Take Three Girls
Take Three Girls | |
---|---|
Carolyn Seymour (left), Liza Goddard and Barra Grant (right) - the leading players in series two outside Holland Park station | |
Genre |
Comedy Drama |
Written by |
|
Directed by |
|
Starring |
|
Theme music composer | Pentangle |
Opening theme | 'Light Flight' |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 24 |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
Michael Hayes
|
Location(s) | London, England, United Kingdom |
Running time | 50 minutes |
Production company(s) | BBC |
Release | |
Original network | BBC1 |
Picture format | PAL (576i), |
Audio format | Mono |
Original release | 17 November 1969 – 1 January 1971 |
Chronology | |
Followed by | Take Three Women (1982) |
Take Three Girls was a drama series broadcast by BBC1 between 1969 and 1971 which followed three girls sharing a flat in Swinging London (17 Glazbury Road, West Kensington W14). It was BBC1's first colour drama series.[1]
The characters - cello-playing Victoria, single mother Kate and Cockney art student Avril - were played by Liza Goddard, Susan Jameson and Angela Down. For the second series, Kate and Avril were replaced by journalist Jenny and American psychology graduate Lulie (played by Carolyn Seymour and Barra Grant).[2]
Two series of 12 episodes were shown on BBC1 between 1969 and 1971. Only 10 episodes of the original 24 still exist.[3] A four-episode series - Take Three Women showing the original characters later in their lives - was broadcast on BBC2 in 1982. Victoria was a widow with a young daughter and Avril an art gallery owner while Kate was sharing her life with her son and his teacher.
The theme music - 'Light Flight' by the British folk rock group Pentangle - was a British chart hit in February 1970. Pentangle also contributed music to Take Three Women.
"Victoria" is a novel by the scriptwriters, Terence Brady and Charlotte Bingham, about their characters' adventures in the first series.
Episodes
Episode # Prod # Original Air Date Titles
1. 1- 1 BB001 17 Nov 69 Kate: Stop Acting
2. 1- 2 BB002 24 Nov 69 Avril: Devon Violets
3. 1- 3 BB003 1 Dec 69 Victoria: Requiem For Cello in SW3 [lost]
4. 1- 4 BB004 8 Dec 69 Kate: Start Working
5. 1- 5 BB005 15 Dec 69 Avril: Heart's Ease [lost]
6. 1- 6 BB006 22 Dec 69 Victoria: Rhapsody for Misplaced Persons [lost]
7. 1- 7 BB007 29 Dec 69 Kate: Try Loving [lost]
8. 1- 8 BB008 5 Jan 70 Avril: Sweet Basil [lost]
9. 1- 9 BB009 12 Jan 70 Victoria: Variations of May and September
10. 1-10 BB010 19 Jan 70 Kate: Keep Hoping
11. 1-11 26 Jan 70 Avril: Roses Round the Door
12. 1-12 2 Feb 70 Victoria: Gloria for First Offence [lost]
Season 2
13. 2- 1 24 Mar 71 Victoria: Coda and Resolution [lost]
14. 2- 2 31 Mar 71 Lulie: The Private Sector
15. 2- 3 7 Apr 71 Jenny: Closed Circuit [lost]
16. 2- 4 14 Apr 71 Victoria: Duet for Two Left Feet [lost]
17. 2- 5 21 Apr 71 Lulie: The Company of Madmen [lost]
18. 2- 6 28 Apr 71 Jenny: Kitsch, or Protocols in a Chinese Laundry
19. 2- 7 7 May 71 Victoria: Prelude to a New Arrangement [lost]
20. 2- 8 14 May 71 Lulie: A Little Blindness [lost]
21. 2- 9 21 May 71 Jenny: Freelance [lost]
22. 2-10 28 May 71 Victoria: Composition Out of Discord [lost]
23. 2-11 4 Jun 71 Lulie: A School for Grievances
24. 2-12 11 Jul 71 Jenny: Release
References
- ↑ The Pentangle, Basket of Light LP sleeve notes, Transatlantic Records 1969
- ↑ IMDb - Take Three Girls (TV Series 1969–1971)
- ↑ Take Three Girls, lostshows.com
- ↑ Take Three Girls - TV.com