Leave It to Mrs O'Brien explained

Genre:Situation comedy
Creator:Angela McFadden
Director:Brian Mac Lochlainn
Starring:Anna Manahan
Pat Daly
Philip O'Sullivan
Blanaid Irvine
Brendan Caldwell
Country:Ireland
Language:English
Num Series:2
Num Episodes:23
Location:Studio 1, RTÉ Television Centre, Donnybrook, Dublin 4, Ireland
Camera:Multi-camera
Runtime:30 minutes
Network:RTÉ Two

Leave It to Mrs O'Brien is an Irish television sitcom that aired on RTÉ 2 for two series from 1984 to 1986. Starring Anna Manahan in the title role, it was based on the stories of Angela McFadden.[1]

Plot

Set in a local parochial house in the Liberties area of inner-city Dublin, the show's main character, Mrs O'Brien, is the housekeeper to two Roman Catholic priests. Her main adversary is Sister Gertrude, an archetypal authoritarian dragon, and in the middle are the two priests of the house. The veteran parish priest, Fr. Rooney, is also prone to skullduggery and is in fear of being moved to a new parish by the Bishop. The second priest, Fr. Michael, is a young, trendy and "sensible" curate.[2]

Cast

Production

Recording

The interior scenes for both series were shot in Studio 1 at the RTÉ Television Centre. While the first series was filmed without a laughter track, the second series was filmed in front of a live studio audience. The quantity of laughter generated was about the same. The second series also saw more on-location filming as well as guest appearances.

Reception

Both series consistently topped the channel's ratings with an audience of over 250,000 per episode; however, it had a less favourable response from the critics. According to the Irish Independent, "One TV critic wanted those responsible 'thrown on the dole and given lousy references'". The network's defense that the series was meant to appeal to undiscriminating viewers, particularly children and the elderly, only invited further criticism.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The worst Irish TV shows EVER!. 28 October 2006. 2 January 2012. Irish Independent.
  2. Web site: Parochial humour. 5 February 1986. The Irish Times.