Acorn Antiques

This article is about the parodic soap opera. For the musical, see Acorn Antiques The Musical.
Julie Walters (Mrs Overall), Victoria Wood (Berta), Rosie Collins (Trixie) and Celia Imrie (Miss Babs) in Acorn Antiques (1986).

Acorn Antiques is a parodic soap opera written by Victoria Wood as a regular feature in the two seasons of Victoria Wood As Seen On TV, which ran from 1985 to 1987. It was turned into a musical by Wood, opening in 2005.

Television version

Wood originally wrote Acorn Antiques as a weekly slot in her sketch shows Victoria Wood As Seen On TV. She based it on the long-running ATV serial Crossroads, and radio soap Waggoner's Walk.[1][2] Swipes were also taken at current soaps such as EastEnders and Coronation Street with their apparent low production values, wobbly sets, overacting, appalling dialogue and wildly improbable plots.

Its premise—the lives and loves of the staff of an antiques shop in a fictional English town called Manchesterford—hardly reflects the ambitious and implausible storylines, which lampooned the staples of soap operas: love triangles, amnesiacs, sudden deaths and siblings reunited.

It also satirised the shortcomings of long-running dramas produced on small budgets with its little artificial-looking set, missed cues, crude camera work and hasty scripts. A lack of continuity is seen in distinct lapses where storylines are introduced and dropped between episodes and character development is forgotten. One episode, for example, is introduced as reflecting the current interest in health fads with a plot where the antiques shop is merged into a 'Leisure centre and sunbed centre', never to be mentioned again. The deliberately haphazard opening and end credits, together with its tinny title music, also lampooned Crossroads. Perhaps the most comical element of Acorn Antiques were the missed cues, harking back to the days when Crossroads was recorded live. Fictional floor managers and directors can be heard prompting the dreadful actors to say their lines, whilst the end of several scenes show the actors not quite knowing what to do with themselves while the camera is still rolling.

References to other daytime television devices featured; after one episode a continuity announcer mentions an exhibition of costumes from the show touring several British towns, and after another episode a range of novelisations is mentioned (bearing such archetypical purple titles as A Waning Moon, and little resemblance to screened storylines). The announcement that the show's theme tune was available to buy as Anyone Can Break A Vase sung by Miss Babs, was a reference to the release of Anyone Can Fall In Love, based on the EastEnders theme and sung by one of its cast members, Anita Dobson.

Wood also created a spoof arts documentary about the show for her As Seen on TV special, in keeping with similar straight-faced 'behind-the-scenes' shows produced about soap operas, which revealed the shambolic production of Acorn Antiques being put together, and interviewed the self-obsessed fictional actors behind the fictional characters. At one point, when an obvious continuity error is pointed out, the hard-nosed producer 'Marion Clune' (played by Maggie Steed) summed up the directorial attitude: "We professionals notice - Joe Public never clocks a darn thing." The documentary also depicted the actress portraying the drudge Mrs. Overall as being an archetypal soap diva called Bo Beaumont (although in the series the fictional end titles credit Julie Walters as Mrs Overall).

In the final show of Victoria Wood As Seen on TV a sketch was shown where the actors playing Mrs Overall and Mr Clifford are supposedly sacked from the soap and killed off and Bo Beaumont/Julie Walters breezes out of the studio, complaining to the TV news crew outside "Does a faithful dog expect to be kicked? That show was my life."

The sketches even led to a fanzine and appreciation gatherings where fans would dress up as the characters.[3] In 2004, in a poll on its website, Channel 4 voted Acorn Antiques the 7th best comedy sketch of all time.[4]

The show made a brief return to television in 1992 in Victoria Wood's All Day Breakfast, her satire on daytime television.[5] A sketch of its soap, The Mall, ends with Mrs Overall returning to reopen Acorn Antiques, mentioning that the other principal characters had been killed in a bus crash (even though she herself had been killed off in the final episode of the original series). A special one off episode was broadcast in 1996 in a programme to commemorate 70 years of BBC1 being on air. One final sketch was shown in 2001 with the original cast and Nick Frost as an armed robber (as part of Victoria's History of Sketch Comedy BBC1 series).[6]

Episode Guide


Series 1 (Featured on As Seen On TV)

DVD Title As Seen On TV Show Description
Think On and Look Sharp Series 1, Episode 1 Things go in threes, one death, one break up, and one coffee without a sweetener.
Shot in Dakar Series 1, Episode 2 Shop co-owner Berta returns from intensive care, to find that her father is still alive!
Trixie Trouble Series 1, Episode 3 Shop worker Trixie causes trouble in the store when she finds out that she is Babs' daughter!
Cousin Jerez Series 1, Episode 4 Cousin Jerez sparks a suspicious interest in Acorn Antiques.
Muesli Series 1, Episode 5 Clifford reveals that he and Berta are married!
Twins Series 1, Episode 6 Mrs Overall finds out that she is Miss Berta's mother!

Series 2 (Featured on As Seen On TV)

DVD Title As Seen On TV Show Description
Up For Sale Series 2, Episode 1 Miss Babs puts Acorn Antiques up for sale
All's Well That Ends Well Series 2, Episode 2 Mrs O reveals that she never posted the letter to the estate agent!
Drastic Refurbishment Series 2, Episode 3 The shop begins the refurbishment.
Health and Fitness Series 2, Episode 4 Acorn Antiques is turned into a Leisure Centre!
Shocking News Series 2, Episode 5 Clifford reveals a secret about him and Derek!
The Final Performance Series 2, Episode 6 Mrs O and Clifford die.

The Musical

In 2005 Victoria Wood created a musical version with Julie Walters, Celia Imrie and other members of the original cast, the role of Mrs Overall being alternated between Julie Walters and Wood. The original run was directed by Trevor Nunn and had a sellout season in the West End. It earned several Olivier Award nominations, and Celia Imrie won the award for Best Supporting Actress in a Musical. It was revived on tour in 2007, directed this time by Victoria Wood herself.

The Crescent Theatre in Birmingham presented the premiere of the first amateur production of the show in May 2010. The Leighton Masqueraders became the second amateur drama group to put on a production of the show later in 2010. Richard and Thomas Ayre are listed as lighting operator's and Victoria Wood attended opening night.

Wigston Amateur Operatic Society will put on their production of the show in May 2016 at The Little Theatre in Leicester.[7]

Cast

Home media

A DVD containing Acorn Antiques as an individual release was made available in a 20th Anniversary Collection on 7 February 2005.[9]

Acorn Antiques was released as part of the complete series of Victora Wood: As Seen on TV on 2 April 2007.[10]

References

  1. "Waggoners Walk". Archived from the original on 2009-10-24.
  2. 1 2 "BBC Suffolk interview with Victoria Wood". BBC. 2007-03-11. Retrieved 2007-09-13.
  3. Brandwood, Neil (2002). Victoria Wood – The Biography (1st ed.). London: Boxtree. ISBN 1-85227-982-6.
  4. "50 Greatest Comedy Sketches". Channel 4. Archived from the original on 12 October 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-15.
  5. "search.com - Acorn Antiques". search.com. 2007-08-28.
  6. "thoughtworthy.com - Nick Frost". BBC News. 2007-08-28.
  7. "TV star Victoria Wood at Leighton Buzzard Show Premiere". Leighton Buzzard Observer. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 2011-08-12.
  8. "Swingers and Roundabouts - Interview with Kenny Ireland". Scotland On Sunday. 2007-03-15.
  9. "Acorn Antiques". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved March 10, 2015.
  10. "Victoria Wood - As Seen on TV". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved March 10, 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.