Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Many of the original cast members from the first two series are credited as characters in 1982 yet appeared in many cases in only one scene with the majority appearing only in one episode and were not seen formally leaving the school.
Grange Hill is a British children's television drama series, originally produced by the BBC and portraying life in a typical comprehensive school.The show began its run on 8 February 1978 on BBC1, and was one of the longest-running programmes on British television when it ended on 15 September 2008 after 31 series.
The first series of the British television drama series Grange Hill began broadcasting on 8 February 1978, before ending on 5 April 1978 on BBC One. The series follows the lives of the staff and pupils of the eponymous school, an inner-city London comprehensive school. It consists of nine episodes.
Peter "Tucker" Jenkins is a main character of British children's drama series Grange Hill, who appeared as a main cast member in the first four series.He would later guest appear in the show throughout its thirty-series run and would feature in his own spin-off Tucker's Luck.
He was given the part of Benny Green in Grange Hill after being spotted at his local drama group and playing football in the local park by Colin Cant, the series' original director. [5] His character was the first pupil seen on screen in the first episode. "I basically played myself in Grange Hill", he later recalled. "There weren't many black ...
An original cast member from 1985 to 1995, she reprised the role from 2001 to 2006, and again from 2012 onwards. ... Her other television roles include Grange Hill ...
Grange Hill: Penny Lewis Regular cast; credited as Ruth Davies 1987 Lizzie's Pictures: Sylvie 2 episodes 1990 A Sense of Guilt: Sally Hinde 1990 Screenplay: Laura 1993 Screen Two: Series regular 1993 Shattered Family: Mitch
Alford featured on the Grange Hill "Just Say No" anti-drug single. In 1980, he appeared in Not the Nine O'Clock News , joining in a song about a strike-breaking train driver. In 1993, prior to his solo singing career, he took his highest profile adult role as fireman Billy Ray in ITV's London's Burning , remaining in the role for five years.