Oasis (British TV series) explained

Runtime:30 min.
Starring:
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Company:Carlton Television
Network:ITV
Num Series:1
Num Episodes:10

Oasis is a short lived CITV drama series which was about a group of children who ran an inner city farm. It is best known for featuring John Simm and Dean Gaffney. It was set in a wasteland site in south London.

The drama series ran from 5 January to 9 March 1993 for 10 episodes, made by Zenith North, the team behind Byker Grove for Carlton; their first children's drama series for the ITV network.

History

Oasis is Carlton Television's first significant television series for children and has 10 episodes.[1] [2] Barry Purchase, whose previous writing credits included Tucker's Luck and Grange Hill, is the Oasiss writer.[3] Produced by John Price, it was directed by Chris Clough and Joanna Hogg.[4] Peter McNamara whose past roles have been the antihero or a goon, plays a completely different role as "a loveable down-and-out who becomes a kind of hero to local children he meets in an inner city wilderness".[3] McNamara, who has asthma and a horse allergy, filmed multiple shots with the horses.[3]

Plot summary

Appalled by the animal cruelty, Jimmy Cadogan, a rodeo clown, leaves his job and directs his efforts towards starting a city farm that serves as a sanctuary for animals he saves. He works with a learned drifter and dropout, Posh Robert, and children to transform The Jungle, a South London wasteland, into a farm, against the wishes of the council and the antihero Bob Bulger.

Cast

Reception

In a critical review, Pat Moore wrote in The Stage, "I hope this series will be popular with children because the plot seems plausible and city-kids can at least identify with the problem of having nowhere safe to play. Some of the older cast members do seem to be overacting, however, a fault I've noticed before in children's productions. Kids are far quicker at detecting a baddie or the untrustworthy than many adults, so snarling a lot just looks daft."[5]

Maggie Drummond of The Daily Telegraph stated, "There is a sad lack of useful factual programmes for teenagers; even worse is the lack of drama redeemed only by the new 10-parter Oasis (Carlton) set in a south London wasteland inhabited by youngsters who behave like mini Arthur Daleys."[6] The Timess Melinda Wittstock called the television series "a ground-breaking children's drama".[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: 1992-10-02 . Fighting to save their jungle from concrete . . . 2023-08-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230813235317/https://www.newspapers.com/article/evening-standard/129966975/ . 2023-08-13 .
  2. News: 1994-05-20 . Pick of today's viewing . . . 2023-08-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230813235455/https://www.newspapers.com/article/heartland-evening-news-the-voice-of-nun/129967265/ . 2023-08-13 .
  3. News: 1992-12-30 . Tears of a rodeo clown . Chelsea News . . 2023-08-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230813234939/https://www.newspapers.com/article/chelsea-news/129966588/ . 2023-08-13 .
  4. News: 1992-08-20 . In Production . . 5810 . 37 . .
  5. News: Moore . Pat . 1993-01-21 . Television Review . . . . 2023-08-13 .
  6. News: Drummond . Maggie . 1993-01-08 . Teenagers turn to the sitcoms . . . 2023-08-13 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230813235829/https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-daily-telegraph/129967524/ . 2023-08-13 .
  7. News: Wittstock . Melinda . 1992-12-01 . New ITV station uses sex to woo audiences; Carlton Television . . . 2023-08-14 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230814000935/https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?p=AONE&u=wikipedia&id=GALE%7CA116239103&v=2.1&it=r&sid=bookmark-AONE&asid=df5bea10 . 2023-08-14 .