Johnny Jarvis

Johnny Jarvis
Genre Drama
Created by Nigel Williams
Starring Mark Farmer
Johanna Hargreaves
Ian Sears
Alrick Riley
Jamie Foreman
Nick Stringer
Theme music composer Gary Shail
& John Altman
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 6
Production
Producer(s) Guy Slater
Running time c. 50 minute episodes
Release
Original network BBC1
Original release

10 November – 12 December 1983

Music sample
"Johnny Jarvis Original Theme "
Written by Gary Shail

Johnny Jarvis is a 1983 British television drama series created and written by Nigel Williams, adapted from his novel of the same title. The series was directed by Alan Dossor and produced by Guy Slater for the BBC. The principal actors were Mark Farmer, Johanna Hargreaves, Ian Sears, Alrick Riley and Jamie Foreman. Today it is credited as capturing the zeitgeist of early 1980s UK life. The adaptation was broadcast between 10 November and 12 December 1983. The signature tune for the series was provided by Gary Shail and the music for the series was by John Altman. It had been rumoured that the original series has been erased from the BBC's tape archive, preventing any further release [1] but extant copies on sale prove the rumour to be incorrect.

Plot summary

The story centres on Johnny Jarvis (Mark Farmer) and Alan Lipton (Ian Sears) who are two teenagers in their final year of secondary school at a comprehensive in Hackney. Energetic, anxious and occasionally naïve, the pair are on the brink of entering the adult world.

Jarvis has always been the class clown, and his unlikely friendship with ‘bookish’ Lipton - a boy with his head ‘stuck in the clouds’ as he considers what the future has in store for him, and considers the image of the father he has never known - is one of the more unusual unions in the story. The pair successfully leave school brimming with hope, but soon find that the harsh reality of Britain in the late 1970s has little to offer them - they are soon both unemployed school-leavers struggling to make progress in the world and the part they play in it.

Life in the confines of school and life on the outside are two entirely different things, as Jarvis and Lipton discover the strongest elements of their school lives are reversed over the course of the series; Jarvis, once a popular ‘jack-the-lad’ character with the world as his oyster, is ultimately left poverty-stricken and relatively isolated, whilst Lipton, who starts the serial emerging from school and finding himself in a grotty squat existence, blossoms from a studious character into a popular new wave performer in a band, the lyrics of songs for which were based on Johnny's downward spiral and terrible existence.

Jarvis (Mark Farmer) and Lipton (Ian Sears)

This linear storyline has a thriller-esque sub-plot concerning a mysterious drug dealer, known as "The Colonel", holding Lipton to ransom in his mother's tower-block flat at the same time that Jarvis' fortunes are no better, minding his child in a bed-sit whilst his girlfriend the complicated Stella (Johanna Hargreaves) brings in the sole wage in order to support them all.

School associates of Jarvis and Lipton, skinhead Manning (Jamie Foreman) and black carpenter Paul Turner (Alrick Riley) provide an intertwined story of inner city racial conflict which highlights that period of street disturbances in British History (1981-1985)

The theme music and original songs were written by Gary Shail (Quadrophenia, Metal Mickey) and arranged by John Altman.

The principal message of the series is a thinly-veiled attack on (then) Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Britain and the wasted resource of schoolchildren emerging from education to find no jobs and precious few prospects awaiting them.

Stella (Johanna Hargreaves) in late 1970s fashion and make up

Episodes

1. "1977-1978" (first broadcast 10 November 1983)

"The unlikely friendship between Johnny Jarvis and Alan Lipton begins in their last year at a comprehensive in Hackney. Jarvis, the loveable clown with a surprising talent for welding…Lipton, the apparently talentless reject, fantasising about the future and the father he has never met. At the end of the year they have to confront the adult world"

2. "1978-1979" (first broadcast 17 November 1983)

"Lipton and Jarvis encounter the amazing Stella for the first time. Turner finds work - of a fairly eccentric kind. Jake remains mysterious and evasive. For both Lipton and Jarvis their relationships with their fathers take a dramatic turn."

3. "1979-1980" (first broadcast 24 November 1983)

"Life at the squat for Stella and Lipton isn't easy. Jake has disappeared again. Both Lipton and the mysterious "Colonel" want to find him - and the Colonel isn't too fussy about his methods. However, Turner is in work - if not earning money; and Jarvis is busy at Technical College, where he acquires a girlfriend."

4. "1980-1981" (first broadcast 1 December 1983)

"Lipton and Guy become the self-appointed leaders of a band at the hostel, singing Alan's songs. Stella moves in to live with Johnny - and his mother. Then a surprising newcomer turns up at the hostel"

5. "1981-1982" (first broadcast 8 December 1983)

"A shadowy drug dealer called The Colonel holds the rock writer Lipton as a prisoner in his mother's council flat. Jarvis is also flat-bound, compelled to baby-sit while Stella goes out to work"

6. "1982-1983"(first broadcast 13 December 1983)

"Johnny and Stella move in to live with Alan in his new flat. But it's not easy to revive old friendships, and the tensions run high."

Cast

References

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