Rev. (TV series) explained

Genre:Sitcom
Creator:Tom Hollander
James Wood
Director:Peter Cattaneo
Starring:Tom Hollander
Olivia Colman
Steve Evets
Miles Jupp
Simon McBurney
Ellen Thomas
Lucy Liemann
Jimmy Akingbola
Vicki Pepperdine
Joanna Scanlan
Ben Willbond
Narrated:Tom Hollander
Theme Music Composer:Jonathan Whitehead
Opentheme:Remix of "I Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray" by Nat King Cole
Endtheme:"Hearing The Prayer"
Composer:Jonathan Whitehead
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Num Series:3
Num Episodes:19
List Episodes:
  1. Episodes
Executive Producer:Matthew Justice and Simon Wilson (series one)
Kenton Allen and Tom Hollander (series two)
Producer:Kenton Allen (series one)
Hannah Pescod (series one and two)
Polly Buckle (series three)
Location:Shoreditch, London
Hackney, London
Runtime:25–30 minutes
Company:Big Talk Productions
Handle with Prayer
Channel:BBC Two
BBC HD

Rev. is a British television sitcom produced by Big Talk Productions. Written by actor Tom Hollander and James Wood, the show premiered on BBC Two on 28 June 2010 and ended on 28 April 2014.[1] The show's working titles were The City Vicar and Handle with Prayer.[2] The series revolves around a Church of England priest, played by Hollander, who becomes the vicar of an inner-city London church after leaving a small rural Suffolk parish.

Hollander said: "We wanted to define ourselves in opposition to the cliché of a country vicar, partly because we wanted to depict England as it is now, rather than having a sort of bucolic-y, over the hills and far away, bird-tweeting England – we wanted the complications of the multi-cultural, multi-ethnic inner-city, where everything is much harder."[3]

Plot

The Reverend Adam Smallbone is an Anglican priest who has moved from a small rural parish to the "socially disunited" St Saviour in the Marshes in Hackney, East London. Unwilling to turn anyone away from his pastoral care, he is faced with a series of moral challenges as he balances the needs of genuine believers, people on the streets, and drug addicts, as well as the demands of social climbers using the church to get their children into the best schools.[4]

Adam has a difficult job as a modern city vicar. His wife Alex, who has her own career as a solicitor to worry about, supports him through his life as a priest, while not being engaged with his work. He is also supported by lay reader Nigel, who believes he should be running the church. In supervision is Archdeacon Robert, who puts pressure on Adam to increase the congregation and church income.

Parishioners include Colin, a heavy drinking, unemployable lost soul who is Adam's most devoted parishioner; Adoha, known for her romantic intentions towards the clergy; and Mick, who is homeless and appears on Adam's doorstep in different situations asking for money.

Bible references

The programme depicts a number of themes which reach their denouement at the end of Season 3. These plotlines reflect both a view of the contemporary C of E Church in London, but also echo familiar narrative from the New Testament. This is notable in a storyline which sees Adam Smallbone reluctantly return to his now deconsecrated St Saviour's Church, with the series most prominent characters, to lead an unofficial Easter Mass carried out after breaking into the Church, and to eventually baptise his infant daughter. By this time, we have seen stories that echo those of Judas Iscariat's betrayal of Christ in the story of Nigel, Peter's thrice denying Christ in the story of Colin, Christ's relationship with Mary Magdalene in the story of Ellie, his 40 days in exile in his suspension pending the investigation of his affair, the encounter with the moneylenders in the Temple in Adam's meeting with the area Dean and Diocesan Secretary as they assess the real estate value of the Church, and in Adam's downfall, the bearing of the cross to Calvary, before, in the Easter ceremony, his eventual Resurrection. Other characters also fulfil roles that refer to figures in the New Testament.

Future

Interviewed in April 2014, Tom Hollander said that he did not know whether there would be a fourth series, and that after the third series "we all want to just pause". He added that "The idea of not doing it any more is sad but also quite attractive, because you wouldn't want for it to ever get worse."[5]

Cast and characters

Main

Recurring

Production

Six episodes were produced for the first series by Big Talk Productions for BBC Two. The show was created by Tom Hollander and James Wood. The church scenes were filmed at St Leonard's in Shoreditch, east London.[7] The BBC Two comedy was renewed by the BBC in September 2010 and filming began again in the middle of 2011, with the second series of seven episodes premiering in November 2011. In August 2012, the show was renewed for a third series of six episodes, which aired in 2014.[8]

Richard Coles, a Church of England priest and former member of the pop group the Communards, was one of several priests, including Rev. Kevin Sculley of St Matthew's, Bethnal Green, who advised the show's writers. Coles has been cited as an inspiration for the Adam Smallbone character.[9]

Episodes

Series 3 (2014)

The six episodes of Series 3 commenced filming on 31 October 2013 and premiered on 24 March 2014.[10]

Reception

The series was commended by The Independent as intelligent comedy, with Hollander "as good as ever" and a strong support cast.[11]

In 2011, Rev. won the South Bank Award for Best Comedy[12] and was nominated for the Royal Television Society Programme Awards for Best Scripted Comedy and Best Comedy Performance (Hollander).[13]

At the 2011 British Academy Television Awards, the series won Best Sitcom, with Hollander also nominated for Best Male Comedy Performance.[14] [15] Both were nominated again in the same categories the following year, without winning.[16] At the 2015 British Academy Television Awards, Hollander and Colman were nominated for Best Male Comedy Performance and Best Female Comedy Performance respectively.[17]

Home releases

The complete first series was released on DVD by 2 Entertain on 21 November 2011.

The second series was released on 19 November 2012. A boxset containing the first two series was also released.

The third series was released on 5 May 2014, a week after transmission of the final episode. A boxset containing the first three series was also released.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 'Rev.' star dismisses 'Dibley' comparisons . 24 June 2010 . . 25 June 2010.
  2. Web site: The City Vicar - Production Details . British Comedy Guide . 18 May 2010.
  3. Hollander, speaking on South Bank Sky Arts Winners interview, 16 February 2011, Sky Arts 1
  4. Web site: The City Vicar . British Comedy Guide . 18 May 2010.
  5. Mirror Online: Rev series 3 finale: Tom Hollander reveals show won't be returning any time soon - Mirror Online, accessdate: 30 April 2014
  6. Web site: BBC Two - Rev., Series 2, Episode 4. BBC. 6 December 2011.
  7. News: Valerie Siebert . East London vicar who inspired Rev sitcom faces bankruptcy . 5 January 2020 . The Daily Telegraph. 26 April 2014.
  8. Web site: BBC Two Renews 'Rev.' For Third Season. Patrick. Munn. TVWise. 1 August 2012. 1 August 2012.
  9. News: More BBC vicar? Popstar Reverend Richard Coles inspires sitcom. Mirror news. 28 June 2010.
  10. BBC media centre http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/latestnews/2013/rev-series3.html retrieved 20 January 2014
  11. Gerard Gilbert, TV should do the clergy a service, The Independent, 23 June 2010
  12. News: Jason Deans . Shane Meadows to make This Is England '88 . The Guardian. 25 January 2011. London.
  13. News: Hemley . Matthew . Tennant and Broadbent nominated for best actor at RTS Awards . The Stage . The Stage Newspaper . 1 March 2011 . 1 March 2011.
  14. Web site: Television in 2011 . . 12 October 2022.
  15. News: BBC's Sherlock wins best drama award at Baftas . John . Plunkett. Halliday, Josh. The Guardian. 22 May 2011 . 23 May 2011 . London.
  16. Web site: Television in 2012 . BAFTA . 12 October 2022.
  17. News: Television in 2015 . BAFTA . 2 September 2019 .