Monday 15 February 2016

Breakfast Serials


Waking up in the morning is a frightful affair, but this is tempered somewhat by that delicious breakfast which is seductively lurking just a short stumble from your still warm bed. Breakfast has got a reputation for being the most important meal of the day and it's hard to argue with a meal which transforms you from lumbering zombie into the requisite approximation of appearing compos mentis.

Sure, we may be dressing the humble meal of breakfast up with a bit too much hyperbole, but it's importance should never be underestimated. Although, for many people, breakfast amounts to nothing more than a bowl of mundane wheaty mush, ultimately, it helps to break down the sense of ease and dischord which clouds our foggy morning minds.

Helping to squeeze out a few more drops of escapism to the inevitable onslaught of another long day is breakfast television. As the hot, sweaty hand of work snakes ever closer to your jugular, you can lose yourself in the banality of those tellywaves for just a few moments and forget that you'll soon be creaking under the strain of the 9 - 5. And if anything's going to offer you a brief victory in evading that crushing realisation that it's time to put on your tie, it's Breakfast Serials.

Genre: Childrens
Channel: BBC1

Transmission: 22/09/1990 - 29/12/1990


Cereal manufacturers know what we want. We need something to cut through that curiously downbeat air which manifests itself around 7.30am on weekdays. And that something is variety. Yes, there's a saviour to the monotony of early mornings and it comes in the form of the variety cereal pack. The brief spark of excitement offered by the tantalising array of options allows us to briefly shrug off that strenuous dread of routine which is just around the corner.


And Breakfast Serials casts itself as the television equivalent. It rails against the tedium of early mornings with short, sharp stabs of drama, comedy and kitchen utensils. Episodes are bookended by The Kitchen Crew aka Teapot, Tin Can and Tomato who ground the show with their trivial, but sometimes surreal mutterings and propensity for delivering hackneyed gags. The variety driven nature of the show begins to seep in once these anthropomorphised kitchen dwellers step to one side to allow the tone and texture of the show to be shaped by a myriad of short serials.

Rallying the viewer with their intoxicating sense of variety, Breakfast Serials manages to run the whole gamut of mankind's vast emotional breadth. Flexing its muscular array of choice we're treated to biting lampoons in the form of Cheapo TV, sinisterly bizarre thrillers such as Runners and Nice Chap, the equally baffling performance art of Zounds and, finally, the one off bonkers stories of Single Tales. Episodes are closed by the re-emergence of The Kitchen Crew who are unable to restrain themselves from launching into song as the end credits scroll past.

Cooking up Breakfast

Breakfast Serials found itself serving up 15 helpings of its anthology style madness in late 1990 with episodes measuring around 35 minutes. Episodes aired 8am on Saturday mornings and the series was limited to one solitary run.

The dominant name behind the scenes was that future writing star, Russell T Davies, who co-wrote the show with the curiously monikered writing group, The Salad Pig. Mysteriously, no director is listed in the credits, but Russell T Davies is on hand to pick up the producer credit.

With a myriad of roles on offer, they're divided up between a fairly small cast of Caroline Berry, John Biggins, Lucy Jenkins and William Petrie.

Tucking In

Breakfast Serials wasn't part of our sinew-straining introduction to Saturday mornings for one reason or another, but it was a proposition that intrigued us. Russell T Davies' presence meant that the promise of fantastic dialogue partnered with astounding narrative and emotional depth were less a certainty, more an iron clad promise.

We managed to track down two complete episodes and a handful of clips on YouTube, so, although it would be difficult to get a handle on the long term fruits of following the serials, we would be able to get a little taster.

The one section which really dazzled and shined with Russell T Davies' trademark wit were the magnificently ludicrous parodies of Cheapo TV. These satires are enlivened with an almost vociferous knuckleduster fuelled attack on the repetitive devices employed in shows such as Last of the Summer Wine and Howards' Way with devastating skill and timing. Nice Chap, too, has a proficient comic flavour swilling around the edges of its dramatic narrative which unleashes a surreal atmosphere.


Other sections, however, unfortunately reflect the perplexity of early mornings, although we concede that some of this is down to our lack of exposure to the entire run. Take, for example, Runners which seeps onto our screens with an inherent menace, but is ultimately packed full of trepidatious looks and long pauses. Russell T. Davies would later refine this creeping menace in the outstanding Dark Season, but here it bored us as the narrative wholeheartedly rejected any discernible meaning.


And as for Zounds, well, much like receiving a knee to the groin, it's a swift affair, but essentially leaves you hurt, frustrated and whispering obscenities for some time afterwards.


There are plenty of bright, snazzy comedic performances in Breakfast Serials and the actors generate a healthy sense of variety across their glut of roles. Only Caroline Berry and William Petrie achieved any level of sustained success in the world of acting, so Breakfast Serials certainly wasn't a launchpad for a new generation of talent.

Washing up the Breakfast Bowl

Breakfast Serials failed to reach the upper echelons of children's TV, instead we found it floundering around the lower rungs albeit with well meaning intentions. Unfortunately, it feels as though the writers had a million ideas frothing to emerge on screen when a more harsh approach in the cutting room was needed. By dispensing with the self-indulgently surreal segments such as Zounds, Breakfast Serials could have concentrated on refining the more interesting aspects of Russell T. Davies and The Salad Pig's vision of breakfast salvation.

13 comments:

  1. Remember this fondly. Its funny, you didn't want to get up for school on a weekday, yet I was always up for stuff like this on Saturday mornings!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know what you mean! I always seemed to be up at the crack of dawn on Saturday mornings whilst the rest of the family slept, so TV was a great distraction until the chaos of family life kicked in!

      Delete
  2. Percy Punglethrope21 February 2016 at 09:41

    Just stumbled by your blog and it's absolutely fantastic! Certainly a step up from typing in "1989 BBC" on Youtube and reading comments that just say "recycled condom only 42 rupee dhaka".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Percy! Thanks for stopping by!

      The comments on here are only as wondrous as the people leaving them. And, by jove, we have some amazing people coming here!

      Delete
  3. I do remember this (Nicechap, and the breakfast table crew singing "Where's your momma gone") but in my mind it conflates almost entirely with "On The Waterfront" (which also boasted RTD penmanship for The Flashing Blade), to the point where I can't remember which bit was which

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for bringing On The Waterfront to my attention, I shall have to investigate that at some point!

      Delete
  4. You really would only know about this if you were 14 or under in 1990 and willing to rise before 8p.m on a Saturday, but it was generally worth it.
    Breakfast Serials was a real curio.
    There was one moment on Zounds when Lucy Jenkins stood facing the camera pushing the tip of her nose upwards like a pig and pulling a face. After a few seconds she asked the viewer 'What are you looking' at?' It's one of the funniest things I've ever seen on TV.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Used to really like show, but even back in the day I realised that it was too off the wall to run to a second season.

    I personally loved the surrealism of Zounds. My favourite bit was "Catch the Parrot" where they'd simply jump around to upbeat piano music trying to grab a plastic parrot dangling from the ceiling. For some reason, I found this hilarious!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Used to really like show, but even back in the day I realised that it was too off the wall to run to a second season.

    I personally loved the surrealism of Zounds. My favourite bit was "Catch the Parrot" where they'd simply jump around to upbeat piano music trying to grab a plastic parrot dangling from the ceiling. For some reason, I found this hilarious!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I swear one of the 'Zounds' segments featured the cast repeating the word 'baps' and musing on the hilarity of it. One day that clip will be found and prove it was not a weird dream of mine....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I remember that! Baps baps baps baps... And the fruit dance, which was just people dancing holding bits of fruit

      Delete
  8. Loved this series, was on at 8am Saturday in the last 15 weeks of 1990... Somehow I remember, even though I was only 10, that it probably wouldn't return again in 1991... Runners was resolved, Nice Chap had his happy ending... How could they do another series? I miss those days

    ReplyDelete
  9. Does anyone remember how Runner’s ended? Thanks

    ReplyDelete