
Rising Damp
Photoc ourtesy of the British Film Institute
CAST
Rupert
Rigsby..................................... Leonard Rossiter
Alan Moore........................................... Alan Beckinsale
Ruth Jones....................................... Frances de
la Tour
Philip Smith ..........................................Don Warrington
Spooner.................................................. Derek
Newark
Brenda..........................................................
Gay Rose
PRODUCERS
Ian MacNaughton, Ronnie Baxter, len Luruck, Vernon Lawrence
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
Yorkshire Television (ITV)
28 Episodes
2 September 1974 Pilot
Episode December 1974-January 1975 5
Episodes November 1975-December 1975 8
Episodes
27 December 1976 Christmas
Special
April 1977-May 1977
7 Episodes
April 1978-May 1978 6
Episodes
See
also British
Programming
Rising
Damp, the classic Yorkshire Television situation comedy series
set in a run-down northern boarding house, was originally screened
on ITV between 1974 and 1978 and has continued to be revived on
British television at regular intervals ever since, always attracting
large audiences (many of whom were no doubt lodgers at one time
or another in similarly seedy houses). Created by writer Ernie Chappell,
the series depicted the comic misadventures and machinations of
Rupert Rigsby, the embittered down-at-heel landlord who constantly
spied on the usually very innocent private lives of an assortment
of long-suffering tenants.
The
success of Rising Damp depended largely upon the considerable
comic talent of its star, Leonard Rossiter, who played the snooping
and sneering Rigsby. Rossiter had first demonstrated his impeccable
coming timing in the same role (though under the name Rooksby) in
the one-off stage play Banana Box, from which the television
series was derived. Rossiter rapidly stamped his mark upon the money-grubbing,
lecherous, manneristic landlord, making him at once repulsive, vulnerable,
paranoid, irrepressible, ignorant, cunning, and above all hilarious.
Sharing his inmost fears and suspicions with his cat Vienna, he
skulked about the ill-kempt house, bursting in on tenants when he
thought (almost always mistakenly) that he would catch them in flagrante
and impotently plotting how to seduce university administrator
Miss Jones, the frustrated spinster who was the reluctant object
of his desire.
Rigsby's
appalling disrespect for the privacy of his lodgers and his irrepressible
inquisitiveness was the moving force behind the storylines, bringing
together the various supporting characters who otherwise mostly
cut lonely and inadequate, even tragic, figures. The supporting
cast was in fact very strong, with Miss Jones played in highly individualistic
style by the respected stage actress Frances de la Tour, the confused,
naive medical student Alan played by an ingenuous but appealing
Richard Beckinsale, and Philip, the proud but smug son of an African
tribal chief, played by Don Warrington. Only Beckinsale had not
appeared in the original stage play. Other lodgers later in the
series were Brenda (Gay Rose) and Spooner (Derek Newark).
The frustrations and petty humiliations constantly suffered by the
various characters, coupled with their dingy surroundings, could
easily have made the series a melancholy affair, but the deft humour
of the scripts married to the inventiveness and expertise of the
performers kept the tone light, if somewhat hysterical at times,
and enabled the writers to explore Rigsby's various prejudices (concerning
sex, race, students, and anything unfamiliar) without causing offence.
In this respect, the series was reminiscent of the techniques employed
in Steptoe and Son and by Johnny Speight and Warren Mitchell in
the "Alf Garnett" series, though here there was less emphasis on
invective and more on deliberately farcical comedy. One occasion
on which the series did come unstuck was when fun was had at the
expense of an apparently fictional election candidate named Pendry,
who was described as crooked and homosexual--unfortunately there
was a real Labour member of parliament of the same name and Yorkshire
Television was obliged to pay substantial damages for defamation
as a result.
The
success of the television series led to a film version in 1980,
but this met with mixed response, lacking the conciseness and sharpness
of the television series and also lacking the presence of Beckinsale,
who had tragically died of a heart attack at the age of 31 the previous
year. Rossiter himself went on to star in the equally popular series
The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin before his own premature
death from heart failure in 1984.
-David
Pickering