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DVD set in Region 0. Series 17: Part 1 & 2: 1-46 11 2001 14 August 2013 [60] Includes the first forty-six episodes of series seventeen. DVD set in Region 0. Series 17: Part 3 & 4: 47-92 12 2001 14 August 2013 [61] Includes the last forty-six episodes of series seventeen. DVD set in Region 0. Series 18: Part 1 & 2: 1-43 11 2002 14 August 2013 [62]
The two-part episode "Lifelines" is the last two-parter to feature in the series until the return of episode titles in 2007. On 14 August 2013, The Bill Series 17 Part 1 & 2 and The Bill Series 17 Part 3 & 4 DVD sets were released (in Australia).
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]
No. overall No. in series Title Directed by Written by Original release date; 1: 1 "Funny Ol' Business – Cops and Robbers" Peter Cregeen: Geoff McQueen: 16 October 1984 (): 2
The Bill series 17; The Bill series 18; The Bill series 19; The Bill series 20; The Bill series 21; The Bill series 22; The Bill series 23; The Bill series 24; The ...
Whilst Woodentop used a traditional three-wall set built at Thames Television's studios at Teddington, for the series, Sun Hill Police Station was created by converting the premises of a two-storey former cigarette packing company on the corner of Artichoke Hill and Pennington Street, in Wapping, East London.
The chief financial officer of conservative global news outlet The Epoch Times has been arrested and charged with leading a yearslong scheme to launder at least $67 million in illicit funds ...
The fifteenth series of The Bill, a British television drama, consisted of 87 episodes, broadcast between 7 January and 31 December 1999.The series saw a notable change, as female officers were no longer introduced by the W acronym in ranking, with the last mention of this when Liz Rawton was introduced as a WDC in Follow Through.