Juliet Bravo
Juliet Bravo is a British television police procedural drama series, first broadcast on 30 August 1980, that ran for six series and a total of 88 episodes on BBC1. The theme of the series concerned a female police inspector who took over control of a police station in the fictional town of Hartley in Lancashire. The lead role of Inspector Jean Darblay was played by Stephanie Turner in series 1 to 3, but in series 4 to 6 she was replaced by Anna Carteret for the role of Inspector Kate Longton. Carteret remained with the series until its conclusion in 1985.
The series was devised by Ian Kennedy Martin, who had already enjoyed success with another police drama series, The Sweeney. Although the genre of police dramas was well-established on British television by 1980, Juliet Bravo and London Weekend Television's The Gentle Touch, which started a few months earlier, were the first series that saw female officers as lead characters, having to fight both crime and the prejudice of male colleagues. Kennedy Martin based the character of Jean Darblay on a real female police inspector, Wynne Darwin.
UKTV’s Drama channel reran all six series in 2018 and again in early 2019. The series had previously been repeated in its entirety on the cable and satellite channel UK Gold from the launch in 1992 until 2001.
Filming locations
Studio scenes for the first two series were recorded at BBC Television Centre, Wood Lane in London. From the third series onward, studio scenes were recorded at the BBC's Pebble Mill Studios in Birmingham. Exterior scenes were filmed in the Lancashire towns of Colne, Bacup, Accrington, Nelson, Burnley, Blackburn, Simonstone and Read. Other locations around east Lancashire, West Yorkshire such as Todmorden and the Black Country were also used. The exterior of Hartley Police Station seen throughout the entire series run was in fact the real-life police station on Bank Street in the town of Bacup. When the station closed in 2011, a campaign was mounted by fans of the series to save it from demolition and turn it into a museum dedicated to the series' legacy. In 2012 it was purchased by a local developer and turned into six new flats.Merchandise
All six series of Juliet Bravo have been released on DVD by 2 Entertain|2Aside from the DVD releases, the BBC licensed three TV tie-in novelisations of the show. These were authored by Mollie Hardwick. The first two were published by Pan Books. Juliet Bravo 1 was a novelisation of the first series episodes Shot Gun, Fraudulently Uttered, The Draughtsman, The Runner and Family Unit. Juliet Bravo 2 was a novelisation of the first series episodes Cages, The One Who Got Away, Relief and The Anastasia Syndrome. A third novel was published by BBC Books. Calling Juliet Bravo: New Arrivals was a novelisation of the second series episode New Arrivals and the third series episode Cause For Complaint.
A script book, containing five TV scripts from the first series compiled by Alison Leake, was issued by Longman Imprint Books in February 1983. The theme tune was also released on 7-inch vinyl via BBC Records in 1980.
Cast
Main
- Stephanie Turner as Inspector Jean Darblay
- Anna Carteret as Inspector Kate Longton
- David Ellison as Sergeant Joseph Beck
- Noel Collins as Sergeant George Parrish
- David Hargreaves as Tom Darblay
- Tony Caunter as DCI Jim Logan
- Edward Peel as DCI Mark Perrin
- Mark Drewry as PC Roland Bentley
- Gerard Kelly as PC David Gallagher
- David Straun as PC Martin Helmshore
- C.J. Allen as PC Brian Kelleher
- Mark Botham as PC Danny Sparks
- Tom Georgeson as John Holden
Recurring
- John Ringham as Divisional Supt. Lake
- Geoffrey Larder as DS Dave Melchett
- Wendy Allnutt as Jennie Randall
- Martyn Hesford as PC Ian Skelton
- James Grout as Divisional Supt. Albert Hallam
- Lloyd McGuire as DS Bernie Duckworth
- David Gillies as PC Peter Sims
- Sebastian Abineri as DS Dick Maltby
- Julie Foulds as WPC Sheila Saunders
Guest appearances