London Bridge (TV series)

London Bridge
Genre Soap opera
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 4
No. of episodes 237
Production
Running time 25 min
Release
Original network ITV
Original release 15 February 1996 (1996-02-15) – 31 March 1999 (1999-03-31)

London Bridge is a British television drama/soap opera made by Carlton for ITV and shown in the London region. It ran from 15 February 1996 to 31 March 1999. It featured many actors who have gone on to star in bigger TV shows, including Bad Girls actresses Simone Lahbib and Mandana Jones and No Angels star Sunetra Sarker. London Bridge revolved around a restaurant, SE1, and the neighbouring block of flats. It started out as a late-night drama which ran for 26 episodes in 1996, before returning as a twice-weekly soap opera later that year. It was not as popular as other British soaps due to only being shown regionally, although did on many occasions beat rival soap Hollyoaks shown on Channel 4. The show was axed in 1999. As of February 2015, the show started a repeat run on local TV channel, London Live.

Characters

Major characters included:

Storylines

In its late-night format the show featured a gritty storyline involving newcomer Mary O'Connor (Simone Lahbib) being raped by a stalker. On becoming twice-weekly the soap introduced Cliff Lewis (Billy Geraghty) as Nick's former friend and the link to Nick's mysterious past. It was revealed that Nick and Cliff had been involved in an armed robbery together which had left a man dead. When Nick was murdered by being locked in the fridge at SE1, Cliff was the prime suspect. Cliff eventually told Nick's wife Isobel that he had seen her kill Nick and they embarked on a relationship. Isobel was eventually put on trial for Nick's murder, but was acquitted after the jury heard about the violence Nick had inflicted on her.

DVD Releases

London Bridge Volume One, featuring the first 13 episodes, was released by Network DVD on 14 November 2011. Volume Two was due to be released by Network DVD in the summer of 2013, but as of 1 September 2015 it has not yet been released.

External links

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