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IMDbPro

Grange Hill

  • TV Series
  • 1978–2008
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Grange Hill (1978)
Just Add S.P.I.C.E.: A Recipe For Happy Healthy Kids 3-6
Play trailer1:07
1 Video
99+ Photos
ComedyDramaFamily

The long running television series of the Grange Hill Comprehensive School, and the children's everyday lives.The long running television series of the Grange Hill Comprehensive School, and the children's everyday lives.The long running television series of the Grange Hill Comprehensive School, and the children's everyday lives.

  • Stars
    • Stuart Organ
    • Gwyneth Powell
    • Lee Cornes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Stuart Organ
      • Gwyneth Powell
      • Lee Cornes
    • 16User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 4 BAFTA Awards
      • 4 wins & 6 nominations total

    Episodes601

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    Videos1

    Just Add S.P.I.C.E.: A Recipe For Happy Healthy Kids 3-6
    Trailer 1:07
    Just Add S.P.I.C.E.: A Recipe For Happy Healthy Kids 3-6

    Photos6269

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Stuart Organ
    Stuart Organ
    • Mr. Robson
    • 1988–2003
    Gwyneth Powell
    Gwyneth Powell
    • Mrs. McClusky
    • 1980–1991
    Lee Cornes
    Lee Cornes
    • Mr. Hankin
    • 1990–2002
    Sally Geoghegan
    Sally Geoghegan
    • Miss Carver…
    • 1995–2002
    Sammy O'Grady
    Sammy O'Grady
    • Kathy McIlroy
    • 2001–2008
    Simone Hyams
    • Calley Donnington
    • 1985–1991
    Karen Ford
    Karen Ford
    • Miss Booth…
    • 1985–1991
    Kelly George
    • Ray Haynes…
    • 1987–2002
    Aidan David
    • James 'Arnie' Arnold…
    • 1994–2001
    John Drummond
    • Trevor Cleaver…
    • 1983–1991
    Rachel Victoria Roberts
    • Justine Dean
    • 1988–1994
    John Alford
    • Robbie Wright
    • 1985–1990
    Colin Ridgewell
    • Colin Brown
    • 1994–2001
    Tina Mahon
    • Ronnie Birtles
    • 1985–1991
    Matthew Buckley
    Matthew Buckley
    • Martin Miller
    • 2001–2007
    George A. Cooper
    George A. Cooper
    • Mr. Griffiths
    • 1985–1992
    Samantha Lewis
    • Georgina Hayes…
    • 1985–1991
    Kirsten Cassidy
    • Tanya Young
    • 2003–2008
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    7.21.7K
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    Featured reviews

    GilraenEstel

    Being a teenager - at it's most painful.

    When you were a teenager, it always felt as if the world was against you. No matter what you did, how much you tried to impress people - there was always something wrong, someone to put you in your place.

    That is the brilliance of Grange Hill - it depicts British school life excellently: the everyday hum-drum of moving from one lesson to the other; the mind-numbing, soul-crushing hell hole that you have to attend every day for five years; the peer pressure and the bullying and most of all, realising that this is your life and it's never going to change. (And no, I didn't like school much!)

    When you were at school, there was always kids whose parents were getting divorced, gay, on drugs, seriously depressed, victim of abuse or pregnant. Grange Hill doesn't just present the problem, it explores how that problem came about, the effect on that character and most of all the reaction of their peers when it all comes out (which it always does). There is always something compulsive about watching on the tele what you know to be happening all around you, what happens to your closest friend or worst enemy - because it's real.

    Compulsive viewing for any one who is/was a teenager.
    RickW-UK

    Can this programme get any more stupid?

    Personally i think that kids programmes featuring schools and ridiculous. They are NOTHING like the real thing, i left school last year and this programme is just one huge laugh.

    Its only a couple of years ago that Grange Hill was home to 'The Double Dare gang', i mean come on! How many teenagers that you know would join the 'Double Dare Gang'

    All of the teachers have changed, and some of the almost real characters have left, while the writers keep coming up with excuses to keep older pupils within the school.

    Finish this show and make something realistic!

    Rick
    8La-Luz

    '79 to '83 it was Brookside for kids

    Have been rewatching this recently out of nostalgia. About 10 years ago I got hold of the first 6 series that went from Tucker, Alan, Benny, Tommy and co. To Stewpot, Claire Scott, Pogo, and Gripper, etc. And at that point excitedly relived my youth! I first started watching it in late 1979, series 2 and was like many a kid was hooked throughout the 1980s. I was still watching it in 1988/89 when Michelle Gayle was in it!

    Anyway, as a Phil Redmond creation, it (nowadays on refelection) seems like a precursor to Brookside. With real life characterisations, real life settings, indellible characters, clever nicknames, and hard hitting stories. It is noticeable that a few Redmond traits are in this, partcularly the name 'Brookdale' as a school and another one, where some the cast's surnames would be given to some of the characters. If anyone does not get that point think, John McArdle actor, Tommy McArdle character (Brookside) as a case in point. Brookside did that kind of thing a lot and it was something that was done first in Grange Hill. Both shows also had a mememorable to this day story. Zammo's addiction, and the infamous body under the patio.

    Back to the main review. Most kids of the 80s have a favourite year that identified with their own age group. For me I thought Tucker was a cool role model but I was a bit young but by series 6 with aforementioned Stewpot, Gripper and the rest it became my and my school friends' favourite. I was, like many a big fan of Jonah Jones and Ziggy Greaves but still think the Gripper era was the best. Grange Hill never had a better villain than him.

    Watching it again recently, the third series is excellent, with some highly amusing scenes. It gets better still in series 4 when Tucker and co. Are in their final year at school. The Christmas special that came along later that year is very good with the school's initial villain 'Booger' Benson duffing up Tucker. The silent end credits to that as Tucker lays unconscious is also very Phil Redmond style and I think the method was repeated once in Brookside.

    So, for me series 3,4,5 and 6 are my particular era and it is fascinating to watch again knowing the storylines in advance. I always think that when I was a kid I acted like a Grange Hill kid and many years later when I became a high school teacher I acted like a Grange Hill teacher! Mr. Keating's "silence!", is one such line I have often used!

    The school that was used for the Gripper era (and probably the most rembered by 80s kids) is on Greyhound Road in Hammersmith, West London. When I was in the area last, I just had to get a photo by the main gates!
    chris_gaskin123

    Better than prime time TV.

    I have been watching Grange Hill since the early 1980's and still watch it to this day, even though I have long left school.

    This drama is better than some of the rubbish which is on TV in the evenings at prime time. A lot of the time all there is on are repeats of detective shows or cheap to make 'fly on the wall' documentaries.

    The young actors and actresses take good parts and a lot have moved on to become well known and star in soaps like EastEnders. Some quite well known faces have played the teachers too such as Anna Quayle (Mrs Munroe) who was in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

    Rating: 4 stars out of 5.
    buckaroobanzai50

    School's Out!

    I remember watching the very first episode of Grange Hill, when Tucker Jenkins the-soon-to-be star of the series, went to meet his friend Benny Green before their first day at school. That was in 1978. I soon became hooked on the series, like most of my age group back then, and was grateful that it was shown twice a week, which was-and still is-unusual for TV drama. Through subsequant episodes, we followed the exploits of the many characters who passed through the school's gates. And, we also could relate to the many problems that the characters experienced, as most of us at some time or other, had been subjected to bullying, peer pressure, the problems of divorce, and even drug abuse.

    The BBC had to endure the scourge of many complaints from parents and various groups. And they also had the likes of people such as Mary Whitehouse, critisising them for corrupting Britain's youth. I remember that the BBC once screened a special debate programme called Speaking Out, in which actors from the series, and real pupils and teachers from schools discussed the issues sometimes covered in Grange Hill. At the time, there was a major fuss because a female character in the series, played by Paula Ann Bland, wanted to go on the pill. Shock Horror!!

    Well, it was a primative time 1982 y'know.

    I regard the classic period of Grange Hill to be somewhere between 1979 to 1989, and since then, I have stopped watching.

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    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Drew Barrymore and Pat Welsh in E.T., l'extra-terrestre (1982)
    Family

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      For a while the show shared its signature tune (Alan Hawkshaw's 1975 track "Chicken Man") with the ITV charades gameshow Give Us a Clue (1979).
    • Crazy credits
      Acting credits were always listed in a given order - teachers and school staff first, then other adult roles, followed by main cast pupils, followed by additional child roles.
    • Connections
      Featured in In Front of the Children (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      Chicken Man
      (uncredited)

      Composed by Alan Hawkshaw

      [Original series theme tune]

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    FAQ20

    • How many seasons does Grange Hill have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 8, 1978 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Грэндж Хилл
    • Filming locations
      • Kingsbury High School, Kingsbury, Middlesex, England, UK(exterior of Grange Hill series 1 & 2)
    • Production companies
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
      • Mersey Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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