Still Game

Still Game

Still Game title card (2016-present)
(L-R) Victor McDade and Jack Jarvis
Genre Sitcom
Created by Ford Kiernan
Greg Hemphill
Developed by Ford Kiernan
Greg Hemphill
Directed by Michael Hines
Starring Ford Kiernan
Greg Hemphill
Paul Riley
Jane McCarry
Mark Cox
Sanjeev Kohli
Gavin Mitchell
James Martin
Theme music composer Frank Chacksfield and The Cuban Boys (2002-2007)
BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra (2016-)
Country of origin Scotland
Original language(s) English, Scots
No. of seasons 7
No. of episodes 50
2 Specials (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Ford Kiernan
Greg Hemphill
Producer(s) Colin Gilbert
Michael Hines
Ewan Angus
Location(s) Dumbarton, Scotland
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time 30 minutes
Production company(s) The Comedy Unit
Effingee Productions
BBC Scotland
Release
Original network BBC One Scotland (2002–2004, 2006–2007, 2014)
BBC Two (2005–2008, 2014)
BBC One (2005, 2016–)
Original release Original Series
1 September, 2002 - 31 December, 2007
Revived Series
7 October 2016– present
Chronology
Preceded by Chewin' The Fat
External links
Website

Still Game is a Scottish sitcom, produced by The Comedy Unit with BBC Scotland. It was created by Ford Kiernan and Greg Hemphill, who play the lead characters, Jack Jarvis and Victor McDade, two Glaswegian pensioners. The characters also appeared in the pair's previous TV show Chewin' the Fat which aired in Scotland from January 1999 until June 2000.

Following its debut on 1 September, 2002 48 episodes of Still Game were aired, including Christmas and Hogmanay specials. The first three series were broadcast only on BBC One Scotland, though five episodes selected from the first two series were later broadcast throughout the UK on BBC Two from January - February 2004. All subsequent episodes received UK-wide broadcasts on BBC Two. The show enjoyed higher ratings than its neighbours on the BBC Two 'Comedy Zone' and received wide critical acclaim.. The 2016 series was broadcast on BBC One throughout the UK.

History

The original stage play of Still Game (1997-1999)

Still Game started as a stage play featuring three characters: Jack Jarvis, Victor McDade, and Winston Ingram. Due to a broken lift, the three men are stranded in Victor's flat and discuss a variety of subjects ranging from death to sex. The stage play toured Scotland, England, Ireland and Canada before returning to Glasgow, where it was filmed and released on video and DVD.

A small number of revisions accompanied Still Game's transition from stage to television. Gavin Mitchell, who originally played Winston (and was replaced by Paul Riley for later performances), played the part of Boabby in the series. Characters mentioned in passing were later fleshed out into supporting characters.

In 1998 Jack and Victor appeared in a number of skits in a tongue-in-cheek documentary about Scottish pop music called Och Around the Clock. In these they are shown to be watching while sitting in Victor's flat. Their skits centred on the duo's disparaging comments about the performers.

The characters reappeared in Kiernan and Hemphill's sketch show Chewin' the Fat, nearly every episode of which featured Jack, Victor, Tam and Winston, with minor differences from their counterparts in the series. By the time Still Game became a show in its own right Winston's physical appearance had changed significantly, but he was still played by Paul Riley. As the show evolved, supporting characters assumed greater prominence. Jack and Victor made their final appearance on Chewin' the Fat in the 2002 Hogmanay Special.

For the show's first three series the broadcast of Still Game was limited to BBC One Scotland. The show was then moved to BBC Two for the fourth series and shown throughout the UK. On 28 December, 2005 the first Christmas special was shown on BBC One, the first national broadcast of the show on the channel. A fifth series of the show started filming in February 2006 and was shown the following June on BBC Two. As of 2006 series three had not been shown nationally, and only five episodes from the first two series were shown on national BBC Two from 17 January to 14 February, 2004. The second series was shown nationally from 10 July, 2008. This meant it was listed as a new series in TV listings, even though it is not for Scottish viewers.

In the first three series the episode titles were all Glaswegian dialect words that were related to the episode. Starting from series four the episodes were titled using standard English so that general audiences could understand them.

The events of Still Game take place in a floating timeline where the characters remain the same age from series to series. One of the most prominent examples of this is that Victor reveals that he is 74 years old in "Scran", an episode of the second series, but it is not until the fifth series ("Smoke On The Water") that he celebrates his 75th birthday.

The sixth series of Still Game ended on BBC Two on 23 August, 2007. A Christmas special was aired on BBC One Scotland on 23 December and for the rest of the UK on BBC Two on 28 December. There was also a Hogmanay special called "Hootenanny" aired on BBC One Scotland, later aired to the rest of the UK on 2 January, 2008.

Ford Kiernan, Greg Hemphill and Paul Riley's company Effingee Productions is thought to have split up after Riley walked away to go it alone after being refused more control over the future of the company by Kiernan. Hemphill stated that he didn't want a "boardroom battle".[1]

On 15 October, 2013, the Daily Record ran a front page story that the show would be returning. On 23 October, 2013, Ford Kiernan and Greg Hemphill announced details of live shows at The SSE Hydro in Glasgow at a press conference. They were scheduled to perform four shows beginning in September 2014, but due to high demand it was extended to 16 then 21 shows.[2]

The 21 shows at The Hydro ran from 19 September, 2014 until 10 October, 2014, played to 210,000 fans and made £6 million in ticket sales.[3] The show received mixed reviews.[4]

In November 2014, a special sketch featuring Jack and Victor visiting the set of River City was made for Children in Need. The sketch also featured a cameo of a director played by Still Game director Michael Hines. On Hogmanay 2014, BBC Scotland showed a documentary celebrating the show tiled Still Game: The Story So Far. The program featured interviews with the cast, celebrities who have appeared on the show and super fans. Including a look at some favourite moments.

On 12 May, 2016 the BBC announced that the show would return in 2016 with a six-part 7th series, (9 years after the previous series). Filming of the new series started in summer and the series began on 7 October, 2016.[5] The show's return attracted its highest ever overnight audience for a single episode on 7 October, taking a 58% share of the Scottish TV audience with 1.3 million viewers. The show also aired for the first time on BBC One throughout the UK and drew a total of audience of 3.2 million.[6]

In September 2016 a second live show was announced for the SSE Hydro. The second stage show will run for 10 nights beginning 4 February, 2017[7] In October 2016 a further 5 performances where added.[8]

Series and Episodes

Series Still Game Airdates Channel
Series 1
1 September, 2002 – 7 October, 2002
BBC One Scotland
Series 2
29 March, 2003 – 24 May, 2003
BBC One Scotland
Series 3
17 June, 2004 – 21 July, 2004
BBC One Scotland
Series 4
22 July, 2005 – 26 August, 2005
BBC Two
2005 Christmas Special
28 December, 2005
BBC One
Series 5
19 June, 2006 – 24 July, 2006
BBC Two
2006 Hogmanay Special
31 December, 2006
BBC One Scotland
Series 6
12 July, 2007 – 23 August, 2007
BBC Two
2007 Christmas Special
23 December, 2007
BBC One Scotland
2007 Hogmanay Special
31 December, 2007
BBC One Scotland
2014 Live at the Hydro
7 November, 2014
BBC One Scotland
Still Game: The Story So Far
31 December, 2014
BBC One Scotland
Series 7
7 October, 2016 – 11 November 2016
BBC One

Cast

Main Cast

Recurring Cast

  • Lynne McCallum as Peggy McAlpine
  • Jake D'Arcy as Peter "Pete the Jakey" MacCormack
  • Paul Young as Hugh "Shug" McLaughlin
  • Shamshad Akhtar as Meena Harrid
  • Sandy Nelson as Chris the Postie
  • Kate Donnelly as Frances Mullen
  • Matt Costello as Stevie Reid
  • Jamie Quinn as Fergie
  • Marj Hogarth as Fiona Jarvis
  • Scott Reid as Methadone Mick

Filming locations

Although Still Game is set in the fictional Craiglang area of Glasgow, the Maryhill district of the city is one of the most common filming locations. The early part of the 1st episode was set in the South Nitshill area of Glasgow where Jack lived before he moved beside Victor in the high rise flats (the flats where Jack originally lived have since been demolished). The shops featured in the series can be found in the Townhead area of Glasgow. The Forth and Clyde Canal and its locks are used in background shots, along with the nearby high-rise tower blocks (flats) including the one in which Jack and Victor live called "Osprey Heights". For the first three series of the show, a real pub ("The Gimlet") in Ruchill was used to film the exterior shots of the pub Jenny's, originally The Clansman. However, between series three and four, the owner of the pub had the building demolished, causing the fourth series production team to build an exterior in a set in the Glasgow North Media park, Maryhill. An outdoor market in Possilpark was used in the episode "Cauld" when the character Winston buys several electric heaters. The bingo scene in "Courtin" was filmed in the Gala bingo in Possilpark and was a scene that coincidentally brought 2 old friends together, as Paul Riley (Winston) and the Gala bingo caller used in filming Joe Houston, used to be friends when they were both young lads. Scene interiors (Jack and Victor's flats, hallways and the interior of Navid's shop) are specially constructed sets, built within a warehouse complex, now a Maryhill industrial estate (and called Craigmont Studios). Scenes from several episodes were also filmed in the Knightswood area of Glasgow, including exterior scenes in the episode 'Courtin', and the golf course scenes in the episode 'Tappin'.

Finport, as mentioned and seen in the fifth series, was filmed on location in Largs and Saltcoats, North Ayrshire, both of which were once popular seaside resorts with Glaswegians. The shots of the promenade and the sea wall is that of Saltcoats' harbour area. The café that Jack and Victor walk past is The Melbourne Café in Saltcoats. The pub scene is set in the Royal Oak pub in Largs, while the bed and breakfast where Jack and Victor stay the night is located at the north end of Largs promenade. In the scene where Jack and Victor arrive on the bus from the right in Finport this leads from the sea, there is no road there. In the scene where Jack and Victor find Winston, a wide panning shot reveals the famous Nardini's ice-cream building and the Caledonian MacBrayne ferry to Millport.

Ardgowan House, a late 18th-century mansion at Inverkip, Inverclyde, was used as the setting for Blair Tunnoch in the episode "Fly Society". Jack and Victor buy tickets for a meal and evening at the theatre from Tam who won them in a radio quiz. During the pre-theatre meal they meet two apparently sophisticated, attractive ladies, played by Una McLean and Jeannie Fisher, whom they try to impress with tales of overseas adventures and wealth. The women invite them to a country house party at Blair Tunnoch.

The area where Jack and Victor are sitting during the court recess in the episode 'Recipe' of series six is the Main Lounge of The Crookston Hotel in Glasgow. The interior shots of the bakery in the same episode 'Recipe' were filmed at factories in Glasgow, one of which Tunnocks factory in Uddingston. The court scenes were filmed in Court No. 2 of Hamilton Sheriff Court.

The bar used during the Hogmanay Special in 2007, Hootenanny, was The Red Hoose in Dunipace, chosen by producers for its old world qualities.

Navid's shop interior was a set in Hillington industrial estate, the exterior shots being a row of shops in Kennedy Path, Townhead, Glasgow.

The shots where Jack and Victor visit Barbara in her work were filmed in the Clydebank area of Glasgow. The interior of the shop was also filmed on site in a local charity shop which is still in use today.[9]

Just before the fifth series started filming, a pest control team had to be called into the Maryhill studio set when it was discovered that rats had infested Navid's shop and were eating their way through the stock. The alarm was raised after Jane McCarry (Isa) found a dead rat on the set. The high rat population in the area was due to the proximity of the Forth and Clyde Canal.[10]

In the Children In Need sketch it saw Jack, Victor and Isa at the River City set in Dumbarton, Scotland.

For the Story so Far episode the stars Ford and Greg filmed that at the BBC Scotland Headquarters in Glasgow.

For the Seventh series the show moved all locations to BBC Scotland Studios in Dumbarton, Scotland. Also where shows such as Scottish soap opera River City, Two Doors Down, Shetland and Millie Inbetween are filmed.

The theme music used on the TV broadcasts of the show is an excerpt from "Cuban Boy",[11] performed by The Cuban Boys, which is itself an arrangement of Frank Chacksfield's track of the same name from the album West of Sunset. Although on the DVD release of the Complete Series 1-6 (including all the specials), the opening and ending theme tune has been changed to an entirely different theme. The reason behind this is still unexplained, however licensing could be a possibility. The BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra recorded an updated version of the theme tune for season 7.

DVD Releases

DVD Title Discs Year No. of Ep. DVD release Notes
Region 2
Complete Series 1 1 2002 6 3 July, 2006
Complete Series 2 2 2003 9 3 July, 2006
Complete Series 3 1 2004 6 17 July, 2006
Complete Series 4 1 2005 6 17 July, 2006 Includes behind the scenes footage
Complete Series 5 1 2006 6 16 October, 2006
Complete Series 6 1 2007 7 3 September, 2007
Complete Specials 1 2005–2007 4 3 November, 2008 Includes the specials from 2005, 2006 & 2007
Complete Series 1 - 5 6 2002–2006 33 16 October, 2006
Complete Series 1 - 6 8 2002–2007 44 3 November, 2008 Includes all of the specials
Still Game Live At The Hydro 1 2014 1 24 November, 2014 Includes over one hour not seen on TV
Complete Series 7 1 2016 6 21 November, 2016

Critical response

Referring to the fifth series' finale, the Daily Record heralded for Still Game to be added to the ranks of the "greatest sitcoms ever". They called the episode "classic comedy" and said it was " a perfect mix of empathetic friendship, laugh-out-loud gags, real feeling in the acting and genuine warmth and chemistry between the characters".[12] The Daily Record also revealed Still Game was trouncing rivals The Catherine Tate Show and Steve Coogan's Saxondale with 300,000 and 700,000 more viewers respectively. Creator and star Ford Kiernan said of the ratings: "I am absolutely delighted. The figures have gradually increased - episode after episode."[13]

Still Game was criticised for its "reliance on expletives" by Teddy Jamieson, television critic for The Herald. He also commented that the sitcom "paints [Scotland] in broad strokes", through its use of stereotypes.[14] TV Today praised the show for being "refreshing" in the age of dying sitcoms. It said the show was funny in a "straight down the line way".[15] Still Game has attracted interest from known screen legends, such as Sean Connery (who even requested a role in the show).[16] Actor Bill Nighy is also reported to be a fan, calling upon the distinct Glaswegian accent for his role as Davy Jones in Pirates of the Caribbean.[17] The show has won awards in both the 2004 and 2005 BAFTA Scotland awards and was named as the winner in the Best Broadcast category at the 2004 Glenfiddich Spirit of Scotland Awards.[18][19][20]

In 2006, Still Game was once again nominated for a BAFTA Scotland award for the "Most Popular Television" category. Other contenders included Rebus and Taggart.[21] Paul Riley, who plays Winston, was also awarded for his role in the show.[22]

The series revival in 2016 received some negative reviews. Julie McDowall, writing for The National, said of the first episode "You're going to hate me for saying this. I already hate myself for even daring to hold these thoughts, but I need to be honest with you: this was a disappointment."[23] She later said of the series, "I fear this once brilliant sitcom is turning into Mrs. Brown's Boys. Just like an auld yin in the Clansman, its teeth have been removed and it’s gumsy and ineffectual and a bit of a bore."[24] A review in Chortle said "I suspect a lot of new viewers will wonder what all the fuss is about, as this episode seems clunky and dated," going on to say "in truth no one here appears to be a great actor" and that "it seems to be a little crudely edited, too, with the timing of cutaways off the pace. And when you start to notice things like that, it’s got to be a sign that something’s wrong."[25]

See also

References

  1. "Evening Times". It’s game over for Scots comedy duo. Retrieved 16 September 2008.
  2. "Five more dates added for Still Game's Hydro show".
  3. Dingwall, John (11 October 2014). "Still Game pulls in £6million from 21 sell-out shows".
  4. "STILL GAME - REVIEW". The Big Issue. Retrieved 6 June 2016.
  5. BBC comedy Still Game to return for new series
  6. "Extra performances added to Still Game live show run". 13 October 2016 via www.bbc.co.uk.
  7. "Still Game returns with new live shows". 29 September 2016 via www.bbc.co.uk.
  8. Extra performances added to Still Game live show run
  9. http://www.clyde-shoppingcentre.co.uk/map/storemap.aspx?UnitNo=SWS27&Shopcategory=Miscellaneous
  10. "Daily Record". A FORD IN THE RIVER. Retrieved 4 August 2006.
  11. http://freespace.virgin.net/skreen.b/cuban_stillgame.htm
  12. "Daily Record". STILL GAME FOR A LAUGH, AND INTO THE BIG LEAGUE. Retrieved 4 August 2006.
  13. "Daily Record". VICTOR IN BEEB RATINGS BATTLE. Retrieved 4 August 2006.
  14. "The Herald". Grisly reality of the afterlife. Archived from the original on 21 August 2006. Retrieved 6 August 2006.
  15. "TV Today". Square eyes 24–28 July. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 4 August 2006.
  16. "Living.Scotsman.com". Still game for a laugh. Retrieved 4 August 2006.
  17. "Daily Record". SKULL GAME. Retrieved 4 August 2006.
  18. "BAFTA Scotland Awards". BAFTA Scotland Awards 2004 Winners. Retrieved 18 August 2006.
  19. "BAFTA Scotland Awards". BAFTA Scotland Awards 2005 Winners. Retrieved 18 August 2006.
  20. "Screenbiz.co.uk". THE SPIRIT OF SCOTLAND. Archived from the original on 2 January 2007. Retrieved 17 August 2006.
  21. "BAFTA Scotland Awards". BAFTA Scotland Awards 2006 Winners. Retrieved 2 November 2006.
  22. "Chortle, the UK comedy guide". Game on - Still Game scoops Scottish Bafta. Retrieved 3 December 2006.
  23. "TV Pick October 7: Return of Still Game proves to be a disappointment". The National. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
  24. "TV Pick of the Day, Friday, October 14: Still Game, and The Story of Skinhead with Don Letts". The National. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
  25. "The return of Still Game". Chortle. Retrieved 26 November 2016.
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