The Gold Robbers
The Gold Robbers is a British thirteen-part crime drama series starring Peter Vaughan, Artro Morris, Richard Leech and Peter Copley; the series was produced by LWT and shown on Friday evenings on ITV between 6 June and 29 August 1969. The series was created and devised by John Hawkesworth, it was inspired by the Great Train Robbery which took place on the early hours of 8 August 1963 when £2.61 million was stolen from a Royal Mail train at a railway bridge in Ledburn, Buckinghamshire. Former CID chief DC Supt. Alfred Butler, who worked on the investigation into the robbery, served as the series' technical advisor.
The series was highly successful for LWT, repeatedly gathering audiences of around 15 million viewers, frequently overtaking the BBC in the ratings. It was later sold to ten countries and nominated for a drama series award at 1969 Television Awards organised by The Society of Film and Television Arts in 1970.
Overview
The series follows the lengthy police investigation led by Det. Chief Supt. Cradock, into one of the biggest and most daring robberies in history where £5½ million worth in gold bullion is stolen when an aircraft lands at West Marsh airfield in Kent. During the investigation, Cradock repeatedly encounters setbacks and successes as he tracks down the suspects, while he is dogged by his interfering superiors, government officials and the ruthless gang who use money, threats and murder to safeguard themselves.Each episode focusses on a different aspect of the robbery, and the various suspects involved. In an interview with the Grimsby Daily Telegraph in 1969, Vaughan described the character of Cradock as an ordinary man faced with the gigantic task of catching the robbers, he stated "I see him as a man obsessed with this job rather than a policeman, I’m trying to let the human factor come through all the petty irritations and so on." Vaughan saw Cradock as a kind of extension of himself, a real human-being with flaws and weaknesses, whilst trying to do good.
The series was generally well received by critics, William Marshall from the Daily Mirror described the first episode as "I thought the episode that introduced The Gold Robbers " last week was a taut, gut-grabbing, immaculate piece of work that rubbed on the exposed nerve-ends of anticipation." Whilst, Majorie Bilbow from The Stage stated it to be one of the best crime drama series to hit the television screens in a while, stating "it promises to be peopled with three-dimensional characters. all with lives of their own, acted by a cast demonstrably alive to the demands of a well- written script."
It notably featured an extensive supporting cast of well known British actors, including the likes of Nicholas Ball, Roy Dotrice, Sally Thomsett, Joss Ackland, George Cole, Ian Hendry, Ann Lynn, Bernard Hepton, Alfred Lynch, Wanda Ventham, Jeremy Child, Christopher Benjamin, Peter Bowles and Geoffrey Whitehead. A number of writers wrote for the series including former Z-Cars contributor Allan Prior, actor and writer Glyn Jones, Doctor Who story editor David Whitaker and novelist Berkley Mather.
A sequel series was planned in 1970 with Vaughan reprising his role as Cradock, but it was subsequently scrapped as LWT stated to the press at the time that it would be virtually impossible to come up with a series containing Cradock that would be of the same high calibre as the original.
Cast
- Peter Vaughan as Det. Chief Supt. Cradock
- Artro Morris as Det. Sgt Tommy Thomas
- Richard Leech as Richard Bolt
- Peter Copley as Asst. Commissioner Farr
- Frederick Bartman as Victor Anderson
- Wendy Gifford as Jo Miller
- John Bindon as Terry Lardner
- Donald Morley as Grierson
- Louise Pajo as Jenny Bolt
- Nicholas Ball as Terry Cradock
- Johnny Shannon as George Nechros
- Maria Aitken as Val
- Sally Thomsett as Sally Hartford
- Joss Ackland as Derek Hartford
- Alethea Charlton as Fay Hartford
- George Cole as Barry Porter
- Peter Madden as Forbes Lingwood
- Jeremy Child as Jeremy Foreman
- George Innes as Dillo
- Frank Sieman as Chief Inspector
- Ronald Clarke as Nobby Clarke
- Roy Dotrice as Freddie Lamb
- Ann Lynn as Rosemary Lamb
- Ian Hendry as Tom Goodwin
- Wanda Ventham as Dee Latter
- Bernard Hepton as Harold Oscroft
- Alfred Lynch as Josef Tyzack
- Colette O'Neil as Mary Tyzack
- Peter Celier as Slade
- Geoffrey Whitehead as Peter Conroy
- Jennifer Hilary as Stephanie Conroy
- Donald Hewlett as Edward Lancing
- Hilda Braid as Vi Conroy
- Patrick Allen as Hon. Timothy Fry
- Christopher Benjamin as Edward Meakin
- Peter Bowles as Stockbroker
Availability
It was one of the last major ITV series produced in monochrome, before they commenced colour production later that same year, which limited the series' repeat potential. Aside from a late evening run in 1970, it was not repeated on television again for over 50 years until it was reshown on Talking Pictures TV, commencing on 4 September 2023.The complete series was released on DVD by Network on 1 July 2013.