The Bill series 14


The fourteenth series of The Bill, a British television drama, consisted of 121 episodes, broadcast between 1 January and 31 December 1998.

Background

The series began with the appointment of new executive producer Richard Handford, who replaced Michael Chapman after his 9-year reign came to an end in the previous series. The appointment preceded discussions with broadcaster ITV about returning to the format of hour-long episodes, which the show last used on a regular basis in 1987. The request was approved, and hour-long episodes began to air twice-weekly beginning in August, a format the series retained until moving to a later time slot in 2009. Due to the rapid transition, several of the first hour-long episodes were originally written for the half-hour time slot, and thus, some episodes contain two completely different stories, written by different writers, which jump from one to another. For example, the opening episode, "Deep End", was initially written in three twenty-five-minute parts, with a fourth epilogue episode, the first half of "The Party's Over", all conceived by Elizabeth Anne-Wheal. A separate story by Neil Clarke, initially envisaged as an entirely separate episode, was broadcast as the second half of "The Party's Over".
Handford also attempted to introduce a more serialised element to the programme; however, individual stand-alone episodes were retained. The first major multipart storylines came towards the autumn and aired back-to-back; PC Eddie Santini, who was introduced at the beginning of the series, emerged as a villain as he attempted to rape new WPC Rosie Fox before bullying her out of Sun Hill in a four-part storyline. The plot would be revisited in another four-part storyline during the following series. The second plot saw PC Tony Stamp face trial for killing a pedestrian with the Area Car. The reception to the serialised episodes were popular, and while there weren't any other episodes of this kind that aired after these two storylines, serialised, multipart storylines were frequently seen whilst Handford was executive producer. In addition to format changes, Handford dramatically changed the title sequence, which had been the same barring minor updates since the first series, with the theme song tweaked and the scene of the Area Car driving at the camera and images of the cast replaced by various scenes involving police work including vehicles, interviews and prisoner processing.
Among the six character exits, the most high-profile was that of Kevin Lloyd as DC Tosh Lines. Lloyd, who appeared in approximately 454 episodes over a 10-year period, was dismissed from the show after turning up for filming too intoxicated to work, and died less than a week later after an unsuccessful stint in rehab. His final episode aired on 9 June, just over a month after his death. DS Alistair Greig and WPC Norika Datta departed after 9 years each on the show, along with WDC Suzi Croft and PC Mike Jarvis and WPC Debbie Keane. Among those to join the cast were George Rossi, who took on the role of DC Duncan Lennox after a guest appearance in the previous series, while Samantha Robson was cast as WPC Vicky Hagen, the show's first female Area Car driver. The biggest arrival was that of now-DCI Frank Burnside, who appeared in a two-part special that included scenes filmed in Manchester, as Christopher Ellison returned to the role five years after leaving Sun Hill as a DI.

Cast changes

Arrivals

  • PC Eddie Santini
  • WPC Vicky Hagen
  • WPC Rosie Fox
  • WDC Kerry Holmes
  • DC Duncan Lennox

Departures

  • WDC Suzi Croft – Accepts a transfer to High Barnet
  • PC Mike Jarvis – Accepts a transfer to the Diplomatic Protection Group
  • DC Tosh Lines – Presumably moves to the Coroner's Office
  • WPC Norika Datta – Accepts a transfer to the Crime Policy Unit
  • DS Alistair Greig – Transfers due to his appeal against tenure being rejected
  • WPC Rosie Fox – Requests transfer after attempted rape and bullying campaign by Eddie Santini
  • WPC Debbie Keane – Unexplained

Episodes

#TitleEpisode notesDirected byWritten byOriginal air date