The Rag Trade (1975–1978)
5/10
Everybody Out - Again!
15 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Following the end of 'On The Buses' in 1973, Ronald Wolfe and Ronald Chesney searched for another hit. 'Don't Drink The Water', a spin-off from 'Buses', failed to duplicate the success of its parent show, while 'Yus My Dear', though it got to No.1 in the ratings for most of its episodes, was fairly dire. A comedy pilot for the B.B.C. entitled 'The Boys & Mrs.B' was equally awful, despite starring the wonderful Thora Hird and a young Tony Robinson. Wolfe and Chesney then decided that enough time had elapsed since the end of their first major success - 'The Rag Trade' - to engineer a revival.

The B.B.C. passed on the idea ( do they never learn? ), so they took it to London Weekend Television. Peter Jones and Miriam Karlin reprised their roles as 'Harold Fenner' and 'Paddy', but the rest of the cast was new. Christopher Beeny, fresh in the public's memory from 'Upstairs, Downstairs' replaced Reg Varney ( his character undergoing a name change to 'Tony' ), the buxom and giggly Diane Langton slotted effortlessly into the space vacated by Barbara Windsor, Anna Karen played 'Olive' ( when 'On The Buses' ended Olive was single again, but here she was happily married. We never found out just who the new man in her life was ). Deddie Davies' fluttery 'Mabel' was obviously intended as another 'Lily' ( the Esma Cannon character from the original ). Future 'Eastenders' star Gillian Taylforth made her television debut as 'Lyn'. In a nod to multiculturalism, one of the new intake at 'Fenner's Fashions' was black - 'Jo-Jo' - played by Lucita Lijertwood. One major new character - the haughty 'Mrs.Fenner' - was played first by Rowena Cooper and then 'Doctor In Charge's' Joy Stewart.

The first episode was a remake of 'The Sample' from 1961. This being 1977, the humour was predictably coarsened, the language slightly stronger ( with words like 'scrubber' and 'knickers' bandied about ). Despite its resolutely anti-trade union stance, the show occasionally took pot shots at the alternative.

MABEL: You can always trust a politician who smokes a pipe.

LYN: What about Margaret Thatcher? She doesn't smoke a pipe.

PADDY: She would do if she thought it would get her a few more votes, love.

Lindsay De Paul provided the catchy theme tune. Despite being a ratings success, 'The Rag Trade' somehow never replicated the affection of its predecessor. One angry letter to 'The Sun' suggested it should be renamed 'The Drag Trade' and that everyone in it 'should be out'. It was unfortunate that Wolfe and Chesney chose to resurrect the show at a time when trade unions were massively unpopular. After only two seasons, Fenner's Fashions shut up shop again, this time for good.

Parodied by L.W.T.'s 'End Of Part One' as 'The Gag Trade' with Fenner's girls as scriptwriters instead of dressmakers.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed