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Includes the last ever episodes, Respect: Part 1 and Respect: Part 2, plus the behind-the-scenes documentary, Farewell: The Bill. DVD is in Region 0. Series 1 – 4: 1-84 17 1984–1988 1 February 2012 [33] Also includes the pilot episode of the series, Woodentop. DVD Box set is in Region 0. Series 5: Part 1: 1-52 8 1989 7 March 2012 [34]
PC Tony Stamp – Graham Cole (Uncredited PC throughout series 1–3, before becoming a full-time cast member in series 4) Scenes of Crime Officer – Ralph Watson ("Funny Ol' Business – Cops & Robbers", "It's Not Such a Bad Job After All" and "A Dangerous Breed")
The Bill was originally conceived in 1983 by Geoff McQueen, then a new television writer, as a one-off drama.McQueen had originally titled the production Old Bill. [2] It was picked up by Michael Chapman for ITV franchise holder Thames Television, who retitled it Woodentop as part of Thames's Storyboard series of one-off dramas and broadcast on ITV under the title Woodentop on 16 August 1983. [2]
Hollis and Stamp are the series' longest-serving characters, though Stamp did not become a regular member of the cast until series 4. The series finale, "Respect," features five PCs: Micah Balfour as Benjamin Gayle, Dominic Power as Leon Taylor, John Bowler as Roger Valentine, Rhea Bailey as Mel Ryder and Sarah Manners as Kirsty Knight.
"Fatal Consequences" is a live episode of the British television drama series The Bill, broadcast on ITV1 on 30 October 2003. The episode marks the 20th anniversary of the pilot episode "Woodentop", and was the first episode of The Bill to be broadcast live. It was written by Tom Needham, directed by Sylvie Boden and produced by Susan Mather ...
Cameron dates PC Kerry Young, played by Beth Cordingly (pictured), after she almost arrests him during his first episode. For MacPherson, the storyline was a chance to explore his character's "emotional depths". [15] He stated that the chance to get into more "emotional deep dark stuff" was one of the reasons why he joined The Bill.
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"Frontline" was a three-part storyline in the long-running police procedural British television series The Bill. Broadcast in 2008, the storyline is significant in the show's history as it was the final plot to feature the death of an on-screen character, PC Emma Keane, which came in the first part of the plot.