website log.tv, but this consists of only seven five-minute pieces of John Sessions, Phil Cornwell and Peter Richardson talking about featured clips from the original series.[1]

Themes and plot

Stella Street depicts its celebrities as finding refuge from the madness of their famous lives in the banality of suburbia and the "everyday" situations they may come across, albeit tinged with a hint of surrealism and comedy referenced from their own stereotyped behaviour.

Examples include Roger Moore visiting David Bowie at Christmas in order to give him a face flannel as a present. A game of Monopoly between the celebs. Michael Caine trying to instruct Dean the builder on how to build him a swimming pool, and Mick Jagger and Keith Richards running the local corner shop.

Style

The show is mainly filmed in a "cinema verite" style using handheld cameras often with Cornwell as Michael Caine talking to the camera to introduce characters or situations in the same way he does in the 1966 film Alfie.

Stella Street was originally broadcast in 10-15 minute segments on BBC2. For foreign broadcasts, two or more episodes were concatenated into a 15-20 minute format.

When released on VHS (and subsequently on DVD), the series were condensed into feature length programmes with additional link footage added.

Film adaptation

In March 2004, Stella Street: The Movie, was premiered at the Aspen Comedy Festival, where it earned Cornwell and Sessions the festival's Film Discovery Jury Best Actor Award.[2] It received mostly unfavourable reviews, Anita Gates in the New York Times writing "the concept doesn't translate well to the longer form. The sense of the absurd is watered down."[3] while Michael Rechtshaffen in the Hollywood Reporter said "What might have achieved a degree of cult status across the pond when it was aired in 10-minute installments, struggles to pass big-screen scrutiny in a feature-length treatment that hinges on the flimsiest of plot lines."[4] However Derek Elley in Variety thought it "Manages to sustain its single-joke premise...over feature length." The film opened in 10 screens in the USA and took $2,574 on the opening weekend.[5] The film has since been released on DVD. It has a 12% (rotten) rating from 17 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes[6] and a 5.3 rating on Internet Movie Database.[7]

Celebrity characters

Played by John Sessions
Played by Phil Cornwell

See also

References

  1. http://www.sitcom.co.uk/news/news.php?story=000345
  2. "U.S. Comedy Arts Festival, March 3–7, 2004". IMDb. IMDb. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  3. Gates, Anita (22 October 2004). "Abandoning Glamour for the Simple Life". New York Times. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  4. "Top Critic Reviews: Stella Street". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster, Inc. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  5. "Stella Street, business". IMDb: Business- box office mojo. IMDb. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  6. "Stella Street". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster, Inc. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  7. "Stella Street (2004)". IMDb. IMDb. Retrieved 7 December 2011.

External links