Al Weisel

The 10 Essential British Television Series

By Al Weisel
CDNOW Senior Editor, Movies

Until 1982, when Channel Four started, British television had just three channels, BBC 1 and 2, and ITV. Yet despite the relatively limited choice, British broadcasting has managed to produce great programming that has often shamed its American rivals despite the comparative difference in the number of outlets. The BBC first began broadcasting in 1936, shut down during World War II, and resumed in 1946. It was joined by ITV in 1955 and BBC 2 in 1964. While British television may have dedicated quite a number of snooze-inducing hours to snooker tournaments and esoteric documentaries, as well as its share of silly sitcoms, it has also managed to produce a staggering amount of classic programming. Luckily, for Americans, we only get to see the best in British TV over here. For a list of the best American exports, see The 10 Essential American TV Series.


1. I, Claudius
Prostitution, cannibalism, patricide, incest, orgiastic sex, disembowelment -- life in ancient Rome was no tea party. While most Americans may think of classy literary adaptations as Great Britain's main television export, this literary adaptation, while certainly classy, would make the average soap opera fan blush. Starring Derek Jacobi as the stuttering Emperor Claudius, who manages to outlive most of his family by pretending to be an imbecile, this look at the reigns of the first Roman emperors is the most entertaining history lesson you'll ever see.
I, Claudius
2. Singing Detective
Dennis Potter's masterful miniseries is not only a great television show but also one of the great works of its time on the small or large screen. The story of a writer confined to the hospital by crippling psoriasis (which Potter suffered from himself), it is part memoir, part detective novel, and even at times a musical. As he lies in his hospital bed Philip Marlow (Michael Gambon), thinks over his past life, rewrites a Raymond Chandler novel with himself as the protagonist, and hallucinates, as characters every so often suddenly burst into song.
Singing Detective
3. Upstairs Downstairs
As enjoyable as it was, Robert Altman's Gosford Park doesn't hold a candle to this sprawling in-depth look at the nuances and ironies of the British class system. Set in one British household from 1903 to 1930, this 68-episode series followed the lives of both the wealthy family living upstairs, headed by member of Parliament Richard Bellamy (David Langton), and the servants downstairs, including the butler Hudson (Gordon Jackson), the cook Mrs. Bridges (Angela Baddeley), and the housemaid Rose (Jean Marsh, who also co-created the series). Incorporating historical events, such as the sinking of the Titanic, into the storyline, Upstairs Downstairs is an epic look at a vanishing epoch.
Upstairs Downstairs
4. World At War
This landmark 26-episode series is the best, most comprehensive documentary ever made about World War II. Narrated by Laurence Olivier, it represents the apotheosis of great British documentary filmmaking. While accurate and thorough this documentary is never dry. From the moment flames consume the photographs under the opening credits as the stirring theme music plays, you will be so moved and captivated that you may forget you are also learning something.
World at War
5. Monty Python
Someone at the BBC must have been asleep at the switch when they let the lunatics of Monty Python have their own show. A good thing, too, because they revolutionized comedy with their strange, surrealistic brand of humor. Every episode was a loose collection of bizarre skits, or even ideas for skits, that ended as soon as they began to run out of steam whether they had reached a proper conclusion or not. Then it was on to the next sketch about silly walks and dead parrots and singing transvestite lumberjacks.
Monty Python's Flying Circus
6. Fawlty Towers
This may be the funniest show to ever air on television. Monty Python's John Cleese stars as Basil Fawlty, the inept owner of a small country inn. When he is not being rude to guests or trying to communicate with the unilingual Spanish waiter, he can usually be found trying to avoid the wrath of his exasperated wife who "can kill a man at ten paces with one blow of her tongue." Each of the 12 episodes is a perfectly constructed masterpiece of comic mayhem that could be dangerous for those under doctor's care.
Fawlty Towers
7. The Prisoner
"I am not a number! I am a free man!" Patrick McGoohan shouted at the beginning of each episode of this 17-episode series about a British spy trapped in a Kafkaesque nightmare. Kidnapped after he resigns his commission and taken to the Village, a mysterious prison that resembles a small English country town where the citizens all have numbers instead of names, Number 6, as he is called, struggles to assert his individuality and escape his captors while they try to pump him for information. A human chess game and a giant balloon monster are just a couple of the wackily psychedelic elements that graced this hallucinatory spy series.
The Prisoner
8. Brideshead Revisited
When it comes to impeccably produced adaptations of literary classics, this is the show that everyone thinks of. Based on the novel by Evelyn Waugh, the story is told in flashback as Charles Ryder (Jeremy Irons), an officer in the British Army boarded at an English country estate called Brideshead, nostalgically recalls his friendship with the charismatic but flighty young man who used to live there, Sebastian Flyte (Anthony Andrews), whom he first meets at Oxford. An elegiac look at England between the wars, it gets a bit preachy at the end but the early episodes about Charles' and Sebastian's friendship are unforgettable.
Brideshead Revisited
9. Absolutely Fabulous
With its pill-popping, sexually libertine heroines, Absolutely Fabulous could never have aired on politically correct American broadcast television. But as self-centered and ridiculous as Patsy and Edina (Joanna Lumley and Jennifer Saunders) were, it's impossible not to be amused as they send up fashion and celebrity in the 1990s, as well as themselves as they try to try to prolong their '60s adolescence just a few decades more -- much to the chagrin of Edina's stick-in-the-mud daughter.
Absolutely Fabulous
10. Queer as Folk
This show did not just break taboos it smashed them into pieces. In the very first episode the drug-taking, sexually promiscuous 29-year-old gay antihero has sex with a 15 year old boy on the day his son is born to the lesbian couple to whom he donated his sperm. Explicit and unapologetic, this series about the admittedly shallow antics of Vincent and Stuart, two club-hopping gay Mancunians, and their friends, was the most realistic portrait of gay life ever broadcast on television, even if critics, both gay and antigay, were offended by the warts-and-all presentation.
Queer As Folk

Al Weisel is the co-author, with Larry Frascella, of Live Fast, Die Young: The Wild Ride of Making Rebel Without a Cause, being published in October 2005.

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