Guy Fuddle lives with grandma who's ill and wants to see her granddaughters sent away as kids before dying. Guy searches for his four sisters. When reunited, grandma's real motives are uncov... Read allGuy Fuddle lives with grandma who's ill and wants to see her granddaughters sent away as kids before dying. Guy searches for his four sisters. When reunited, grandma's real motives are uncovered.Guy Fuddle lives with grandma who's ill and wants to see her granddaughters sent away as kids before dying. Guy searches for his four sisters. When reunited, grandma's real motives are uncovered.
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It appears that I am also one of the few that ever remember this great series!? I just wish I could find it on DVD. Scene/s that I remember and grin about wherever I am are Ade trying to buy a sandwich in America and him being run over on the drive of his house and crawling to the door :) Saunders is also superb in the roles she plays, seeming to really be at one with the characters and manages to crush Ade so smoothly every few minutes as his craziate bonkers mum.... (another series quote ;) ) This is one of those shows I saw once and wished i'd found re-run, gutted I missed the Gold repeats :( All in all it was fantastic, but then I'm biased as I sometimes resemble Ade and quote him and his characters ad nauseum ;)
after reading everyone else's comments i thought i should do my duty and post one too yea like many of the others that commented i had a vague recollection of a scary granny a drippy ade edmonson and a senile cook and very amusing sisters....especially madeline "madeline madeline i want to go to bed vis u" hehe that episode was so good but i was lucky to make a friend when i moved here who happened to love the show as much as my memory was bad and had all the episodes on tape which was great i got to see granny being all scary again and I'd completely forgot that stephen fry and hugh laurie made appearances as doctors...its a pretty good cast which you will all know from looking above and definitely worth searching for and buying. if you do find it and are not happy then i am deeply sorry..anyway i digress this is not so much a comment or review on the show as such more a silver lining for everyone like me who remembers but hasn't seen it for 20 years....i managed to get a copy tonight from ebay so if u all keep your eyes peeled then maybe you'll be as lucky as me...
I remember watching this series in the 80s too and found it really funny. The episode I remember best was the one with Madelaine, the dippy, romantic sister who lived in France, believing herself to be an artist, or an artist's model and who actually turned out to be a nude model for the slimey French guy. I also remember Rik Mayall was in that episode as the priest. I enjoyed the series, but have never seen any re-runs of it, sadly. Oh yeah, didn't Dawn French as 'cook', turn blue in the last episode?!!!
A batty, old matriarch (Jennifer Saunders) from the country set forces her emotionally abused dimwit of a grandson (Ade Edmondson) into bringing back home her four granddaughters (all Saunders) from different precarious situations as a last wish.
A concept that is incredibly funny on paper, written by the immensely clever and comedic Ben Elton, but as Elton's first foray into adding some drama into a comedy series it ultimately fails to find balance. Nevertheless he succeeded very well in the construction of the story, with the first episode clearly setting up the next four episodes and the final sixth episode wrapping everything up while adding a twist to keep momentum going.
Jennifer Saunders has the opportunity to play five different characters that all inhabit the same world and therefore - as opposed to playing different characters in a sketch show - need to all be on a similar, believable level of crazy. And this early on in her telly career, she succeeds to find different faces, postures, voices and nuances brilliantly. She showcases her wide range of comedic and dramatic talents, even succeeding in one of the most difficult, tragicomedy.
Ade Edmondson plays the dimwitted, good natured grandson who is the 'active' connection between each episode, with most episodes focused on him trying to find one of his long lost sisters. Edmondson is an incredibly funny and clever comedic actor and writer, though at this stage of his career many of his tv appearances rely a lot on a similar type of humor and character. The chaotic, anarchic energy displayed in much of The Comic Strip and Comedy Store performances and that eventually became really famous in shows like The Young Ones taints Edmondson's performance. His character acts on a slightly different level to the rest which often leads to a jarring transition from scene to scene.
The series has an immense cast of supporting and guest actors - all familiar faces from the up and coming comedy scene of the 80s. The three main names attached to this project, Elton, Saunders and Edmondson, are all joined by their frequent collaborators: Dawn French, Helen Lederer, Chris Barrie, Rik Mayall, Lenny Henry, Nigel Planer, Ruby Wax, Harriet Thorpe, Christopher Ryan and many more. Supporting actor Stephen Fry and his character do a really good job at tying together the characters and storyline back at home at the family pile. Though the addition of Hugh Laurie and his scenes with Fry seem like unconnected afterthought or friendly favour - like a sketch that had been lying on Elton's desk that never found its way into a different show, only to be shoehorned in here to showcase yet another side to Elton's comedy writing.
On a whole, one of the things that brings this show out of balance, specifically out of its comedy-drama balance, is the different levels at which certain actors play their characters - ranging from quiet, tragicomedy to over the top, in your face comedy (Edmondson, Mayall). I can't help but feel that if the series was largely played in the former style, it would let its writing speak more for itself and have the most effect. Its runtime is its other major downfall. At some five minutes (or sometimes more) too long, the episodes drag on too long and specifically in some scenes. With a shorter runtime, the series would have been a lot sharper, a lot tighter.
Happy Families is a unique series, but at times a hard watch some thirty years on. Nevertheless this is masterpiece from Jennifer Saunders and very worth the time for anyone interested in her work. It's also a wonderful time capsule to see many of the comedians known from the circles of Edmondson, Elton and Saunders all come together.
A concept that is incredibly funny on paper, written by the immensely clever and comedic Ben Elton, but as Elton's first foray into adding some drama into a comedy series it ultimately fails to find balance. Nevertheless he succeeded very well in the construction of the story, with the first episode clearly setting up the next four episodes and the final sixth episode wrapping everything up while adding a twist to keep momentum going.
Jennifer Saunders has the opportunity to play five different characters that all inhabit the same world and therefore - as opposed to playing different characters in a sketch show - need to all be on a similar, believable level of crazy. And this early on in her telly career, she succeeds to find different faces, postures, voices and nuances brilliantly. She showcases her wide range of comedic and dramatic talents, even succeeding in one of the most difficult, tragicomedy.
Ade Edmondson plays the dimwitted, good natured grandson who is the 'active' connection between each episode, with most episodes focused on him trying to find one of his long lost sisters. Edmondson is an incredibly funny and clever comedic actor and writer, though at this stage of his career many of his tv appearances rely a lot on a similar type of humor and character. The chaotic, anarchic energy displayed in much of The Comic Strip and Comedy Store performances and that eventually became really famous in shows like The Young Ones taints Edmondson's performance. His character acts on a slightly different level to the rest which often leads to a jarring transition from scene to scene.
The series has an immense cast of supporting and guest actors - all familiar faces from the up and coming comedy scene of the 80s. The three main names attached to this project, Elton, Saunders and Edmondson, are all joined by their frequent collaborators: Dawn French, Helen Lederer, Chris Barrie, Rik Mayall, Lenny Henry, Nigel Planer, Ruby Wax, Harriet Thorpe, Christopher Ryan and many more. Supporting actor Stephen Fry and his character do a really good job at tying together the characters and storyline back at home at the family pile. Though the addition of Hugh Laurie and his scenes with Fry seem like unconnected afterthought or friendly favour - like a sketch that had been lying on Elton's desk that never found its way into a different show, only to be shoehorned in here to showcase yet another side to Elton's comedy writing.
On a whole, one of the things that brings this show out of balance, specifically out of its comedy-drama balance, is the different levels at which certain actors play their characters - ranging from quiet, tragicomedy to over the top, in your face comedy (Edmondson, Mayall). I can't help but feel that if the series was largely played in the former style, it would let its writing speak more for itself and have the most effect. Its runtime is its other major downfall. At some five minutes (or sometimes more) too long, the episodes drag on too long and specifically in some scenes. With a shorter runtime, the series would have been a lot sharper, a lot tighter.
Happy Families is a unique series, but at times a hard watch some thirty years on. Nevertheless this is masterpiece from Jennifer Saunders and very worth the time for anyone interested in her work. It's also a wonderful time capsule to see many of the comedians known from the circles of Edmondson, Elton and Saunders all come together.
I was at the school that was used for some of the filming (I added the school name to the filming locations). They filmed during the term time so we saw the cast around campus. The headmasters garage being used (and exploded if I remember correctly?); the one side of the school converted to look like a French village street (and desperate attempts by students to get some souvenirs); a bedsit in the same corridor as mine being painted green for a scene (a nasty colour green as well but I don't remember which scene) and Ade Edmonson giving autographs on cigarette packets of students who were not allowed to smoke :) Happy days....
Did you know
- TriviaA budget was allocated for a second series, which was never commissioned. As a result, the money was used to produce the first series of Red Dwarf (1988).
- ConnectionsReferenced in Wogan: Episode #5.116 (1985)
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